How do I get removed from the SEM Fresh blocklist?

Blocklists
SEM Fresh blocklist, SEM Fresh blacklist removal, new domain blocklist, Spam Eating Monkey Fresh, newly registered domain email blocked
Quick Answer
SEM Fresh flags newly registered domains and recent spam-like activity. Unlike reputation-based lists, it focuses on recency signals — so even clean new domains can be listed temporarily. Listings typically expire automatically once the triggering period passes and the spam-like activity stops. There is no manual delisting process.

SEM Fresh (by Spam Eating Monkey) is a real-time blocklist family that flags newly registered domains and recent spam-like activity. If your domain or IP is listed, some mail servers may temporarily delay, reject, or route your email to spam until the listing expires and the triggering activity stops.

What is SEM Fresh?

SEM Fresh is a set of automated, time-based blocklists operated by Spam Eating Monkey. Unlike reputation systems that track long-term sending behavior, SEM Fresh focuses on recent signals, such as:

  • Newly registered domains (common in short-lived spam campaigns)
  • IPs/domains observed sending to spam traps
  • Backscatter behavior (misconfigured servers generating non-delivery messages to forged senders)

Most SEM Fresh-style listings are designed to expire automatically after a defined period—often quickly—once the triggering behavior stops.

To confirm whether you’re listed, run a check with InboxAlly’s free Spam Database Lookup.

Why am I listed on SEM Fresh?

Common reasons include:

  • Your domain is newly registered (and falls into a “fresh domain” window like 0/5/10/15/30 days).
  • A compromised mailbox, API key, or script sent unexpected mail.
  • Your server hit a spam trap (often caused by poor list hygiene or purchased/old lists).
  • Backscatter: your mail server sent bounce messages with a null sender (MAIL FROM: <>) to addresses that didn’t originate the mail.
  • Shared infrastructure issues: another sender on the same shared IP/network triggered the listing.

SEM Fresh is heavily weighted toward recency—a sudden change in volume, targeting, or domain age can be enough to trigger it.

How do I get removed from SEM Fresh?

SEM Fresh generally does not offer manual delisting. Removal happens automatically after the list’s expiration rules are satisfied and the triggering activity stops.

Do this immediately:

  1. Verify the listing

    • Use Spam Database Lookup to see which SEM list you’re on (and whether it’s your domain, IP, or both).
  2. Stop the behavior that triggered the listing

    • Pause bulk or automated sending temporarily.
    • Check for compromise: review recent logins, API usage, SMTP activity, and any web forms/scripts that can send mail.
    • Review recent campaigns for sudden volume spikes, new lists, or new sending patterns.
  3. Reduce future trap/complaint risk

    • Tighten list hygiene (remove old/unengaged addresses; avoid questionable sources).
    • Monitor spam complaints and unsubscribe behavior closely.
  4. Wait for automatic expiration

    • Once sending is clean, most SEM Fresh-related entries clear on their own based on the list’s timer.

For ongoing monitoring inside InboxAlly, use Domain Reports to track domain reputation and related signals over time.

SEM blocklists and typical expiration rules

BlocklistWhat it listsExpiration / removal rules
SEM-FRESHZERONewly registered domains (typically registered in the last 24 hours)Automatically removed after 24 hours
SEM-FRESHDomains registered in the last 5 daysAutomatically removed after 5 days
SEM-FRESH10Domains first registered in the last 10 daysAutomatically removed after 10 days
SEM-FRESH15Domains first registered in the last 15 daysAutomatically removed after 15 days
SEM-FRESH30Domains first registered in the last 30 daysAutomatically removed after 30 days
SEM-BACKSCATTERIPs sending mail to a spam trap with a NULL sender (MAIL FROM: <>)Removed after 15 days without further backscatter activity
SEM-BLACKIPs sending mail to a spam trapRemoved after 15 days without further spam activity
SEM-IPV6BLIPv6 addresses sending mail to a spam trapRemoved after 15 days without further spam activity
SEM-NETBLACKNetworks identified as having persistently low reputationEntries do not expire automatically
SEM-URIDomains and URIs detected in the body of email sent to a spam trapRemoved after 30 days without being seen again

Note: SEM Fresh is operated by Spam Eating Monkey. You can read more on their public site: https://spameatingmonkey.com/

How does SEM Fresh affect deliverability?

If you’re listed, impacts are usually immediate but temporary, such as:

  • Deferrals (temporary delays) while the receiving server evaluates risk
  • Rejections (bounces) from servers that enforce SEM lists strictly
  • Spam folder placement due to elevated risk signals

Because SEM Fresh is time-based, deliverability often improves soon after:

  • the triggering activity stops, and
  • the listing expires.

If deliverability problems continue after expiration, it usually indicates an underlying issue (compromise, list quality, authentication gaps, or ongoing complaint rates) that needs remediation.

Frequently Asked Questions

I received an error mentioning spameatingmonkey.net. What does it mean?

It typically means the receiving server checked Spam Eating Monkey data and found your domain or sending IP listed on one of their blocklists (including SEM Fresh variants).

How long does a listing last?

It depends on the specific list:

  • “Fresh domain” lists expire in 1–30 days based on domain age windows.
  • Trap/backscatter lists commonly require ~15–30 days without repeat activity.
  • Some entries (like SEM-NETBLACK) may not expire automatically.

Can I request removal?

In most cases, no—SEM Fresh-style lists are automated and clear based on time and observed behavior.


For a broader walkthrough of what to fix and how to recover, see Blocklist Impact and Remediation.