Email Content Spam Test Tool (Free)
There are many reasons why your emails end up in the spam folder: SPF, DKIM, and DMARC records, domain reputation, warmup process, list quality, and email signature configuration are some of the most critical technical factors.
If you're not familiar with these topics or haven't set them up yet, check out this guide first: How to Prevent Your Emails from Going to Spam
You've done all the technical setup, warmed up your accounts, and optimized your sending infrastructure — but your emails might still be landing in spam. At that point, the problem is usually the content itself.
This tool analyzes your email subject line and body content, measures the risk of triggering spam filters, and gives you a spam score out of 100. It's optimized for the signals used by Gmail, Outlook, and Yandex.
How to Run an Email Spam Test
Running a spam check with this tool takes about 10 seconds:
Enter subject line
Paste email body
Click "Analiz Et"
The tool will list detected spam words, highlight risky phrases directly in your text, and give you an overall spam score out of 100.
What Does This Spam Checker Do?
The tool analyzes your email content across 7 critical categories:
⏰ Urgency / Pressure
"act now", "last chance", "hurry" — harmless alone, but multiple triggers raise flags.
💰 Financial Promises
"earn money", "passive income", "no fees" — common in B2C emails.
🎁 Free / Discount
"free", "discount", "gift card" — too many in one email creates risk.
🎣 Clickbait
"click here", "you've been selected", "incredible" — classic patterns.
🛡️ Trust Manipulation
"100% guaranteed", "no risk", "not spam" — biggest red flags.
💊 Health / Diet
"lose weight", "miracle pill" — extra caution needed.
⚠️ Threat / Fear
"account will be closed", "security alert" — phishing patterns.
Additionally checks capitalization ratio, exclamation marks, emoji density, link count, and currency symbols.
How Is the Spam Score Calculated?
The spam score is determined by keyword density within categories, subject line risk (double weight), formatting patterns, and link/promotion density.
80–100
Low risk. Your email will likely reach the inbox.
60–80
Moderate risk. Optimization recommended.
0–60
High risk. Content should be revised.
Why Do Emails Go to Spam?
Spam filters don't just scan for individual words. They evaluate content patterns, subject line signals, sender reputation, user engagement history, and technical authentication (SPF, DKIM, DMARC) together.
This tool analyzes the content and subject line signals — the parts you can control before hitting send. For the technical side, check out the spam prevention guide.
7 Rules to Keep Your Emails Out of Spam
Security
Keep Your Emails Out of Spam
Check your content before sending. Reduce spam risk, reach the inbox.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is an email spam test?
An email spam test analyzes your subject line and body content for spam trigger words, formatting issues, and risk patterns. Running one before sending helps you identify problems that could route your email to the spam folder.
Why is my email going to spam?
The most common reasons are excessive spam trigger words, low domain reputation, missing SPF/DKIM/DMARC configuration, and low user engagement. This tool checks the content side — for technical setup, refer to the spam prevention guide.
Does this tool store my data?
No. The analysis runs entirely in your browser (client-side). Your subject line and email content are never sent to any server, stored, or shared.
What score is considered good?
80 and above means low risk — your email will most likely reach the inbox. 60–80 is moderate risk. Below 60 is high risk and your content should be revised.
Does it work for Turkish emails?
Yes. The database contains over 250 spam words and phrases in both Turkish and English. Mixed-language emails are also analyzed for triggers in both languages.
Which spam words are the most risky?
The highest-risk categories are urgency/pressure ("last chance", "acil"), financial promises ("earn money", "pasif gelir"), and threat/fear language ("your account will be closed"). Subject line usage doubles the penalty.
Does using a spam word guarantee my email goes to spam?
No. Modern filters evaluate overall tone, sender reputation, engagement history, and technical infrastructure together. However, multiple spam words from the same category significantly increases risk.