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Did My Bounced Message Get There?

All the Places Email Can Fail

Return to Sender
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When an email message comes back to you because of a problem, exactly who did or did not get the message can be confusing.
Question: I sent four recipients an e-mail. As it turns out, I got a notice from MAILER-DAEMON that the address was not deliverable. I know it is because they changed their address, which I wasn’t aware of. Should the other three recipients have received the e-mail? This situation occurs once in awhile, because people don’t always tell quickly enough when they change addresses. So, my question in essence, like with tree lights, if one fails, do the others stay lit?

In your case, the message was probably delivered to the other three recipients.

In the general case, of course, things are never that simple.

Things also get more complicated because you are not guaranteed to get a bounce if something goes wrong.

Let’s look at the possibilities.

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TL;DR:

Did it get there?

Email takes a specific path on its way to your recipient’s inbox. Each step along the way can have its own type of error. Fortunately, errors, in the form of “bounce” messages, generally tell you what the error is and where it happened. In all cases, the details, if they exist, are revealed by paying close attention to those bounce messages.

Defining a “bounce”

You’ll hear the term “bounce” used a lot when discussing email. A bounce is nothing more than an email message that is sent back to the sender because of a problem delivering that message.

You send a message. It has a problem. You get an email back that tells you about that problem. The email you sent is referred to as having “bounced” back (whether or not the error email you get includes your original message).

The path email takes

The path of emailEmail makes several stops along its path from you to your recipients, and, of course, an error can happen at any point.

Exactly what an error means depends on at least two things:

  • Where in the path it happened.
  • The specific error.

The key in every case is to carefully read the error message for clues as to what broke and where.

Let’s look at a few examples.

Failures before email leaves

Some errors are generated by your email program when you press the Send button. These types of errors include anything that can be detected before sending, including a malformed email address, improper account configuration, or a misbehaving mail server.

In these cases, the mail never left your machine, and hence wouldn’t make it to any recipients.

Some email programs create their own “bounce” messages in this scenario. Rather than popping up an error message immediately, they manufacture a faux-bounce in the form of an email message placed in your inbox.

Failure getting to your mail server

By “your mail server” I mean the mail server your email program contacts when sending mail. Typically, that’s the “SMTP” server setting, and the configuration information will have been provided to you by your email service or ISP.

The three most common causes of failure when sending email at this stage are:

  • Bad account information, such as a bad username or password.
  • Bad account configuration, such as a bad mail server name, port, or security requirements.
  • Something about the message itself, such as some kind of early spam detection or size limits of some sort.

Regardless of whether it comes to you as an immediate popup or a bounce, the error message should tell you exactly what’s wrong. Read it carefully.

Failures at this stage prevent all copies of the email from being sent; the message still hasn’t left your machine.

Failures en route

Your mail server is responsible for taking the single message you’ve sent and sending it one at a time to each recipient. At this point, errors fall into two general buckets:

  • Your email server can’t contact the recipient’s email server.
  • The recipient’s email server refuses to take delivery of the message.

In the first case, you’ll usually get a bounce from your email server telling you it was unable to contact the remote server. The bounce message will come “From:” your mail server. Depending on the error, you may get the response immediately, or it can take several days for the mail server to give up.

In the second case, the bounce message may come either from your mail server or from the recipient’s mail server. In either case, the reason will be included in the message. Common problems include:

  • The recipient’s mail server thinks your email is spam.
  • The recipient’s mailbox is full (or “over quota“) and cannot accept more mail until it’s cleaned out.
  • The recipient’s email account has been closed, and no longer accepts mail.
  • You’ve typed the recipient’s email address in wrong.

Regardless of the reason, if the email has reached this point, each failure is per-recipient, meaning some of the emails will make it, and others — the ones that result in an error message back to you — will not. The key here is the error message will specifically reference one of the email addresses you attempted to send to. It’s that address that has the problem.

Confusing bounce messages

Bounce messages can be very confusing. There’s often a lot of technical gobbledygook making the message difficult to understand.

Please take the time to read it anyway. Quite often, the error will be buried within that mess: brush the mess aside and the reason for the failure becomes clear.

Unfortunately, sometimes bounce messages say the equivalent of “It didn’t work”, with no additional information as to why it didn’t work. When that happens, the best you can do is to use the information in the “From:” line of that message to see which server along the sending path generated the error. Use the information above to make an educated guess as to what might have gone wrong, and whether it’s something you can fix.

Missing bounce messages

Finally, it’s possible that your email is not delivered and you don’t get a bounce message at all.

The problem is spam. Since so much spam is sent to invalid or blocked email addresses, the load of sending bounce messages for every such message can become overwhelming. As a result, many email services elect not to send them at all.

There’s little you can do when this happens. If you suspect your email hasn’t made it through, about all you can do is ask your recipient — using a medium different than email!

Do this

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6 comments on “Did My Bounced Message Get There?”

  1. Not exactly on topic but let me try asking.
    I restored Win 7 on a neighbor’s computer (that she’d allowed MS to upgrade to 10).
    Everything works except my emails to her Road Runner email account don’t reach her. Other emails do.
    I don’t get an error message telling me of a bad delivery. I assume the emails got through … until I go back to her computer and find none of them in her Inbox or Junk box.
    I’m not in her Blocked senders. I’ve tried adding my email address in her Allowed senders but it won’t take. (Not concerned with this, just mentioning it in case that’s your suggestion.)
    Our concern is, who else is sending her email that’s not getting through?
    Ideas, anyone?

    Reply
      • If only there were a “Bad Delivery” message.
        No, it appears the email was delivered fine. But at the receiver’s end – and she’s using webmail, so client software can’t be responsible – the email just doesn’t appear. Not in Spam/Junk either.
        When an email is sent to both her RoadRunner and Gmail addresses, only the Gmail account receives it.
        I’m certain the RR address is correct, as I use “Reply” to an email I got from her RR account.
        It’s a puzzlement.

        Reply
  2. Emails sent to a distro list from a gmail account at a school gets a bounce back message that says “message rejected from _______@________.com” from all 302 members. How can I get this fixed?

    Reply
    • That bounce message probably had more details as to why. If not all we can do is assume that it looked too much like spam and consider rewording or carefully examining the message for spammy characteristics.

      Reply
    • Messages sent to a large number of recipients have a high chance of being labeled as spam. It might even be your Email Service Provider which refused to send the email as they have specific limits to how many recipients an email can be sent to, to prevent spam. You can use a bulk mailing service to sent to a distribution list. Leo uses Aweber for his newsletters and there is Mailchimp which is free for up to 2,000 subscribers and up 12,000 mailings per month.

      Reply

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