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Soft Bounce vs Hard Bounce: What's the Difference and What to Do

Soft bounces are usually temporary. Hard bounces are usually permanent. Here is how to tell them apart and respond correctly.

Not every bounce means the same thing.

If you treat temporary delivery issues the same way you treat dead addresses, you make bad cleanup decisions. If you ignore hard bounces, you hurt reputation and waste sends.

Hard bounces

A hard bounce is usually a permanent failure.

Common reasons include:

  • mailbox does not exist
  • domain does not exist
  • address is malformed

The important part is the action: these addresses usually should not stay in future sends.

Soft bounces

A soft bounce is usually temporary.

That can happen because of:

  • a full inbox
  • a temporary server issue
  • message-size limits
  • short-term throttling

A soft bounce is frustrating, but it does not automatically mean the address is bad forever.

Why the distinction matters

Hard bounces are a stronger negative signal for sender reputation because they suggest poor list quality.

Soft bounces still matter, but they usually call for monitoring and retry logic, not immediate removal.

The practical response

  • remove or suppress addresses that hard-bounce
  • monitor repeat soft bounces across sends
  • clean your list before campaigns so obvious hard-bounce candidates never get sent in the first place

Where MailCull fits

MailCull helps on the prevention side.

It catches many of the issues most likely to create hard bounces later:

  • broken syntax
  • typo domains
  • disposable providers
  • domains without viable mail setup

That does not eliminate every delivery problem, but it reduces the avoidable ones before they hit your campaign report.

Reduce future hard bounces 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.