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What Is Email Warmup? A Complete Beginner's Guide

June 12, 2025·5 min read·By MailPilot

If you've just registered a new domain and are about to send your first cold email campaign, you're about to run into a wall that catches almost every new sender: your emails will land in spam. Not because your content is bad, not because your list is dirty — simply because your domain is new and has no sending reputation. Email warmup is the solution.

What Is Email Warmup?

Email warmup is the process of gradually building a sender reputation for a new or inactive email account by sending small numbers of emails that generate positive engagement signals. Inbox providers like Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo use reputation scores to decide whether your emails go to the inbox, spam, or promotions. A new domain has no reputation — so ISPs apply maximum skepticism by default.

Warmup works by sending real emails to real inboxes that open, reply to, star, and archive those emails. These positive engagement signals feed back into the ISP's reputation model for your domain. Over 14–30 days, your reputation score rises to the point where the ISP trusts you enough to deliver your emails to the inbox.

Why Do ISPs Treat New Domains as Suspicious?

Spam operations frequently spin up new domains to avoid blocks on previously blacklisted domains. A new domain that suddenly sends 500 emails per day is statistically more likely to be a spam operation than a legitimate business. ISPs have learned this pattern through decades of anti-spam enforcement, so they default to skepticism for any domain with no sending history.

The same logic applies to inactive domains. A domain that has not sent email in 6+ months has its reputation score decay to near zero. Even if that domain had a clean history, ISPs treat the re-activation like a new sender.

How Email Warmup Works: The Mechanics

  • Start at low volume: 5–10 emails per day in week one. This mimics a human building a new working relationship, not a mass marketing campaign.
  • Generate real engagement: Warmup emails are sent to a peer network of real mailboxes (not bots) that open, reply to, and archive the messages. These are the signals ISPs track to determine sender quality.
  • Ramp progressively: Each week, sending volume increases by 30–50%. By week 4, most domains are at 100–150 emails per day with stable inbox placement.
  • Monitor placement in real time: Inbox placement rate across Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo shows whether warmup is working. Target: 95%+ before launching real campaigns.

When Do You Need Email Warmup?

  • New domain: Any domain less than 30 days old should be warmed before any campaign sends.
  • New mailbox on established domain: Even on a trusted domain, a brand-new individual mailbox (e.g., james@yourdomain.com) needs its own warmup.
  • Inactive domain (6+ months): Treat it like a new domain — full 30-day warmup.
  • After a deliverability crash: If your spam rate spiked or you were blacklisted, warmup is part of the recovery process.
  • Before any high-volume campaign: Even established domains benefit from a warmup run before a volume spike.

What Email Warmup Does NOT Do

Warmup builds sender reputation — it does not fix broken authentication records, remove you from blacklists, or improve list quality. All three of those problems need to be addressed before or alongside warmup. SPF, DKIM, and DMARC must be correctly configured before warmup begins. Any blacklist listings should be resolved. Your email list should be cleaned of invalid addresses. Warmup amplifies a clean sender's reputation; it cannot rescue a fundamentally broken setup.

MailPilot automates email warmup across 8,400+ real mailboxes with progressive ramp-up, automatic DNS health checks, and live inbox placement monitoring. Most senders reach 95%+ inbox placement within 21 days of starting.
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