How To Fix 451 4.7.1 | Greylisting – Message Temporarily Deferred

6 minutes
451 4.7.1

The 451 4.7.1 error means the recipient’s server is greylisting your email — temporarily deferring emails from unknown senders to filter out spam. 

Fix it by waiting 15-30 minutes for automatic retry (your mail server handles this). For persistent issues, verify SPF/DKIM/DMARC authentication, check blacklist status, and request recipient whitelisting.

Greylisting exploits a fundamental difference between legitimate mail servers and spam infrastructure — legitimate servers retry after temporary failures, while spammers rarely bother. The delay is intentional, not a malfunction. 

Moreover, properly authenticated senders often bypass greylisting entirely, making authentication your best long-term solution.

Quick skim — 451 4.7.1 error overview

The 451 4.7.1 error indicates an intentional, temporary rejection for spam-filtering purposes.

AttributeDetails
Error code451 4.7.1
CategoryGreylisting / anti-spam measure
MeaningUnknown sender temporarily deferred
SeverityTemporary (self-resolving on retry)
Common causesFirst contact, missing authentication, and anti-spam policy
Fix approachWait for retry → verify authentication → request whitelist

What does greylisting mean?

Greylisting temporarily rejects emails based on the triplet: sender IP + sender address + recipient address. First attempts from unknown triplets receive 451 (try later). Subsequent attempts — after a waiting period — succeed.

Why greylisting works

Spam systems and legitimate servers behave differently:

BehaviorSpam InfrastructureLegitimate Servers
Retry after 451Almost neverAlways (per RFC)
Volume per IPMassiveModerate
Unique tripletsMillionsPredictable patterns

Spammers blast once and move on — they don’t wait and retry. Legitimate servers follow standards and persist through temporary failures.

Greylist timeline

EventTiming
First attemptRejected with 451
Waiting period5-30 minutes (server-dependent)
Retry attemptAccepted (triplet now trusted)
Future emailsPass immediately (triplet cached)

Why does the 451 4.7.1 error occur?

Greylisting triggers when the receiving server doesn’t recognize your sending signature.

First contact

Your server hasn’t communicated with this recipient recently (or ever):

  • New business relationship
  • Changed sending infrastructure
  • Recipient migrated email providers
  • Greylist cache expired

Missing authentication

Well-authenticated senders often bypass greylisting:

  • SPF/DKIM/DMARC failures increase greylist likelihood
  • Authenticated mail may skip deferral entirely
  • Policy varies by recipient configuration

Volume patterns

Some servers use 451 4.7.1 for rate-related deferrals:

  • Sending too fast
  • Volume spike triggered protection
  • Behavior resembled spam patterns

How do you fix 451 4.7.1?

For genuine greylisting, waiting is the complete fix. Your mail server handles everything automatically.

Wait for auto-retry

Standard mail server behavior manages greylisting:

  • Server queues deferred message
  • Retries after configured interval (typically 15-60 minutes)
  • Delivery succeeds on the subsequent attempt
  • No manual intervention required

Check your mail queue if curious — the message shows “deferred” status, not “failed.”

Verify authentication

Proper authentication reduces greylisting frequency across all recipients:

Run an email deliverability test to verify that all authentication mechanisms pass.

Check blacklist status

Blacklisted IPs face stricter scrutiny:

  • Search major blacklist databases
  • Request delisting if found
  • Address the underlying cause before requesting removal

Verify SMTP settings

Misconfigured authentication can trigger deferrals:

  • Enable “outgoing server requires authentication” in email clients
  • Confirm credentials are correct
  • Verify port and encryption settings match provider requirements

Request whitelisting

For persistent issues with specific recipients:

  • Contact the recipient directly
  • Ask them to whitelist your domain or IP
  • Have their IT department add you to the allow lists

When should you escalate?

Greylisting should resolve within 1-2 hours. Escalate if:

  • The message remains deferred after 24 hours
  • Multiple recipients at the same domain are affected
  • Error persists across different sending attempts
  • Pattern appears across your entire infrastructure

Check for outages

Verify no service disruptions:

  • Check your email provider’s status page
  • Review the recipient provider status
  • Rule out temporary infrastructure issues
Need help fixing an email error?

Still stuck after trying the fix?

Some email errors are easy to clear. Others point to deeper deliverability issues involving authentication, sender reputation, blacklisting, routing, or mailbox provider policy. If you would rather have an expert review it, speak with an email delieverability consultant for free and we can help diagnose the issue and fix it on your behalf.

Root cause analysis

We look beyond the error message itself to find what is actually breaking delivery, trust, or inbox placement.

Technical fixes handled for you

From SPF, DKIM, and DMARC to blacklist cleanup, DNS alignment, and sending setup, we can guide or implement the fix.

Deliverability-first review

We assess whether the error is part of a bigger pattern hurting opens, replies, and overall campaign performance.

Free expert consultation

Talk to a real deliverability expert, get honest guidance, and see the next best step without pressure or upsells.

When should you book a consultation? If the error keeps coming back, affects multiple mailboxes or domains, started after an ESP or DNS change, or is tied to spam placement, low inboxing, high bounce rates, or authentication failures, it is usually faster to get an expert involved early.

Frequently asked questions

Here are some commonly asked questions about this error:

Is 451 4.7.1 a bounce?

Soft bounce — the message is deferred, not rejected. Your mail server queues it and retries automatically. Most greylisted messages deliver successfully on the second or third attempt. No action needed unless retries are exhausted without success.

Why does greylisting delay important emails?

Unfortunately, that’s the tradeoff for effective spam filtering. Greylisting sacrifices immediacy for security. For time-sensitive communications, proper authentication (often bypassing greylisting) or pre-established relationships help.

Can I disable greylisting?

Only if you control the receiving server. Greylisting is a recipient-side policy — you cannot force recipients to disable their spam protection. Proper authentication and a good sender reputation minimize the impact of greylisting for most recipients.

Email Deliverability Score
Enter Your Email Address To Check Your
Deliverability Score
Envelope
Invalid phone number

How To Fix 450 4.4.318 | Suspicious Remote Server Error
The 450 4.4.318 error means Exchange detected a suspicious termination of a connection during SMTP […]
March 17, 2026
How To Fix 451 | Message Temporarily Deferred – DKIM Not Setup
The 451 “Message Temporarily Deferred” error (with DKIM-related messaging) means receiving servers are throttling your […]
March 15, 2026
How To Fix 452 4.2.2 | Mailbox Over Quota Temporary Failure
The 452 4.2.2 error means the recipient’s mailbox is full — storage quota exhausted, unable […]
March 14, 2026