Domain Reputation 101 [What It Is, How To Check & How To Fix It]

8 minutes
Domain Reputation 101 [What It Is, How To Check & How To Fix It]

Domain reputation is the opinion mailbox providers have of your sending domain — a score that determines whether your emails reach the inbox, land in spam, or get blocked entirely.

Think of it as a credit score for email:

  • High scores mean a trusted sender, inbox delivery
  • Low scores mean a suspicious sender, spam folder, or rejection
  • The score follows your domain everywhere (you can’t escape it by switching providers)

Unlike IP reputation (which attaches to your sending server’s address), domain reputation attaches to your domain name itself — the part after the @ symbol. 

Because domains rarely change, mailbox providers increasingly prioritize domain reputation over IP reputation when making filtering decisions.

The frustrating part is that you don’t control your email reputation score directly. Mailbox providers calculate it based on how recipients interact with your emails and how well you follow sending best practices. Your actions influence the score, but you never set it yourself.

How does domain reputation differ from IP reputation?

The distinction matters more than most senders realize, especially as filtering technology evolves.

FactorDomain reputationIP reputation
Attached toDomain name (example.com)IP address (192.0.2.1)
PermanenceHighly permanentCan change by switching IPs
Provider emphasisIncreasing priorityStill matters, but less central
Shared infrastructure riskYour behavior onlyShared with other senders on the same IP
Reset possibilityVery difficultEasier (new IP = fresh start)

Historically, IP reputation dominated email filtering decisions. Spammers adapted by cycling through IP addresses constantly, making IP-based blocking less effective as a defense.

Domain reputation solved this problem elegantly. Your domain stays constant across IP changes, ESP migrations, and infrastructure shifts. Bad behavior follows the domain — you can’t outrun a damaged reputation by switching email providers or servers.

For senders on shared IP pools, domain reputation matters even more. Your domain reputation is yours regardless of what other senders on the same IP do.

A bad neighbor affects your IP reputation, but your domain reputation remains under your control. For infrastructure considerations, see our guide on dedicated vs shared IP.

What factors affect domain reputation?

Mailbox providers assess the “who, what, where, and when” of your domain — every interaction leaves a fingerprint that influences your score.

Technical signals

Authentication and infrastructure form the foundation:

  • Domain age — newer domains treated with suspicion
  • Authentication status — SPF, DKIM, DMARC pass rates
  • DNS configuration — proper records, reverse DNS setup
  • SSL certificate validity — expired or misconfigured certificates raise flags
  • Infrastructure neighborhood — hosting alongside spammy domains hurts you

Sending behavior

How you send matters as much as what you send:

  • Return-path domain — where bounces route
  • Volume consistency — sudden spikes trigger warnings
  • Blocklist status — listings on Spamhaus, Barracuda, etc.
  • Content patterns — domains linked in emails, image hosting domains

List quality

The addresses you send to reveal your practices:

Recipient feedback

Engagement signals carry enormous weight (more than most senders expect).

MetricHealthy thresholdDanger zone
Spam complaint rateUnder 0.1%Above 0.3%
Hard bounce rateUnder 2%Above 5%
Authentication pass rateAbove 95%Below 90%
  • Spam complaint rates — Gmail/Yahoo require under 0.1% for bulk senders
  • Negative signals — deleting without reading, moving to spam
  • Engagement metrics — opens, clicks, replies, forwards

How do you check your domain reputation?

Since each mailbox provider calculates reputation using proprietary algorithms, no single tool shows the complete picture. Checking multiple sources gives you the clearest view.

Provider-specific tools

These show how specific mailbox providers view your domain:

Gmail-specific reputation (High/Medium/Low/Bad), spam rate, and delivery errors. Essential for anyone sending to Gmail addresses.

Outlook/Hotmail complaint rates and trap hits. Covers a significant portion of business email.

Third-party scoring

Independent services aggregate data across multiple sources:

ToolWhat it showsCost
Sender Score (Validity)Aggregate score 0-100 from 80+ providersFree lookup
Talos Intelligence (Cisco)Domain rating (Good/Neutral/Poor)Free
SpamhausBlocklist status, reputation dataFree lookup
BarracudaBlocklist statusFree lookup
MxToolBoxMulti-blacklist check, domain healthFree/Paid

Score interpretation

Understanding what scores mean helps prioritize action:

Score rangeStatusImplication
85-100Good/HighEmails likely reach the inbox
70-84MediumSome filtering possible
Below 70Poor/LowSerious deliverability issues
Below 50BadEmails likely blocked or spam-foldered

Run a quick diagnostic with an email deliverability test to check authentication and blacklist status in one place.

What happens when domain reputation drops?

The impact ranges from inconvenient to catastrophic, depending on severity and how quickly you respond.

Minor damage

Early-stage reputation problems create friction:

  • Emails are routed to promotions or the spam folder
  • Reduced open rates (recipients simply don’t see your messages)
  • Slower business interactions and response times

Severe damage

Persistent problems escalate to serious consequences:

  • Emails blocked entirely (never delivered, bounced back)
  • Website URLs flagged or throttled when included in emails
  • Transactional emails fail (order confirmations, password resets)
  • Search engine penalties if the domain is associated with malicious content

Research suggests roughly 21% of legitimate emails fail to reach inboxes — often due to reputation issues. That’s one in five messages never seen by the intended recipient. See our email statistics research for current deliverability benchmarks.

Warning signs

Reputation damage announces itself through measurable changes:

Warning signWhat it indicates
Delivery rate drops (98% → 90%)Filtering or blocking increasing
Open rates drop 2-3+ percentage pointsEmails are going to spam
Blocklist appearancesSevere reputation damage
Authentication failures in reportsTechnical misconfiguration
Complaint rate spikesContent or list quality problems

If delivery rates drop suddenly without explanation, check the reputation immediately. The faster you identify the problem, the faster recovery begins.

For help diagnosing reputation issues or planning recovery from damage, an email deliverability consultant can analyze your specific situation and create a targeted improvement plan.

How do you improve domain reputation?

Reputation builds slowly and is damaged quickly. Improving a damaged reputation requires consistent positive behavior over weeks or months — no shortcuts exist.

Fix authentication first

Authentication failures signal “unverified sender” to mailbox providers. Before anything else:

  • Configure SPF to authorize sending IPs
  • Set up DKIM to sign messages cryptographically
  • Implement DMARC to enforce policies and receive reports

Authentication won’t fix reputation alone, but failing authentication makes recovery impossible. Get this right before addressing other factors.

Clean your list

Sending to bad addresses accelerates reputation damage with every send:

  • Validate new addresses before adding to the list
  • Remove hard bounces immediately (no exceptions)
  • Sunset inactive subscribers (no engagement in 6-12 months)
  • Never purchase or scrape email lists (the fastest path to reputation destruction)

Reduce complaints

Spam complaints destroy reputation faster than any other factor. Prevention beats cure:

  • Only email people who explicitly opted in
  • Match content to subscriber expectations
  • Make unsubscribe easy (one click, honored immediately)
  • Segment audiences for relevance (generic blasts generate complaints)

Manage volume

Sudden spikes trigger spam filters even when the content is legitimate:

  • Maintain consistent sending patterns
  • Warm up new domains gradually (4-8 weeks of increasing volume)
  • Don’t compress your entire annual campaign into one massive send

Consider subdomain isolation

Subdomains are treated as separate entities for reputation purposes. Strategic separation isolates risk:

  • marketing.example.com for campaigns
  • mail.example.com for transactional messages
  • If one subdomain gets damaged, the primary domain stays protected

How long does reputation recovery take?

Recovery timelines depend on damage severity and the consistency of corrective action.

Minor damage

If caught early (slight delivery rate drop, minor blocklist listing), recovery typically happens in 2-4 weeks with immediate corrective action. Quick response makes a significant difference.

Severe damage

Major reputation damage — multiple blocklist listings, sustained high complaints, widespread spam folder placement — takes 1-3 months of perfect sending behavior to recover. Mailbox providers need to see sustained positive patterns before upgrading scores.

Catastrophic damage

Domains with extensive spam history or malware association may never fully recover. 

Some organizations create new subdomains or entirely new domains rather than trying to rehabilitate severely damaged ones. Starting fresh sometimes costs less than fighting history.

The key factor across all scenarios is sustained positive behavior. 

One good week doesn’t fix months of problems. Mailbox providers look for consistent patterns — typically 30-90 days of clean sending — before meaningfully improving reputation scores.

Frequently asked questions

Here are some commonly asked questions about domain reputation: 

Does domain age affect reputation?

Yes. New domains start with no reputation — mailbox providers treat them cautiously until they establish a sending history. Warming up a new domain (gradually increasing volume over 4-8 weeks) helps build trust. Domains under 30 days old often face heavier scrutiny regardless of content quality.

Can I reset my domain reputation?

Not really. Unlike IP reputation, which resets when you change IPs, domain reputation follows the domain permanently. The only “reset” is creating a new domain or subdomain — but that means starting from zero reputation, not from a clean slate with good standing.

Which matters more — domain or IP reputation?

Domain reputation increasingly dominates filtering decisions, especially at major providers like Gmail. IP reputation still matters, but it is less central than it was a decade ago. For most senders, domain reputation should be the primary focus of monitoring and improvement efforts.

How often should I check my reputation?

Monthly at a minimum for routine monitoring. Check immediately if you notice delivery rate drops, open rate declines, or increased bounces. Automated monitoring tools can alert you to sudden changes before they compound into major problems.

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