HubSpot Email Deliverability Guide: Delivery, Acceptance, and Inbox Placement
If you send marketing or transactional emails through HubSpot, understanding delivery, deliverability, acceptance rate, and inbox placement is critical for reliable performance and ROI.
This how-to guide breaks down the key concepts behind email performance, using the same principles explained in the original HubSpot email deliverability article, and translates them into practical actions you can take today.
Key Email Terms Every HubSpot User Must Know
Before you improve your results, you need to understand the core metrics that shape email performance.
1. Email Delivery
Email delivery is the first step in getting your messages to recipients. A message is considered delivered when the receiving mail server accepts it from your sending service.
Common reasons a message may not be delivered include:
- Typos in the email address
- Domains that do not exist
- Receiving server is unavailable
- Recipient mailbox is full
When a message is not delivered for these reasons, you see bounces in your email reports.
2. Email Deliverability
Email deliverability refers to whether a delivered message actually lands where you want it to: usually the primary inbox, but sometimes a promotions or updates tab.
Deliverability is influenced by:
- Sender reputation and past behavior
- Recipient engagement (opens, clicks, replies)
- Spam complaints and unsubscribes
- Content quality and formatting
Good deliverability means most of your delivered messages make it to the inbox instead of spam or junk folders.
3. Email Acceptance Rate
Email acceptance rate measures how many messages are accepted by the recipient mail servers, compared to how many you attempted to send.
In practice, this metric shows how often other providers decide your mail stream is acceptable enough to pass into their systems. A low acceptance rate can indicate technical issues or strong filtering at the server level.
4. Inbox Placement
Inbox placement is the final outcome of your deliverability efforts. It tracks whether your email ends up in:
- The primary inbox
- Secondary tabs like Promotions
- Spam or junk folders
High inbox placement means that a large share of your delivered emails arrive where recipients are most likely to see and interact with them.
How HubSpot Users Can Improve Email Delivery
Improving email delivery is mostly about preventing avoidable bounces and hard failures at the server level.
Step 1: Maintain a Clean Contact List
Use these practices to keep your list healthy and reduce delivery issues:
- Remove invalid or bouncing addresses regularly
- Avoid purchasing or renting email lists
- Use clear, explicit opt-in methods
- Confirm addresses with double opt-in for high-value segments
A clean list helps receiving providers see your mail stream as lower risk, which supports better acceptance and future deliverability.
Step 2: Monitor Bounce Types
Review your bounce reports and separate:
- Hard bounces (permanent issues like fake or non-existent addresses)
- Soft bounces (temporary problems like full inboxes or server downtime)
Remove recurring hard bounces from your list and watch for patterns in soft bounces that may suggest server or configuration problems.
How HubSpot Senders Can Boost Deliverability
Deliverability hinges on your reputation as a sender and how recipients respond to your messages over time.
Step 3: Send Only to Engaged Contacts
Mailbox providers look closely at engagement signals such as opens, clicks, and replies. Improve those signals by:
- Targeting active subscribers instead of your entire database
- Suppressing long-term inactive contacts from regular campaigns
- Running re-engagement campaigns before removing disengaged contacts
Better engagement makes providers more likely to trust future messages from you.
Step 4: Align Content with Subscriber Expectations
People engage more often when your content matches what they expected at signup. To strengthen this connection:
- Clearly state what type of content and frequency subscribers will receive
- Deliver on those promises consistently
- Make subject lines accurate, not misleading
- Write concise, value-driven body copy
When recipients consistently find value in your emails, they are less likely to ignore, delete, or mark them as spam.
Step 5: Respect Frequency and Timing
Sending too often, or at erratic times, can quickly hurt your deliverability. To avoid this:
- Set a predictable sending cadence by list or segment
- Allow subscribers to choose their preferred frequency when possible
- Monitor unsubscribe and complaint trends after any schedule change
Stable and reasonable sending patterns contribute to a healthier reputation over time.
Maximizing Inbox Placement with HubSpot Best Practices
Once your messages are accepted and benefiting from solid deliverability, your focus shifts to landing in the right folder.
Step 6: Reduce Spam Triggers
Many spam filters use a combination of content signals and reputation data. You can reduce risk by:
- Avoiding excessive punctuation in subject lines
- Limiting all-caps and overly promotional language
- Providing a visible, easy-to-use unsubscribe link
- Using clear sender names and recognizable from-addresses
These simple changes make your messages look more like wanted communication and less like unsolicited promotion.
Step 7: Encourage Positive Recipient Actions
Mailbox providers weigh positive recipient behaviors heavily. You can nudge people to help your inbox placement by:
- Asking new subscribers to add you to their contacts or safe sender list
- Inviting readers to reply to certain messages with feedback or questions
- Creating content that naturally earns clicks and forwards
Each positive interaction helps counteract the occasional unsubscribe or spam complaint.
Ongoing Monitoring and Optimization for HubSpot Campaigns
Deliverability and inbox placement are not one-time projects. They require continuous attention.
Step 8: Track Core Metrics Over Time
Focus on trends instead of one-off sends. Watch for sustained changes in:
- Open rate and click-through rate
- Bounce rate by type
- Spam complaint rate
- Unsubscribe rate
Sudden drops in engagement or spikes in complaints are early warning signs that your deliverability may soon suffer.
Step 9: Test and Iterate on Subject Lines and Content
Use controlled tests to learn what your audience responds to best. For example:
- A/B test subject lines for clarity and relevance
- Compare short, scannable email formats to longer editorial styles
- Experiment with different calls to action and layouts
Incremental improvements in engagement accumulate into stronger inbox placement and more reliable performance across all campaigns.
Next Steps and Additional Resources
Strong email performance depends on understanding the relationship between delivery, deliverability, acceptance rate, and inbox placement, then adjusting your strategy to support each layer. By applying the practices above, you can protect your reputation, keep your list healthy, and send messages that recipients and mailbox providers want to keep seeing.
If you want expert support implementing these practices across complex funnels, you can explore consulting services from Consultevo, which specializes in advanced email and automation strategy.
For a deeper dive into the original concepts around delivery, deliverability, and inbox placement, review the full explanation in the HubSpot knowledge article on these topics.
Need Help With Hubspot?
If you want expert help building, automating, or scaling your Hubspot , work with ConsultEvo, a team who has a decade of Hubspot experience.
“`
