Email best practices

Why every email sender should care about TLS and STARTTLSĀ 

TLS is no longer ā€œnice to have.ā€ It’s the norm for secure, trustworthy email delivery. By enabling and enforcing STARTTLS, you make sure your emails don’t just arrive – they arrive securely.Ā 
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September 29, 2025

When you click send on an email campaign, you probably imagine it shooting straight into your customer’s inbox. In reality, email takes a more complicated path. Your message hops from one server to another, crossing networks you don’t control, until it finally reaches its destination. 

And here’s the catch – if those connections aren’t encrypted, your message is essentially a postcard. Anyone handling it along the way – internet providers, compromised routers, even malicious actors – could read or modify the contents. 

Now think about what kinds of messages you’re sending: 

  • Order confirmations with customer detailsĀ 
  • Password reset linksĀ 
  • Marketing emails tied to customer identitiesĀ 

Would you be comfortable sending that on a postcard? Probably not… 

This is where TLS comes in. 

What is TLS? 

Transport Layer Security (TLS) is a protocol that encrypts the connection between email servers. Think of it like sealing a letter in an envelope before it’s sent through the postal service. TLS ensures that your emails travel in that sealed envelope – hidden from prying eyes, protected from tampering, and delivered with the trust your brand depends on

When both the sending and receiving servers support TLS, messages are transmitted securely. This protects sensitive information, maintains customer trust, and helps ensure compliance with privacy standards. 

Why does TLS matter for email senders? 

Email isn’t just a marketing channel anymore, with businesses sending invoices, verifying identities, resetting passwords, and communicating sensitive details. Every one of those messages deserves protection in transit. TLS helps in five key ways: 

Protects privacy and security 

Without TLS, your email can be intercepted, read, or even altered by anyone who has access to the network between servers. This could be an ISP, a compromised router, or a bad actor performing a ā€œman-in-the-middleā€ attack. 

With TLS, the connection is encrypted. Even if someone does intercept the traffic, all they see is scrambled data they can’t read. 

Pro tip: A password reset email without TLS could expose a login link to an attacker. With TLS, that link is safely encrypted until it reaches your recipient. 

Builds trust with your audience 

Customers are becoming more aware of digital security. If they discover your brand sends emails without encryption, it reflects poorly – even if nothing malicious happens. 

Some email clients and providers even display security indicators (like a padlock icon) when TLS is used. These subtle cues reinforce that your brand is professional and trustworthy. 

Supports compliance requirements 

Regulatory frameworks like GDPR, HIPAA, and industry standards such as PCI DSS expect that businesses take reasonable steps to protect personal data in transit. TLS is considered the baseline. 

Failing to use TLS doesn’t just put your recipients at risk – it could also put you out of compliance, leading to fines, audits, or contractual issues with partners. 

Improves deliverability and reputation 

Mailbox providers (like Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook) care about the security of their ecosystems. If you send without TLS, some providers may deprioritize your messages, flag them as less secure, or in some extremely rare cases, reject them. 

Meanwhile, consistent TLS usage signals to providers that you’re a legitimate sender who values secure practices. That can help your sender reputation and improve inbox placement. 

Defends against downgrade attacks 

Without enforced TLS, attackers can sometimes trick servers into downgrading to plaintext delivery. This leaves your message exposed, even if both parties support TLS. 

By configuring STARTTLS with enforcement, you block this risk. Your email is either delivered securely or not delivered at all there’s no insecure middle ground. 

STARTTLS: Taking the next step 

By default, many email servers try to use TLS if both sides support it, but if TLS isn’t available, they’ll fall back to unencrypted delivery. That means your emails could still be traveling like postcards. 

STARTTLS is an email protocol command that tells an email server to switch from an unencrypted connection to an encrypted one using TLS. And importantly, you can configure your system to enforce STARTTLS – requiring that all emails to a given domain are encrypted, or else not delivered. 

As mentioned, this prevents downgrade attacks, where a bad actor forces the connection to drop back to insecure delivery. 

What do I need to do?  

The good news for senders is that most modern ESPs and security standards now require TLS 1.2 or higher (including Mailjet) and don’t require any action on your behalf. This means you’re already operating on a secure baseline. However, some platforms still accept TLS 1.0 and 1.1, which are considered outdated and less secure. If you manage your own infrastructure, make sure your servers support TLS 1.2 or higher.  

Conclusion

TLS is no longer optional. It’s the standard for protecting your recipients, your brand, and your deliverability. By enabling and enforcing STARTTLS, you ensure that your emails aren’t just delivered, but delivered securely.Ā 

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