Uncategorized IP Reputation vs. Domain Reputation: What’s the Difference? By MailChannels | 3 minute read When your emails don’t reach the inbox, one of the first things to check is reputation—but is the problem your IP address or your domain name? In this post, we’ll break down the difference between IP reputation and domain reputation, how they work together, and how to fix issues with either one. What Is IP Reputation? IP reputation is the trust score assigned to the IP address used to send your email. This score reflects the past behavior of that IP and helps mailbox providers decide whether to deliver or block your messages. If your IP sends spam or is on blocklists, it can ruin your deliverability—even if your content and domain are clean. Good IP reputation = better chance of inbox placement. What Is Domain Reputation? Domain reputation is the trust score associated with the From: domain in your emails (e.g., yourdomain.com). This reputation is based on: How your domain is authenticated (SPF, DKIM, DMARC) Sending volume and consistency User engagement (opens, clicks, replies) Spam complaints Whether your domain is used in phishing or spoofing attacks Even with a clean IP, a bad domain reputation can still send your email to the spam folder. Key Differences at a Glance AttributeIP ReputationDomain ReputationBased onSending IP’s past email behaviorYour domain’s sending history and identityEvaluated byMailbox providers & blocklists (e.g. Spamhaus, Talos)Mailbox providers (e.g. Gmail, Outlook)Tied toServer/relay infrastructureSending identity (your brand)Can be reset byChanging IP addressDifficult to reset—follows domainAffectsShared IP pools, SMTP errorsBrand trust, phishing flags Why You Need to Monitor Both Many hosting providers and email platforms focus only on IP reputation—especially in shared environments. But domain reputation now plays an even bigger role, especially with Gmail, Yahoo, and Outlook. You may encounter: ✅ Clean IP, bad domain → spam folder ❌ Bad IP, clean domain → bounce (e.g., “550 5.7.1 blocked”) ❌ Both bad → total delivery failure Pro Tip: Think of IP as your car, and domain as your driver’s license. Both need to be valid to reach your destination. Diagnosing Reputation Problems Here’s how to figure out which one is the problem: Check IP reputation: Talos Intelligence MxToolbox Blacklist Check Microsoft SNDS Check domain reputation: Google Postmaster Tools Senderscore.org (also includes IP data) Inbox placement monitoring tools (e.g., MailMonitor, GlockApps) How to Improve IP & Domain Reputation Here’s a dual-layer strategy: For IP Reputation: Use SPF, DKIM, and DMARC properly Avoid sending spam or marketing to unverified lists Monitor for abuse (especially on shared IPs) Use MailChannels SMTP Relay to isolate and filter bad senders For Domain Reputation: Use a custom domain for all mail (avoid @gmail.com or @outlook.com as sender address) Ensure authentication records (SPF/DKIM/DMARC) align with your envelope and From: domain Avoid domain hopping—stick to one domain and build its reputation slowly Watch user engagement—remove inactive subscribers Why MailChannels Protects Both With MailChannels Smart Host: Emails are routed through IP pools with strong reputations Abuse detection prevents bad senders from damaging your shared IPs ResponseAnalytics gives insight into both bounce codes and reputation issues Our system ensures authentication is set up correctly to boost domain trust See how MailChannels helps manage deliverability → Final Thoughts To achieve consistent email deliverability, you must protect both your IP and domain reputation. Ignoring either can lead to spam folder placement, bouncebacks, or even permanent damage to your sending ability. Keep Learning What Is IP Reputation? And Why It Matters How to Check If Your IP Is Blacklisted Best Practices to Protect Domain Reputation