LashBack’s unsubscribe blocklist is a real-time list of IP addresses that appear to be sending mail to suppression-list addresses (i.e., addresses that should not be mailed because they previously unsubscribed). If your sending IP is listed, it’s a strong signal that unsubscribe/suppression handling is broken somewhere in your sending flow.
What is LashBack’s unsubscribe blocklist?
LashBack tracks IPs that send email to specially created, closely monitored email addresses (“unsubscribe probes”). These probe addresses are used only on suppression lists, so any mail sent to them suggests the sender is not honoring unsubscribe requests.
Key characteristics commonly associated with this list:
- IP-based: Listings are tied to the sending IP address.
- High volume / frequently updated: The list is large (often cited as ~1M IPs) and updated regularly.
- Focused on compliance: It’s specifically about mailing suppressed/unsubscribed addresses, not general spam content.
Why am I listed?
The most common reasons an IP ends up on LashBack are operational issues that cause mail to continue after an unsubscribe. Examples include:
- Suppression list not applied to one or more campaigns, segments, or automations.
- Multiple systems sending (ESP + CRM + internal tool) where one system doesn’t share suppression status.
- Unsubscribe events not syncing across tools (delays, failed webhooks, API errors).
- List imports that overwrite or ignore suppression flags.
- Using old lists or reactivating contacts without preserving historical unsubscribes.
What to check first:
- Confirm unsubscribes are being recorded correctly in your source of truth.
- Verify suppression is applied to every send path (broadcasts, automations, transactional where applicable).
- Audit any integrations or middleware that sync contacts and subscription status.
How do I get removed from LashBack?
LashBack typically allows manual delisting requests for an IP address, often free once every 30 days. The exact process can change, so follow the instructions on LashBack’s site for the current delisting procedure.
Before requesting removal, make sure you’ve fixed the underlying cause—otherwise you may be re-listed quickly. At minimum:
- Stop sending to suppressed/unsubscribed addresses immediately.
- Ensure suppression is enforced across all sending systems and integrations.
- Re-verify your unsubscribe handling end-to-end (unsubscribe → stored → synced → excluded from sends).
How does this affect deliverability?
A LashBack listing can contribute to deliverability problems such as:
- More mail going to spam (reputation impact tied to the listed IP).
- Reduced inbox placement across major mailbox providers.
- Increased filtering or throttling if providers interpret the behavior as non-compliant sending.
Because this list is about sending to suppression addresses, it can also be a sign of broader list hygiene and compliance issues that mailbox providers take seriously.
Monitor and prevent future listings with InboxAlly
- Use the free Spam Database Lookup to check whether your IP or domain appears on major blocklists.
- For ongoing monitoring inside InboxAlly, use Domain Reports (available in the InboxAlly app) to track domain reputation and authentication status over time.
Related guide: blocklist impact and remediation
For a step-by-step approach to diagnosing impact and fixing listings, see Blocklist Impact and Remediation.