My emails went to Promotions or Spam — what it means & what to do
If your campaign landed in Promotions or Spam, don’t panic — in almost every case this is a reputation/content question, not a broken setup.
Promotions ≠ Spam
Section titled “Promotions ≠ Spam”Gmail’s Promotions tab is the correct, intended destination for opt-in marketing email. Recipients still see it; it’s simply filed under the tab Gmail created for exactly this kind of mail. Landing in Promotions is success, not a problem to fix.
Spam is different — that’s where you want to avoid. The most common cause on a new domain is simply that the domain hasn’t built reputation yet. See Why new sending domains warm up.
Why this happens
Section titled “Why this happens”On a new sending domain, mailbox providers don’t yet trust your mail. Combined with the fact that marketing content naturally trips more filters than a 1:1 personal email, early campaigns commonly land in Promotions or Spam until reputation builds.
It is not caused by:
- A MailMonk misconfiguration
- A broken SPF/DKIM/DMARC setup (these are verified — see Authentication)
- A problem with the underlying sending service
What to do about it
Section titled “What to do about it”- Confirm it’s actually Spam, not Promotions. Promotions is fine — no action needed.
- Send to engaged people first. Opens, clicks, and replies from real recipients teach Gmail your mail is wanted and pull future sends toward the inbox.
- Ask a few recipients to mark it “Not spam” / drag it to Primary. A handful of these signals early on helps significantly.
- Tighten your content. Avoid heavy image-only emails, trigger-word stacking, and ALL-CAPS. See Content best practices.
- Keep the list clean. Bounces and complaints hurt placement fastest. See List hygiene.
- Give it time. Placement improves over the first few weeks as reputation builds. This is the expected curve, not a stall.