Deliverability
Mar 6, 2026
Why Your Cold Emails Land in Spam (And How to Fix It)
Your cold emails land in spam because of broken authentication, poor domain reputation, or list quality issues - not your copy. Here's exactly what to check and how to fix it.

Your cold emails land in spam because of technical infrastructure failures, not bad writing. The three main culprits are broken email authentication (SPF, DKIM, DMARC), sending from new or damaged domains, and emailing invalid or unengaged addresses. Fix the infrastructure first - then worry about copy.
Why Do Email Providers Send Cold Emails to Spam?
Email providers like Gmail and Microsoft Outlook use machine learning systems to filter messages before they reach the inbox. These systems evaluate dozens of signals - but the most heavily weighted ones are sender reputation, authentication signals, and engagement patterns.
If your domain is new, if authentication records are misconfigured, or if previous campaigns generated high spam complaint rates, providers treat your emails as a risk - regardless of what the email says.
This means you can write the best subject line of your career and it still won't matter if the envelope it's in is flagged.
What Is Email Authentication and Why Does It Matter?
Email authentication is a set of technical protocols that prove to receiving mail servers that you are who you say you are. The three you need:
SPF (Sender Policy Framework): A DNS record that lists which mail servers are authorized to send email from your domain. Without it, your domain can be spoofed and is treated as untrustworthy.
DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail): A cryptographic signature attached to each email that verifies the message wasn't tampered with in transit. It's a trust signal.
DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance): A policy that tells receiving servers what to do if SPF or DKIM fails - quarantine, reject, or monitor. Without DMARC, you have no control over how spoofed emails using your domain are handled.
All three must be configured correctly. One missing or misconfigured record can land your entire sending infrastructure in the spam folder. Check your full deliverability setup with this framework.
How Does Domain Reputation Affect Deliverability?
Domain reputation is a score that email providers assign to your sending domain based on historical behavior. It's influenced by:
Spam complaint rates (above 0.1% triggers action from Gmail)
Bounce rates (above 5% signals a dirty list)
Engagement rates (low open rates tell providers your emails aren't wanted)
Sending volume spikes (suddenly going from 10 to 1,000 emails/day looks like a compromised account)
New domains start with no reputation - which is actually a disadvantage. Providers are cautious with unknown senders. This is why sending from a brand-new domain without a warmup period almost guarantees spam placement.
The solution is domain warming - gradually increasing send volume over time to build a reputation before scaling. Most guides tell you this takes 4-6 weeks. Lidgen's pre-warmed infrastructure eliminates that wait, so you can start sending at scale from day one without the deliverability risk.
How Does List Quality Impact Spam Placement?
Your email list is a deliverability factor, not just a targeting factor. Here's why:
If you send to invalid addresses, emails bounce. High bounce rates signal to providers that you're not maintaining your list - a behavior associated with spammers.
If you send to spam traps (email addresses specifically set up by providers to catch bulk senders), your domain gets blacklisted.
If you send to people who never engage, low engagement signals tell providers your emails are unwanted - and they start filtering them accordingly.
The fix: Verify every list before sending. Use an email verification tool to remove invalid addresses. Segment by engagement and suppress contacts who haven't opened in 90+ days. List hygiene directly impacts your deliverability and bottom line - it's not optional maintenance.
The Spam Audit: What to Check Right Now
Run through this in order:
1. Authentication check Use MXToolbox or Google Admin Toolbox to verify SPF, DKIM, and DMARC are all set up correctly for every sending domain.
2. Blacklist check Check your sending domains and IPs against major blacklists (MXToolbox Blacklist Check covers 100+ databases). If you're listed, request delisting and identify what caused it.
3. Spam score test Use Mail Tester or GlockApps to send a test email and get a spam score with specific failure reasons.
4. List hygiene audit Run your list through a verification tool (ZeroBounce, NeverBounce, or similar). Remove invalid, disposable, and catch-all addresses before your next send.
5. Engagement audit Segment your list. If a portion of contacts haven't engaged with anything in 60-90 days, suppress them from active campaigns before sending again.
The Infrastructure Problem Most Teams Don't Know They Have
Most B2B sales teams use one or two domains for all their cold outreach. That's a concentration risk.
If that domain gets flagged - even temporarily - your entire outbound operation stops. No pipeline. No meetings. No revenue.
Infrastructure diversity - sending across multiple warmed domains and IPs - is what separates teams that scale outreach reliably from those that constantly fight deliverability fires. Here's why infrastructure diversity is a non-negotiable for outreach at scale.
Lidgen manages this layer for you: multiple pre-warmed sending domains, real-time monitoring, and immediate alerts if any sending asset shows reputation degradation - so you never wake up to find your campaigns silently failing.
FAQ
Why do my cold emails go to spam even with good copy? Spam filtering is primarily driven by technical signals - domain reputation, authentication, and engagement history - not content. If your emails have great copy but still land in spam, audit your infrastructure before changing your messaging.
How do I check if my emails are landing in spam? Send test emails to seed accounts across Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo using a tool like GlockApps or Mail Tester. These tools show exactly where your emails are landing and what's causing issues.
How long does it take to fix a domain reputation problem? Minor reputation issues can improve in 2-4 weeks with clean sending behavior. Serious blacklistings or spam trap hits can take 4-8 weeks and may require switching to a new sending domain entirely.
Tired of fighting deliverability fires? Lidgen's infrastructure is pre-warmed, monitored, and built so your emails land where they're supposed to - in the inbox. Book a demo to see it in action.