The5ers uses Mailchimp as their primary email service provider. They rank #51,161 in the Tranco list of most-popular domains. Their email authentication setup is good (score 80/100).
Authentication signals observed in this brand's emails. SPF, DKIM and DMARC are the standard sender-authentication stack — see the DMARC policy below for whether spoofing is actually blocked or just monitored. One-click unsubscribe meets Google & Yahoo's bulk-sender requirements.
SPF / DKIM / DMARC above reflect the last 3 emails we've observed. DMARC policy is read live from DNS.
DMARC reports sent to the5ers.com. Policy
p=quarantine means receivers actively block or quarantine spoofed mail.
SPF alignment: observed emails use a third-party return-path (mail140.sea51.mcsv.net, mail235.wdc02.mcdlv.net, mail45.atl31.mcdlv.net) — SPF passes there but doesn't align with the5ers.com, so DMARC has to rely on DKIM alignment.
DKIM alignment: all 7 observed emails sign with a domain aligned with the5ers.com (the5ers.com). DKIM authenticates the visible From — supports DMARC directly.
2 of 3 emails in the last 7 days were delayed beyond 5 minutes (67%) — peaks past 15 minutes are well outside healthy sender behaviour. Slow sends averaged 16 min, peaked at 19 min. Healthy senders deliver in under 30 seconds. Consistent delays usually mean greylisting, reputation-based throttling, or receiver-side filter scrutiny — worth investigating sender reputation and authentication setup.
Brands often use multiple ESPs (e.g. one for marketing, another for transactional/notifications).
None — only the primary ESP(s) shown aboveESPs we've seen sending email for this brand. Green = confirmed by SPF, sender IP rDNS, or known infra pairing (label shows the source). Grey = observed but not yet confirmed by SPF or PTR.
ESPs this brand has authorized in their SPF record. We confirm them with a green ✓ only after seeing recurring use (3+ emails across 2+ days). Until then they stay here — either we haven't observed any email yet, or we've seen a handful but not enough to call them a regular sender for the brand.
Probed: the5ers.com, mail140.sea51.mcsv.net, mail235.wdc02.mcdlv.net, mail45.atl31.mcdlv.net, mail168.atl81.rsgsv.net
Folder distribution across all emails from this brand observed in Gmail inboxes. High inbox % = good deliverability; spam appearances are the headline signal.
| Folder | Count | Share |
|---|---|---|
| inbox | 7 | 100.0% |
Which ESP's emails are landing where. Sorted by spam % so problem senders surface first. Brands using one ESP for marketing and another for transactional often see very different placement profiles per ESP. Per-ESP folder data only started being captured recently — counts here may be smaller than the total above until backfill catches up.
| ESP | Emails | Placement | Inbox % | Tabs % | Spam % |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mailchimp | 7 | 100.0% | 0.0% | 0.0% |
Daily observations per ESP. Brands often run multiple ESPs concurrently — marketing on one, transactional on another — so this chart shows usage rather than switches.
IP addresses the5ers.com has been observed sending from, and where their mail landed in Gmail.
| Domain | ESPs detected | Delivery (7d) |
|---|---|---|
the5ers.com | Mailchimp 8 | 🐌 2/3 significant delay (avg 12 min, peak 19 min) |