Domain Domains are destinations on the internet that are controlled by individuals or organizations. Searchers look for domain names by entering the address or a keyword in a browser’s search bar. For instance, Mailgun’s domain name is mailgun.com. Companies send emails from their domains. ...
For example, v=spf1 include:domain1.com include:mailgun.org include:domain3.com ~allIf you’re using a subdomain, add a new TXT record with mail.yourdomain.com as the hostname (with certain providers, you may just have to enter the subdomain, which would just be mail in this case...
Choosing the right domain name might seem obvious - your company is X, so why shouldn't your domain be X as well? Well, depending on how you're looking to use Mailgun, implementing just the right level of nuance can make a significant difference on the effectiveness of your configu...
If your domain has no DMARC record, hackers can more easily spoof an email address that is attached to your domain name.At Mailgun, when adding a domain to your account you are required to add DKIM and SPF records – both of which help to indicate where the domain is allowed to send ...
Enables configuring multiple domains without registering the service each time for a domain. Should'nt have breaking changes. My tests seem all good.
1) Login to the Mailgun control panel and select the Domains section. 2) Select any domain that is in the orange “unverified” state. 3) In the Domain Verification & DNS section, locate the records with the red warning indicator. 4) In the DNS administration tool provided by your DNS ...
Mailgun just got better for client management. Get the details on the new IP Pools and Domain Sending Keys features. Read more...
You can only use one email server to receive messages for a given domain name. When it's a domain configured in your Mailgun account, it could be either Mailgun or Google/other servers, but not both. Both is bad; servers get confused. Don't do both. However, you can use the same...
Why am I still going to the spam folder if I’ve warmed up my domain and IP? 06 IP and domain warm-up with Mailgun What is an email warm-up process? You might already be familiar with the need forwarming up a new IP, and domains are much the same. Still, it’s important to ...
When you get set up to send in Mailgun, you add the DNS records for each of your domains so that your emails are clearly sent from that domain. That way, the domain reputation of yourdomain1.com can be kept separate from the domain reputation of yourdomain2.com. Things like domain ag...