Email deliverability is influenced by multiple technical and behavioral signals that receiving mail servers evaluate before accepting, filtering, or rejecting a message. Understanding these signals helps explain why emails sometimes fail to reach the inbox even when sending infrastructure appears correct.
This page outlines the core concepts involved in email deliverability and how they relate to common diagnostic checks.
Understanding email deliverability
Email deliverability refers to how receiving mail servers process an email message after it is sent. This includes whether the message is accepted, where it is placed (inbox, spam, or other folders), or whether it is rejected entirely. Deliverability is not determined by a single factor. Mail servers evaluate a combination of technical configuration, message structure, and sender behavior before making a decision.
Before evaluating placement or reputation, receiving servers perform a series of technical checks, including:
Tools like Mailtester are commonly used to perform one-time technical checks that help identify configuration or formatting issues before sending. These checks provide a snapshot of how a message and its sending domain are evaluated at a technical level.
Why authentication exists
Email authentication allows receiving servers to verify that a message is authorized by the sending domain and has not been altered in transit. Authentication does not guarantee inbox placement, but it is a prerequisite for reliable delivery.
The main authentication mechanisms used today are:
Authentication failures or misalignment can cause messages to be filtered or rejected regardless of content quality. Check your DMARC record.
An email can be successfully delivered while still being placed in a spam or secondary folder. Delivery confirms that the receiving server accepted the message, but placement determines where the message appears.
Inbox placement is influenced by additional signals beyond authentication, including:
Different mailbox providers apply different policies and weighting to signals. As a result, the same message may be placed differently across providers even when authentication is correct.
Inbox placement testing helps observe these outcomes under real mailbox conditions rather than relying solely on technical validation. Check your domain’s inbox placement rate
Recipient behavior and address validity directly affect deliverability over time. Messages sent to invalid or low-quality addresses can negatively impact sender reputation and increase filtering.
Common list quality issues include:
Poor list hygiene can lead to repeated delivery errors, which are monitored by receiving mail servers and factored into future message evaluation. Verifying recipient addresses before sending helps reduce these risks and supports consistent delivery outcomes. Here is the reference to the email list verification tool.
Email deliverability is best understood as a combination of technical validation, authentication, placement behavior, and recipient interaction. One-time checks help identify immediate issues, while long-term outcomes depend on consistent configuration and sending practices.