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How to Clean an Email List You Inherited

Inherited lists are risky because you usually do not know how they were collected, maintained, or last cleaned. Here is how to review them safely.

If someone hands you an email list, the first rule is simple:

do not treat it like a trusted send file yet.

Inherited lists come with missing context:

  • how they were collected
  • whether consent was clear
  • when they were last used
  • whether they were ever cleaned properly

Step 1: do not send immediately

The fastest way to hurt deliverability is to assume an inherited list is healthy.

Treat it as unverified data until you have evidence otherwise.

Step 2: understand what you inherited

Before cleaning, ask basic questions:

  • How old is the list?
  • Where did it come from?
  • Has it been used recently?
  • Was it ever maintained consistently?

Even partial answers help you interpret what you will find.

Step 3: clean before first use

Run the list through MailCull and get a status breakdown before any campaign touches it.

That lets you:

  • remove undeliverable
  • isolate risky
  • decide whether the remaining list is strong enough to use

Step 4: restart cautiously

Even after cleaning, inherited data deserves a careful restart. Use smaller sends first and watch the outcome instead of assuming the whole audience should be blasted immediately.

Evaluate an inherited list with MailCull →

Keep reading

Read next Email List Cleaning for E-Commerce: Protect Your Campaigns and Save on ESP Costs For ecommerce teams, list hygiene is not just a technical task. It directly affects campaign reach, cost, and revenue confidence. Also read Why Purchased Email Lists Are a Bad Idea A practical look at why bought lists damage deliverability and why organic growth beats shortcuts.