# How to Warm Up a New Email Domain Without Getting Flagged URL: https://warmerly.com/blog/warm-up-new-email-domain-without-getting-flagged Published: 2026-03-04 Reading time: 9 minutes Tags: Warmup, Domains, Deliverability > A practical guide to warming a brand new sending domain in 2026: authentication checklist, realistic ramp curves, the signals receivers track, and the early warnings that mean you should slow down. A fresh domain is a blank slate, and not in the way most founders hope. Gmail, Outlook, and Yahoo all treat domains under 30 days old with deep suspicion, and any single misstep in the first fortnight can attach a negative reputation that sticks for months. The fix is not magic, it is patience, plus a handful of technical steps performed in the right order. This piece walks through how to warm a new domain from purchase to first cold campaign without tripping the bulk-sender heuristics that send most rookies to the junk folder. ## Start with domain age, not warmup software Receivers weight domain age heavily. A domain registered yesterday with a perfectly tuned DMARC record will still be filtered more aggressively than a five-year-old domain with a sloppy SPF record. If you have the option, buy your sending domains two to three weeks before you need them. Park them with valid MX records pointing at your mail provider and let the WHOIS age tick over. Avoid buying expired domains for outreach. They carry the reputation of whoever sent from them last, and that history is opaque to you. A clean new registration beats a cheap aged domain with mystery baggage. ## The authentication checklist, in order Configure these before a single warmup message leaves your mailbox. Order matters because DMARC alignment depends on SPF and DKIM passing, and any reordering creates false positives in your reports. 1. MX records pointing at your mail provider. Confirm with dig MX yourdomain.com. 2. SPF as a single TXT record at the apex. Keep DNS lookups under 10. End with ~all in production. 3. DKIM with a 2048-bit key, published at the selector your provider issues (often google._domainkey or selector1._domainkey). 4. DMARC at _dmarc.yourdomain.com starting at p=none with rua reporting to a mailbox you actually read. 5. MTA-STS policy file at https://mta-sts.yourdomain.com plus the corresponding TXT record. Gmail and Microsoft increasingly use this as a maturity signal. 6. TLS-RPT at _smtp._tls.yourdomain.com so you find out when TLS negotiation fails with a partner. 7. A reverse DNS (PTR) record on the sending IP, if you control it. Shared-pool senders skip this. Once the records are live, send a single message to a Gmail address you control and open the original headers. SPF, DKIM, and DMARC must all read PASS. Alignment mode matters too: strict alignment means the From header domain must exactly match the SPF and DKIM domains, while relaxed permits an organisational match. Most cold senders are fine on relaxed, but know which you have configured. ## Realistic ramp curves The single biggest mistake new senders make is ramping volume too fast. Receivers do not just look at total volume, they look at the rate of change. A spike from 5 to 50 sends in a single day looks like a compromised account, even if the absolute numbers are tiny. A safe ramp for a brand new domain looks roughly like this: - Days 1 to 3: warmup peers only, 5 to 10 messages a day. - Days 4 to 7: 15 to 25 warmup messages a day, replies and spam recovery active. - Days 8 to 14: 30 to 50 warmup messages a day, mixed across at least two recipient providers. - Days 15 to 21: continue warmup at 40 to 60 a day, send your first 5 to 10 cold messages a day in parallel. - Week 4 onward: scale cold sending by no more than 20% per week while keeping warmup running at reduced volume. These figures assume one mailbox. If you run multiple mailboxes on the same domain, the per-mailbox volume stays the same but the domain-level total grows, and Gmail watches domain totals at least as closely as per-mailbox ones. ## Signs of trouble, and what to do about them Catch problems early and you can pull the ramp back before reputation calcifies. Watch these signals daily: - Gmail Postmaster domain reputation dropping from High to Medium. Pause cold sends for 48 hours, keep warmup running. - Spam-folder rate above 8% in your warmup tool. Reduce volume by half and audit content for link-to-text ratio. - Bounce rate above 2% on cold sends. Stop sending and re-verify your list. - Complaint rate (Postmaster feedback loop) above 0.10%. This is the line at which Gmail accelerates filtering. - Sudden absence of DMARC aggregate reports from a previously-reporting provider. Often means your messages stopped passing alignment. If two or more of these trip in the same week, your domain is in trouble. Stop cold sending entirely, keep warmup running for at least 14 days, and only restart outreach when Postmaster reads High and your warmup health score sits above 80. > **The patience principle** — Two extra weeks of patience at the start saves three months of recovery later. Treat the first fortnight of a new domain like onboarding, not a launch. Most warmup tools, Warmerly included, will automate the day-by-day cadence above and surface the warning signals on a single dashboard. Whichever tool you pick, the underlying principle does not change: domains earn trust slowly, and lose it quickly. **Keep going** - [Email warmup explained: what it is and why it works](https://warmerly.com/blog/email-warmup-explained) - [Email warmup best practices for an established domain](https://warmerly.com/blog/email-warmup-best-practices) --- Source: https://warmerly.com/blog/warm-up-new-email-domain-without-getting-flagged Full content index: https://warmerly.com/llms-full.txt Site index: https://warmerly.com/llms.txt