TL;DR
A dedicated IP gives you full control over reputation but demands volume and constant warmup. A shared IP spreads cost and warmup across many senders but ties your fate to strangers. Here is where each one wins for cold email in 2026.
The Core Deliverability Tradeoff
The decision comes down to control versus shared risk, and both directions cut two ways.
With a dedicated IP, you own every signal. No stranger can spike complaints and drag you into a blocklist. But you also have nothing to hide behind. A bad week is fully attributable to you, and a brand new dedicated IP with zero history looks suspicious to filters until you prove yourself.
With a shared IP, an established pool already carries warm, trusted history. A small sender benefits from volume they could never generate alone. The downside is obvious: if a co-tenant gets reported or hits a spam trap, the whole IP can land on a blocklist and your mail suffers for a decision you did not make.
| Factor | Dedicated IP | Shared IP |
|---|---|---|
| Reputation control | Full | Partial (blended) |
| Co-tenant risk | None | High in unmanaged pools |
| Cold start | Slow, you build from zero | Fast, inherits pool history |
| Blame for problems | Always you | Diluted, but you still pay |
| Volume needed to stay warm | High and consistent | Low, pool keeps it active |
| Recovery from a hit | Yours to fix | Depends on the operator |
Major mailbox providers have steadily reduced how much raw IP reputation weighs in filtering, leaning instead on domain and authentication signals. Google documents reputation at the domain and IP level in Postmaster Tools, and the practical reading across 2025 testing is that domain reputation now drives most cold email outcomes. That shift makes the dedicated versus shared IP question less decisive than it was five years ago, though it still matters at the extremes.
The Volume Thresholds Where a Dedicated IP Makes Sense
A dedicated IP only stays trusted if it sends enough consistent mail for providers to model its behavior. Send too little and the IP looks dormant, then suspicious when it suddenly wakes up. This is the single most important number in the decision.
The rough industry guidance, echoed by deliverability vendors like Validity, is that a dedicated IP wants a steady floor of volume to maintain a stable reputation. Below that floor, a shared IP is almost always the better choice because the pool keeps the address active for you.
| Monthly send volume | Recommended model | Why |
|---|---|---|
| Under 20,000 | Shared / provider managed | Not enough volume to keep a dedicated IP warm |
| 20,000 to 100,000 | Shared or provider managed mailboxes | Pool history outweighs the control benefit |
| 100,000 to 500,000 | Borderline, depends on consistency | Dedicated works if volume is steady, not spiky |
| 500,000+ | Dedicated IP | Volume is high enough to hold reputation, control matters |
For cold email specifically, almost nobody sends enough from a single IP to justify dedicated infrastructure. Cold campaigns spread small daily volumes across many mailboxes and domains on purpose, to stay under per mailbox limits and to isolate risk. That sending pattern is the opposite of what a dedicated IP rewards. See our cold email sending volume limits guide for the per mailbox numbers that shape this.
The takeaway: a dedicated IP is a tool for high volume, single stream transactional or marketing mail. Cold outreach is a low volume, high distribution pattern, so the provider managed mailbox model fits it far better.
How to Decide and Protect Your Reputation Either Way
Run through this short checklist before paying for dedicated infrastructure.
- 1Estimate steady monthly volume. If you are not reliably above several hundred thousand messages a month from one stream, a dedicated IP will struggle to stay warm.
- 2Check whether your volume is consistent or spiky. Dedicated IPs punish gaps. Cold campaigns with on and off cadences are a poor fit.
- 3Decide who you trust to manage reputation. A reputable provider managed setup means Google or Microsoft polices the IP range, which removes the co-tenant nightmare of an unmanaged pool.
- 4Confirm your authentication is solid. SPF, DKIM, and DMARC are table stakes now regardless of IP model. Our DNS setup guide covers the records.
- 5Set up monitoring. Whatever model you choose, watch blocklists and reputation continuously. See email deliverability monitoring setup.
Protecting reputation looks the same on either model: validate lists to keep bounces low, keep complaint rates under control, warm gradually, and watch for blocklist hits early. InboxKit's InfraGuard runs blacklist checks every six hours, watches DNS, and auto pauses sending when something looks wrong, so a problem gets caught before it compounds.
The honest summary for most cold email teams: skip the dedicated IP. Run real mailboxes on trusted provider IPs, spread volume across domains, and put your energy into domain reputation and list hygiene where it actually pays off.
Frequently Asked Questions
Almost never. Cold email uses low per mailbox volume spread across many mailboxes and domains, which is the opposite of the high steady volume a dedicated IP needs to stay warm. Real mailboxes on provider managed IPs fit cold email far better.
As a rough guide, a dedicated IP wants a steady floor in the hundreds of thousands of messages per month from a single stream. Below that the IP looks dormant and reputation cools. Shared or provider managed IPs are better for lower volume.
It depends on the pool. An unmanaged shared SMTP pool is risky because a co-tenant who hits a spam trap or gets reported can land the whole IP on a blocklist. Provider managed ranges from Google and Microsoft are policed centrally, so the risk is much lower.
Less than it used to. Major providers now weigh domain reputation and authentication more heavily than raw IP reputation. IP still matters at the extremes, but for cold email your domain is the reputation asset that moves outcomes.
A new dedicated IP needs two to four weeks of carefully ramped volume to build history, and it must keep sending consistently to stay warm. Provider managed IPs inherit trusted history, so you only warm your domains and mailboxes.
Sources & References
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