This article covers what spam traps are, how they affect email deliverability in Keap™, and best practices for keeping a list free of spam trap addresses.
Spam traps are special email addresses used by mailbox providers, blacklist operators, and anti-spam organizations to detect senders with poor list quality or bad email practices. A spam trap looks like a valid email address but does not belong to a real person and is never used for legitimate communication. Its only purpose is to identify senders who are not following email list management best practices.
There are three main types of spam traps:
1. Pristine Traps
Definition: Addresses created solely as traps, often hidden on web pages or placed in locations where they should never be collected legitimately.
Purpose: To identify senders who purchase lists or scrape websites.
2. Recycled Traps
Definition: Addresses that were once valid but have been abandoned and then reactivated by mailbox providers as spam traps.
Purpose: To identify senders who fail to remove inactive or unengaged contacts.
3. Typo Traps
Definition: Misspelled or malformed addresses, such as
me@mgail.con.Purpose: To identify senders with poor data collection or form validation practices.
Why Spam Traps Matter
Sending to spam traps can have serious consequences:
The sending IP address or domain may be blocked or blacklisted.
Emails may go directly to spam or fail to deliver entirely.
Sending to traps signals to inbox providers that contacts may never have opted in or are no longer engaged.
The severity of the impact depends on the trap type, how frequently the trap address is hit, and which organization is operating the trap.
Identifying and Managing Spam Trap Risks
Spam traps cannot be reliably identified at the individual email address level — anti-spam organizations intentionally prevent this. The most effective approach is to prevent trap addresses from entering the list and to remove high-risk contacts proactively.
Key best practices:
List Hygiene — Regularly remove unengaged contacts. Pristine and typo traps never engage, and recycled traps typically show no engagement for six months or more.
Engagement-based Management — Suppress or remove contacts with no opens or clicks over a defined time period.
Confirmed Opt-In — Confirm subscriptions to reduce typo addresses and ensure genuine interest.
Permission-Only Sending — Only email contacts who have explicitly opted in. Never use purchased, shared, or outdated lists.
Automated List Management — Use Keap's Automated List Management tools to streamline suppression and contact cleanup.
Summary
Spam traps are not the root problem — they are a symptom of poor list acquisition or weak list maintenance. By focusing on engagement, permission-based collection, and proactive hygiene, the risk of sending to spam traps is significantly reduced and overall deliverability improves.
Recommended External Resources
The following third-party services provide professional guidance and tools for improving email deliverability and list quality:
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Email deliverability consulting and software
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List cleaning
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Form security
Frequently Asked Questions
What does this article cover?
This article covers the three types of spam traps, why hitting spam traps damages email deliverability, and best practices for preventing trap addresses from entering a Keap contact list.
Can spam trap addresses be identified in a contact list?
No. Anti-spam organizations intentionally prevent spam traps from being identified at the individual address level. The best protection is prevention — using confirmed opt-in, maintaining list hygiene, and suppressing unengaged contacts before they become a risk.
What happens if a spam trap address is emailed?
Consequences vary based on the type of trap and how often it is hit. Potential outcomes include IP address or domain blacklisting, emails being filtered to spam, or emails failing to deliver at all.
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