Product
Sinch Mailgun is introducing free DMARC reporting for all Mailgun senders on a paid plan through a new collaboration with Red Sift. This enhancement gives Mailgun users greater visibility into email authentication results to improve security, protect sender reputation, and increase email ROI. With email providers like Google and Yahoo tightening authentication requirements, this initiative helps senders meet industry standards while reducing phishing and spoofing risks.
Email authentication plays a key role in inbox placement and brand protection. Without authentication in place, cybercriminals can spoof a sender’s domain, damaging trust and reducing deliverability rates. DMARC, alongside SPF and DKIM, ensures that email servers verify the legitimacy of messages before they reach recipients.
Major providers like Google and Yahoo have made DMARC compliance a required factor in determining whether emails are delivered or marked as spam. The Mailgun/Red Sift partnership provides actionable insights to help senders diagnose authentication failures, adjust policies, and improve email performance – and according to our pros, it’s a good idea to set up DMARC monitoring now as DMARC policy enforcements will likely scale.
“Our Red Sift DMARC integration simplifies email security for all Mailgun customers. Providing DNS records on a single page makes implementation straightforward for teams of any technical level, and this partnership will help defend against email spoofing, improve deliverability, and best of all – protect brands.”
The new DMARC reporting feature gives senders clear visibility into authentication performance, including:
Senders looking to automate enforcement and strengthen protection can upgrade to Red Sift OnDMARC, unlocking advanced features such as:
Mailgun remains focused on providing senders with the tools they need to maintain deliverability and trust. Free DMARC reporting is a key step toward helping users navigate evolving email security standards and protect their domains from unauthorized use.