Emails do not go to spam for one reason. They go to spam when the receiving side does not trust the sender, message, audience, or sending pattern enough to place the email in the inbox.
Why are my emails going to spam? Emails usually go to spam because the receiving system does not trust the sender, domain, message, or sending behavior enough to place the message in the inbox. Common causes include weak sender reputation, poor authentication, high spam complaints, bounces, bad lists, aggressive volume, misleading content, and poor engagement.
Expert sources used in this guide: Google's sender guidelines FAQ, Google email sender guidelines, Twilio SendGrid on non-human opens and clicks, Twilio SendGrid deliverability guidance, Apache SpamAssassin, and FTC CAN-SPAM guidance.
When emails start going to spam, most teams ask the wrong question first.
They ask, "What word triggered the filter?"
That question feels useful because it gives the team something visible to fix. Remove a phrase. Rewrite the subject line. Make the email shorter. Take out a link. Stop saying "free." Sand down the message until it sounds like every other cold email ever written by a committee afraid of its own shadow.
Sometimes content is part of the problem.
But spam placement is rarely just a word problem.
Emails go to spam because the receiving side is making a trust decision. That decision is shaped by sender reputation, domain history, authentication, complaint patterns, bounce behavior, sending volume, list quality, recipient engagement, filtering systems, and the message itself.
The email may be sent. It may even be accepted by the receiving server. But that does not mean it landed where a human being had a fair chance to see it.
That is the distinction teams miss.
Sending is not the same as landing.
Delivered is not the same as inboxed.
And inbox placement is not a decorative metric. It is the condition that determines whether the rest of the campaign can even be judged fairly.
Email Deliverability Is a Trust Problem, Not Just a Spam Filter Problem
Spam filtering is not just a mechanical checklist looking for forbidden words.
It is a trust system.
Receiving providers are trying to answer a practical question: should this message be placed where the recipient is likely to see it, or should it be filtered, buried, quarantined, or rejected?
That decision depends on patterns.
Does this sender authenticate properly? Does this domain have a history of good behavior? Do recipients complain? Do messages bounce? Does volume spike strangely? Do people engage? Does the content accurately represent who sent it and what is being offered? Does the sender behave like a disciplined business communicator, or like a machine trying to force pipeline through every mailbox that still answers?
The receiving side is not grading your intentions.
It is grading your behavior.
Data point: Google tells senders to keep user-reported spam rates below 0.1% and avoid reaching 0.3% or higher. Google also says spam rates above 0.1% can negatively affect inbox delivery for bulk senders, and rates at or above 0.3% have an even greater negative impact. Source: Google Workspace Admin Help.
That is a small margin.
A campaign does not need to make half the market angry to create a deliverability problem. A small complaint pattern, repeated at scale, can become a signal that changes how future email is treated.
Email Deliverability: Spam Folder vs. Inbox Placement
The phrase "going to spam" is useful, but it can also be too narrow.
The real issue is inbox placement.
An email can land in the spam folder. It can also land in promotions, quarantine, a low-priority folder, or some buried place where the recipient is unlikely to act. From the sender's side, those outcomes may all look like the same problem: weak engagement.
That is how teams misdiagnose performance.
Low replies may look like weak copy.
Low opens may look like a bad subject line.
Thin pipeline may look like a weak offer.
But the message may simply be landing where the buyer is unlikely to see it.
Simple rule:
If the email does not land where the recipient can see and trust it, the campaign is not getting a fair test.
That is why deliverability diagnosis should come before copy diagnosis. If inbox placement is weak, the team is not judging the message under honest conditions.
Cause 1: Weak Email Authentication
Authentication is the technical proof layer behind email trust.
It helps receiving systems verify that the sender is allowed to send on behalf of a domain. The core standards are SPF, DKIM, and DMARC.
SPF helps identify which servers are authorized to send for a domain. DKIM helps verify that a message was signed by the domain and was not altered in transit. DMARC tells receiving systems what to do when authentication fails and gives the domain owner reporting visibility.
Google's sender guidelines identify SPF, DKIM, and DMARC as important authentication requirements for senders. Source: Google Workspace Admin Help.
Authentication does not guarantee inbox placement. But broken or misaligned authentication creates doubt before the message is judged on its own merits. And that doubt has consequences beyond a single send. When authentication fails consistently, it becomes a negative signal that compounds over time, quietly eroding sender reputation before the team realizes anything is wrong. A domain with a strong sender reputation can absorb occasional friction. A domain with weak or broken authentication starts every send at a disadvantage.
What to check Is SPF configured for every system sending on behalf of the domain? Is DKIM enabled and aligned? Is DMARC published and monitored? Are third-party tools properly authorized?
- Did authentication break after adding a new sending tool?
If authentication is broken, fix that before rewriting copy.
Cause 2: Poor Sender Reputation
Sender reputation is the accumulated judgment attached to a sending identity.
It is shaped by behavior over time: bounces, complaints, engagement, list quality, volume consistency, authentication, and whether the sender looks like a legitimate business communicating with discipline.
A strong sender reputation gives email cleaner conditions. A weak sender reputation injects friction before the recipient ever evaluates the message.
This is why emails end up in the spam folder even when the copy has not changed.
The message may be the same, but the sender identity is not being treated the same way anymore. Once enough negative signals accumulate, the spam folder becomes the default destination regardless of what the email says.
What to check Did performance decline gradually before the spam problem became obvious?, Did send volume increase quickly?, Are some domains or mailboxes performing worse than others?, Are spam complaints increasing?, Are replies and positive engagement declining?, and Are emails being ignored at higher rates?
Sender reputation is not a badge you buy. It is behavior made visible over time.
Cause 3: High Bounce Rates, Bad Lists, and Email Deliverability Problems
Bad lists are one of the fastest ways to teach providers not to trust you.
Every hard bounce tells the receiving side something about list quality. A few bounces happen in any real system. A pattern of bounces says the sender may not know who they are emailing.
That pattern damages sender reputation. Receiving systems track bounce behavior over time, and a sender that consistently mails invalid or stale addresses starts to look like one that does not know its audience or does not care. That signal accumulates.
That is why bounce handling is not just database hygiene.
It is reputation management.
If a system keeps sending to invalid addresses, stale contacts, guessed emails, or poorly sourced leads, the campaign can damage the sending environment while still looking active in the CRM. And once sender reputation takes a hit from bad list behavior, it does not recover the moment the list is cleaned. The damage follows the domain and the sending identity forward.
What to check Are hard bounces suppressed immediately?, Are invalid addresses being removed before campaigns launch?, Did the list source change before performance dropped?, Are contacts stale, scraped, guessed, or poorly enriched?, Are unsubscribed contacts fully suppressed?, and Are duplicate and bad-fit records entering the sequence?
Sending more to a bad list is not scale. It is just a faster way to damage trust.
Cause 4: Spam Complaints and Email Deliverability
Spam complaints are one of the clearest signals that recipients do not want the mail they are receiving.
That does not always mean the company is doing something malicious. Sometimes the targeting is sloppy. Sometimes the message is misleading. Sometimes the CTA is too aggressive. Sometimes the recipient has no idea why they received the email.
But from the receiving side, the complaint still matters.
It is direct negative feedback.
If complaints rise, the sender's future emails may start from worse conditions.
What to check Are complaints concentrated by campaign, list source, domain, or mailbox?, Does the subject line accurately match the body?, Is the sender identity clear?, Does the recipient understand why they received the message?, and Is the opt-out process clear and honored quickly?
When complaints rise, it is worth examining where they are concentrated. Are they tied to a specific campaign, a particular list source, a domain, or a mailbox? Patterns in complaint data often point directly at the source of the problem, which makes them more useful than aggregate numbers alone. Beyond the data, the message itself deserves scrutiny. Does the subject line accurately match what is in the body? Is the sender identity clear enough that the recipient knows who sent the email and why? If the recipient cannot quickly understand why they received the message, confusion turns into distrust, and distrust turns into complaints. The opt-out process matters too. If unsubscribing is difficult, buried, or slow to take effect, recipients who would have quietly left instead reach for the spam button. That complaint is a direct signal to receiving systems, and it negatively impacts inbox placement for every future send from that identity. A campaign that misleads, confuses, or traps recipients is not just losing a lead; it is quietly degrading the inbox placement conditions under which every future email will be judged.
Cause 5: Aggressive Sending Volume
Volume changes the conditions of delivery.
A mailbox that behaves normally at low volume may become suspicious when it is pushed too hard. A domain that looks stable at one pace may start creating risk signals when a team suddenly doubles send volume. A campaign that was barely healthy can become unhealthy quickly when leadership decides the answer is "more activity."
That is the problem with brute-force outbound.
It assumes deliverability stays constant while volume rises.
It does not.
The harder a team pushes a weak system, the faster it exposes the weaknesses underneath. Mailboxes get stressed. Domains absorb risk. Placement slips. Replies slow down. Then the team blames the subject line.
That is not optimization. That is stomping on the gas while the engine is coughing.
What to check Did volume increase before emails started going to spam?, Are too many emails going through too few mailboxes?, Are new mailboxes warmed and paced?, Are daily and hourly limits respected?, and Is routing based on sender health, or is the system sending blindly?
Healthy scale preserves trust while increasing capacity. Pressure just pushes harder and hopes nothing breaks.
Cause 6: Misleading or Spammy Content Patterns That Hurt Email Deliverability
Content still matters.
But content problems are usually pattern problems, not single-word problems.
A word like "free" is not automatically fatal. The bigger issue is the pattern around it: fake urgency, exaggerated claims, manipulative personalization, misleading subject lines, too many links, unclear sender identity, or a CTA that pressures the recipient instead of clarifying the next step.
Apache SpamAssassin describes filtering as a scoring framework that can evaluate headers, body content, statistical patterns, DNS blocklists, collaborative filtering databases, and other signals. Source: Apache SpamAssassin.
That means the system is not merely asking whether one word appeared. It is evaluating the email inside a broader trust environment.
What to check Does the subject line accurately represent the message?, Is the sender identity clear?, Does the email explain why the recipient is getting it?, Are urgency and claims factual?, Are links visible and understandable?, Is there one clear CTA?, and Is the opt-out easy to find and honor?
Each of these checkpoints is a small trust decision that shapes whether the email lands in the inbox or gets filtered before anyone sees it. The subject line should open the door, not disguise itself as a trap. If it promises something the body does not deliver, the recipient feels misled, and that feeling turns into a complaint. The sender identity needs to be clear enough that the recipient immediately understands who sent the email and why it is arriving in their inbox. If that context is missing, confusion follows, and confused recipients reach for the spam button faster than disinterested ones. The email should explain why the recipient is receiving it. That one sentence of context reduces distrust significantly. Urgency and claims need to be factual. Artificial scarcity and inflated promises are not just persuasion tactics that wear thin; they are signals that receiving systems and recipients both learn to distrust over time. Links should be visible and understandable. A recipient who cannot tell where a link goes before clicking it is a recipient who does not click, and one who may flag the message instead. There should be one clear call to action. Multiple competing asks dilute intent and make the email feel like a pressure campaign rather than a communication. The opt-out should be easy to find and fast to honor. When unsubscribing is buried or slow, recipients who would have quietly left instead report the message as spam. That complaint is a direct negative signal to receiving systems, and it degrades inbox placement not just for that send but for every future send from that identity. These are not just compliance checkboxes. They are the behavioral signals that determine whether the receiving side treats the sender as a legitimate communicator or a source of noise, directly impacting your overall inbox placement.
Cause 7: Noisy Opens and Misread Metrics
When emails are going to spam, teams often turn to opens and clicks to diagnose the issue.
That can help, but only if those metrics are interpreted carefully.
Open and click data can be affected by privacy systems, security filters, prefetching, and non-human activity. That does not make the metrics useless. It means they should not be treated as perfect evidence of human attention.
Measurement note: Twilio SendGrid documents that aggressive spam filters can open messages and click links before delivery, and some email providers prefetch opens. That means open and click engagement can include non-human activity. Source: Twilio SendGrid.
If the team reads noisy engagement data as clean truth, it may fix the wrong thing. It may rewrite the subject line when the real issue is inbox placement. It may blame the body copy when the audience is bad. It may celebrate clicks that came from security systems instead of buyers.
Opens and clicks are clues.
They are not the verdict.
Cause 8: Compliance, Trust Issues, and Email Deliverability
Compliance does not guarantee inbox placement, but careless compliance behavior can damage trust — and trust problems compound quickly, especially when a team is scaling outbound as part of a go to market push.
The FTC says commercial email must avoid false or misleading header information, avoid deceptive subject lines, include a valid physical postal address, and provide a clear opt-out mechanism. Source: Federal Trade Commission.
That is not just legal housekeeping.
It is trust hygiene.
When a go to market motion depends on email to reach new markets, compliance shortcuts create risk that outlasts the campaign. If the message misrepresents who sent it, hides the purpose, makes opt-out difficult, or borrows the tone of a fake account alert to create panic, the campaign may earn short-term attention while quietly damaging the sender reputation that future campaigns depend on.
That is a terrible trade.
A team building a go to market strategy around outbound email cannot afford to treat compliance as a legal formality. The receiving side does not distinguish between intentional deception and careless execution. Both produce the same signal: this sender cannot be trusted.
Run a Deliverability Check
If your emails are going to spam, do not start by randomly rewriting the email.
Run a deliverability check first.
Check these areas in order:
Authentication: Are SPF, DKIM, and DMARC configured and aligned?
Inbox placement: Are messages landing in the inbox, spam, promotions, quarantine, or another folder?
Sender reputation: Are domains and mailboxes being trusted less over time?
Complaints: Are user-reported spam rates increasing?
Bounces: Are hard bounces suppressed quickly?
List quality: Are recipients valid, relevant, current, and likely to care?
Volume: Are mailboxes paced, warmed, and protected from overload?
Routing: Are emails sent through the healthiest available path?
Content: Is the message clear, truthful, calm, and easy to act on?
Measurement: Are opens and clicks being interpreted carefully?
This order matters because infrastructure can distort every other signal.
If the email is landing in spam, the copy may not be getting a fair chance. If the list is bad, the offer may not be getting a fair test. If opens are noisy, the subject line may be taking blame for a metric that cannot carry that conclusion.
The goal is not to make email more complicated.
The goal is to make the problem more honest.
Where Glowbox Fits
Glowbox exists because many teams keep fixing the visible layer while the hidden delivery layer keeps damaging inbox placement.
The CRM, campaign, and copy may stay the same. But underneath them, the sending environment may need better protection, routing, pacing, monitoring, and reputation management. When inbox placement is weak, the campaign is not getting a fair test — and no amount of subject line revision or sequence restructuring will fix that.
Glowbox strengthens the delivery layer underneath the tools teams already use, so campaigns reach the inbox before the team judges the audience, message, sequence, or offer.
It is not a magic meeting machine. It is not a replacement for strategy. It does not fix bad targeting or a weak offer.
But if emails are going to spam because the infrastructure layer is weak, that is exactly where the diagnosis should start.
Run a Deliverability Check
If your emails are going to spam, start underneath the campaign. Check authentication, inbox placement, sender reputation, complaints, bounces, list quality, volume, routing, content, and measurement before changing tactics.
About the author: Isaac Carter
Key Takeaways for Email Deliverability
Emails usually go to spam because of trust problems, not one magic spam word.
Inbox placement matters because delivered does not always mean seen.
Authentication, sender reputation, bounces, complaints, volume, and list quality all affect deliverability.
Content should be clear, truthful, calm, and easy to act on.
Open and click metrics can be noisy, so use multiple signals when diagnosing spam placement.
Run a deliverability check before rewriting the campaign.
Deliverability is not a detail to revisit after launch. It belongs in your go to market strategy from the start, before the first sequence is built and before the first email is sent.