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How Gmail and Outlook Decide if Your Email Goes to Spam

Gmail and Outlook look at sender reputation, authentication, engagement, and list quality when deciding inbox placement.

Gmail and Outlook do not make inbox decisions based on one single signal. They look at a mix of reputation, authentication, user behavior, and list quality.

What matters most

Sender reputation

If your domain or sending setup has a history of bounces, complaints, or erratic volume, inbox placement gets harder.

Authentication

SPF, DKIM, and DMARC are foundational. If those are missing or broken, trust drops quickly.

Engagement

If people open, click, reply, and keep your emails, that helps. If they ignore or complain, that hurts.

List quality

Sending to bad addresses creates bounce signals that providers notice immediately.

What you can control

You cannot control every provider decision, but you can control the basics:

  • keep authentication healthy
  • send consistently
  • avoid sudden volume spikes
  • make unsubscribe easy
  • clean the list before important sends

MailCull fits the list-quality part of this workflow. It helps you remove the clearly bad addresses that cause preventable bounce damage.

Clean a list before the next send in 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.