How to Diagnose and Fix a Declining Email Open Rate
A diagnostic guide for modern marketers in a privacy-constrained world
Open rates aren’t dead — they’ve just changed. Thanks to Apple Mail Privacy Protection and similar tools, open rates have become less reliable, but they’re still useful when analyzed with nuance and in context.
If your open rates are trending down, this guide will walk you through what to check, why it’s happening, and how to fix it.
Step 1: Define “Decline” Correctly
First, confirm you’re seeing a real trend, not a blip.
Ask:
Is this drop isolated to one campaign or systemic across segments?
Did it start suddenly (technical issue) or gradually (engagement decay)?
Are you seeing the same drop in click-throughs or just opens?
Tip: Correlate with CTOR and conversions — if those are stable, it may be a tracking artifact, not an actual problem.
Step 2: Audit Your Deliverability
Most open rate issues are tied to inbox placement.
Check:
Bounce rate (hard and soft) — over 2% signals list issues
Sender reputation — use tools like Google Postmaster Tools or GlockApps
Spam complaints — anything over 0.1% is a red flag
Blacklist status — run your sending domain through MXToolbox
Fixes:
Warm up your sending domain if new
Segment out inactive users
Use double opt-in to improve list quality
Step 3: Evaluate Your Subject Line Strategy
Low open rates with good deliverability usually mean the subject line missed the mark.
Review:
Are you repeating the same formats or buzzwords?
Have you tested tone (e.g., casual vs. urgency)?
Is your preview text reinforcing — or confusing — the subject?
Use A/B testing to explore variations like:
Curiosity-driven vs. benefit-led
Personalized vs. broad
Short vs. long
Step 4: Optimize Send Time and Frequency
Over-sending leads to fatigue. Under-sending leads to forgettable brands.
Ask:
Are you sending too often to the same list?
Are you sending at the optimal time for your audience?
Test:
Time-based sends (e.g., Tuesdays at 10 AM)
Behavior-based sends (e.g., within 24 hours of site visit or cart view)
Step 5: Segment and Suppress Strategically
Mass sends drag down your averages and risk spam folder placement.
Improve targeting by:
Suppressing inactive users until reactivation
Prioritizing engaged segments
Using dynamic content blocks per user segment
Step 6: Adjust for Privacy-Skewed Tracking
If you have high opens but low clicks, Apple Mail Privacy may be inflating results.
Adapt by:
Focusing more on clicks and conversions
Comparing opens across like segments over time
Treating iOS opens as baseline noise, not absolute indicators
Litmus — device-level tracking and spam filter testing
Postmark — for transactional email and engagement analysis
Google Postmaster Tools — for Gmail deliverability insights
Final Takeaway
A declining open rate doesn’t always mean your emails are failing — but it’s always a signal worth exploring. Look at the data holistically, segment intelligently, and test with purpose.