Warming up an email domain is a critical process for ensuring high deliverability, building sender reputation, and avoiding the infamous spam traps that can tank your outreach efforts. Whether you’re launching a new email marketing campaign or setting up a new domain, a successful warmup strategy starts with having the right infrastructure in place.
This article takes a deep dive into what you need to check and configure to conduct an effective email warmup — without landing in spam traps. If you’re looking for a technical, yet accessible, guide—this one’s for you.
Why Email Warmup Matters
Jumping straight into bulk emailing from a cold domain is like trying to climb Everest without acclimatization — your emails will likely be blocked or flagged as spam. ISPs (Internet Service Providers) are fiercely protective of their users, and sudden email activity triggers red flags. Warmup helps establish a reputation as a trustworthy sender.
Unfortunately, many businesses start sending emails without proper configurations, accidentally triggering spam traps — invisible addresses used by inbox providers to catch spammers. Hitting these traps can blacklist your domain before your campaign even begins.
Infrastructure Checklist: The Foundation of Safe Email Warmup
Let’s explore the core components that should be set up before sending a single email. These steps are essential not only for deliverability but also for reputation building.
1. Choose the Right Domain
Never warm up your main business domain. Instead, use a subdomain (like mail.yourdomain.com
) or a brand-new domain specifically purchased for outbound emailing. This keeps your core domain safe from reputation damage if anything goes wrong during warmup.
- New Domain: Needs a longer warmup period (up to 8 weeks).
- Reputation history: Ensure it hasn’t been previously blacklisted.
2. DNS Configuration
Correct Domain Name System (DNS) settings not only authenticate your emails but are also critical to building a positive sender reputation. Configure the following:
- SPF (Sender Policy Framework): Specifies which mail servers are authorized to send emails on behalf of your domain.
- DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail): Ensures email content hasn’t been tampered with in transit.
- DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting, and Conformance): Tells receiving servers how to handle messages that fail SPF or DKIM checks.
- rDNS (Reverse DNS): Matches IP addresses with domain names. A mismatch can land your emails in spam.
- MX Records: Properly route emails if using replies or receiving emails from subscribers.
All these settings must be aligned between your email service provider (ESP) and your domain registrar.

3. Dedicated IP Address (Optional but Recommended)
When using a shared IP, your sender reputation might suffer due to other users’ actions. A dedicated IP gives you full control over your sending reputation. If using a dedicated IP, it must go through its own warmup process: start with fewer emails and gradually increase volume daily.
Note: Many popular ESPs only offer shared IPs unless you’re on an enterprise-level plan. In such cases, pick a provider with good deliverability stats.
4. Set Custom Tracking Domains
Link tracking in email campaigns often uses the ESP’s default domains, which may be blacklisted or flagged. To avoid this, use a custom tracking domain (e.g., links.yourdomain.com
) configured via CNAME records.
This small step adds much-needed authenticity to your email content and protects click tracking. It also helps avoid being penalized for someone else’s spam behavior on shared domains.
5. Monitor Blacklists Before Sending
Check if your domain or IP is on major real-time blackhole lists (RBLs) such as:
- Spamhaus
- SpamCop
- Barracuda
- SORBS
Use tools like MXToolbox or Talos Intelligence to monitor blacklist status. Starting warmup while being blacklisted ensures poor inbox placement.
How to Avoid Spam Traps During Warmup
Now that your infrastructure is set, it’s time to begin your warmup routine. But even with all safeguards in place, you can still fall prey to spam traps if you’re not careful.
1. Don’t Buy or Scrape Email Lists
This can’t be said enough times: purchased or scraped email lists are dangerous. Spam traps are often placed into such lists to catch offenders. Build your email contact base organically through permission-based methods.
2. Use Gradual Sending Patterns
Warmup schedules matter. Here’s a simple example for starting with a brand-new domain:
- Week 1: Send 10–30 emails/day, only to highly engaged users (e.g. colleagues, existing customers).
- Week 2: Increase to 50–100 emails/day, depending on response rates.
- Week 3 and beyond: Slowly reach your target volume while monitoring spam complaints and open rates.
Use email warmup tools that simulate real interactions like opens, clicks, replies, and moving emails from spam to inbox. These behaviors help ISPs trust your domain faster.

3. Send to Engaged Users First
Always start by emailing contacts who are likely to open and interact with your emails. High engagement rates signal a trustworthy sender to inbox providers.
Warmup is not just about sending more emails — it’s about sending good, wanted emails.
4. Validate Every Email Address
Even small numbers of invalid emails can lead to high bounce rates — a key indicator that you may be a spammer. Use email validation tools to scrub your list before sending.
Look for the following indicators:
- Syntax errors
- Disposable email addresses
- Role-based addresses (e.g. info@, support@, admin@)
5. Track Key Metrics Daily
Your goal with warmup is to show that people want your emails. Keep a close watch on benchmarks such as:
- Open rate (should be >20%)
- Click-through rate (CTR) (should be >2–5%)
- Bounce rate (should be <2%)
- Spam complaints (should be <0.1%)
Use these metrics to determine when it’s time to increase your volume — or slow down and recalibrate.
Final Thoughts: Infrastructure First, Emails Later
Email warmup is a strategic process that sets the tone for your sender reputation and future deliverability. But no amount of brilliant copywriting or exclusive offers will help if your technical foundation is flawed.
By getting your infrastructure right — from domain setup to DNS records, IP warmup, and monitoring — you’ll avoid spam traps and pave the way for long-term success.
And remember, warming up is not a one-time event. Continue to send relevant, valuable emails regularly to maintain your reputation over time.
So before hitting “Send,” double-check this checklist. A few upfront hours of setup will save you months of frustration later.
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Here’s to inbox visibility and a solid sender reputation!