Email Deliverability
7 Reasons Cold Emails
Hit Spam(And Quick Fixes)
Moving beyond simple mail-merge to create truly unique and impactful outreach at scale.
Nukesend Team
Author
August 13, 2025
Published
12 min read
Read Time

Let’s be real — sending cold emails can feel like playing darts in the dark. You spend time crafting the perfect message, hit send, and then… silence. Or worse, you find out your cold emails are landing in the spam folder.
That stings. Especially when you know your outreach could actually help the person on the other end.
Here’s the kicker: most of the reasons cold emails hit spam are avoidable. But it’s not about guessing — it’s about understanding how spam filters work, what email providers monitor, and how to build a sustainable cold outreach engine that delivers results.
In this guide, we’ll break down the 7 most common reasons cold emails go to spam, explain the technical and behavioral triggers behind each, and walk you through actionable fixes based on the latest 2025 email deliverability benchmarks.
Let’s clean up your outreach game.
1. You're Not Warming Up Your Email Domain
Why Cold Outreach Needs a Warm-Up
If you’re launching a new domain or a fresh email account and jumping straight into cold outreach, you’re walking on thin ice. ESPs (Email Service Providers) like Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo have sophisticated filtering systems that watch every move you make. A sudden spike in email volume from a new or inactive domain is a glaring red flag.
Think of your sender reputation like a credit score — you have to build trust over time. Without history, even a well-written message can be treated as spam. This is especially critical if you’re using a custom domain like yourbrand.io or company.tech.
Moreover, if you skip warm-up and get hit with a high bounce rate or spam complaints early on, your domain can get blacklisted. That’s a death sentence for email campaigns.
Quick Fix: Warm Up Your Domain Slowly
Start small. In the first week, send no more than 10–20 cold emails per day. Gradually increase the volume over the next 2–4 weeks, reaching 100–150/day only when engagement metrics (opens, clicks, replies) are healthy.
Use warm-up tools like:
- Lemwarm
- Mailreach
- Warmup Inbox
- Mailwarm
These platforms simulate real human interactions and build your reputation naturally.
Also, be aware: ESPs often throttle or filter emails when daily cold outreach exceeds ≈150 emails/day, especially for new accounts.
Bottom line? Treat your email domain like a muscle — don’t sprint without stretching.
2. Spammy Subject Lines Trigger Filters Instantly
Why ESPs Hate Overhyped Subject Lines
Subject lines are one of the first things spam filters scan. If your subject screams "marketing email," it’s going to get flagged.
Spam filters use natural language processing (NLP) to identify phrases and patterns historically associated with spam. Words like:
- “Act now”
- “Double your income”
- “100% free”
- “Urgent deal”
...are associated with scams, phishing attempts, or mass marketing and increase your spam score.
The problem is, even when you think you’re writing catchy subject lines, they can come across as disingenuous or pushy.
Quick Fix: Use Calm, Curious Language
The goal of a subject line is not to sell — it’s to spark curiosity or create relevance.
Instead of “Boost Your Revenue 10X — Limited Time,” try:
- “Quick question about your hiring process”
- “Your recent blog caught my eye — quick thought”
- “Idea to reduce your churn by 15%”
Keep it:
- Under 50 characters
- Relevant to the recipient
- Personalized with a name or company detail if possible
This not only avoids spam filter triggers in cold outreach, but also increases your open rates. And remember, with 50.9% of recipients never engaging with cold emails, you can’t afford to waste the first impression.
3. Your Email Copy Feels Like a Sales Pitch
When Cold Emails Sound Too Promotional
Here’s where most people trip up: they write cold emails like landing pages. But cold outreach isn't about instant conversion — it's about starting a relationship.
Spam filters don't just scan subject lines — they also scan body content for promotional signals. If your email sounds like a sales brochure, it’s toast.
Common mistakes include:
- Buzzwords like “guaranteed,” “exclusive deal,” or “best-in-class”
- Wall-of-text paragraphs with no whitespace
- Excessive use of images, bold fonts, or colored HTML
- Overuse of links or embedded tracking pixels
Not to mention the meeting request CTA that everyone uses — which, by the way, decreases conversion by ≈ 50% when used as a cold-first touchpoint.
Quick Fix: Write Like You Talk
Think of your email as a quick DM — not a proposal.
Use:
- Conversational tone
- 2–3 sentence paragraphs
- First-name personalization
- Simple, friendly closing lines
And never ask for a meeting on the first touch. Instead, try:
- “Open to a quick back-and-forth if this resonates — no pressure at all.”
Avoid excessive links in cold emails (one at most), and stay far away from attachments. These are classic cold outreach spam folder triggers.
4. You’re Missing SPF, DKIM, or DMARC Records
Why Authentication is a Must
Email authentication protocols are like digital passports that prove your email is legitimate. Without them, your emails are often treated as suspicious — or worse, spoofed.
Here’s what each does:
- SPF (Sender Policy Framework): Verifies that your sending server is authorized.
- DKIM (DomainKeys Identified Mail): Verifies message integrity.
- DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication): Tells receivers how to handle unauthenticated messages.
Missing any of these significantly increases your chances of cold emails being flagged as spam.
Quick Fix: Authenticate Your Domain
Check your DNS records using tools like:
- MXToolbox
- Google Admin Toolbox
- DMARC Analyzer
Make sure:
- SPF includes your sending service (e.g., SendGrid, Mailgun)
- DKIM has the right selector and key
- DMARC has a policy of at least “none” with a reporting address
This fix alone can dramatically improve cold email inbox placement.
5. You're Sending to Bad or Bought Lists
Bounce Rates Kill Your Sender Score
High bounce rates and low engagement scream “bad list.” If you're sending to outdated or bought email lists, you’re asking for trouble.
Even worse is scatter-gun outreach, where you email 10 people at one company hoping someone responds. That strategy not only reduces reply rates but also increases your chance of being flagged.
According to 2025 outreach guidelines, to avoid mass spam complaints:
- SMBs: Email no more than 1 contact every 30 days
- Mid-Market: Max 3 contacts per 30 days
- Enterprise: Max 5 contacts per 30 days
Quick Fix: Clean Your List, Segment Smartly
Use email verification tools like:
- NeverBounce
- ZeroBounce
- BriteVerify
Filter out:
- Invalid or inactive emails
- Catch-all and generic addresses
- Unengaged recipients after 3–5 non-opens
Also, build your list organically via LinkedIn, intent platforms, or opt-in content. This ensures higher sender score and better cold email deliverability.
6. You Forgot the Unsubscribe Link
Breaking the Law (And the Inbox)
The moment your email doesn’t offer an opt-out option, it crosses the line from professional outreach to potential violation of laws like:
- CAN-SPAM (U.S.)
- GDPR (EU)
- PECR (UK)
Besides the legal risk, it causes recipients to mark you as spam simply because they can’t unsubscribe. If your manual spam-report rate exceeds 0.1% (1 in 1,000 emails), you risk your domain getting throttled or blacklisted.
Quick Fix: Offer a One-Click Unsubscribe
Place a visible unsubscribe link at the end of your email. Make it clean and easy to use — don’t bury it in small fonts or confusing wording.
Here’s a simple line that builds trust:
- “Don’t want emails like this? Click here to stop receiving them — no hard feelings.”
You’ll reduce complaints and improve cold email compliance with GDPR and CAN-SPAM.
7. You're Overloading Emails with Links or Attachments
Looks Like Phishing, Gets Treated Like It
When spam filters see too many links or attachments, they associate it with phishing attempts or malware delivery — especially if you’re using shortened URLs or third-party tracking domains.
Also, if your emails get too long or overly formatted, it trips alarms.
Quick Fix: One Link, No Files, Light Threading
Stick to a single, clean link, ideally your company domain (e.g., yourcompany.com/blog/case-study). Avoid attachments — share resources via Google Drive or Notion if needed.
Keep email chains short. After 3 “Re:” replies, start a fresh thread with a new subject line. This avoids ESPs filtering long conversations into junk.
Plus, rotate your CTA — don’t ask for a call every time. Try value-driven actions like:
- “Would feedback like this be helpful?”
- “Want me to send a brief case study?”
This reduces cold email spam risk from repetitive requests.
Final Thoughts: How to Stop Cold Emails From Going to Spam
The inbox is still open for business — but only for senders who earn their spot.
If your cold emails are hitting spam folders, it's usually due to predictable mistakes. The key to fixing it isn’t magic — it’s a combination of:
- Solid technical setup
- Smart targeting
- Respectful, human outreach
Here’s your Cold Email Deliverability Checklist (2025):
- ✅ Warm up your domain for 2–4 weeks before outreach
- ✅ Stay under 150 emails/day
- ✅ Use plain-text or minimal HTML
- ✅ Authenticate with SPF, DKIM & DMARC
- ✅ Avoid spammy subject lines and buzzwords
- ✅ Keep CTAs light — avoid aggressive meeting requests
- ✅ Use only 1 link and no attachments
- ✅ Respect contact limits per company (1–5 max/month)
- ✅ Offer one-click unsubscribe
- ✅ Remove leads after 3–5 no-responses
With this approach, you’re not just avoiding the spam folder — you’re building trust, delivering value, and getting real conversations started.
Because at the end of the day, that’s what great outreach is all about.
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