Custom email domain
Set up your own custom domain to interact with your customers.
By default, when Stripe sends invoices, receipts, and failed payment notifications to your customers, it sends them from the stripe.
domain. You can change this to a custom domain.
Set up a custom email domain
To start sending emails from your own domain, complete the following steps:
- Add your domain in the Dashboard.
- Verify your domain to allow sending.
- Set your sending domain as your domain.
To modify the look and feel of your emails, go to your Branding settings.
Add your domain
Navigate to your Customer email settings and add the domain that you want to send customer emails from.
Verify your domain
To verify your domain, you must configure the Domain Name System (DNS) records provided in the Dashboard. These DNS records are necessary to verify your domain ownership and reliable email delivery.
The procedure for adding DNS records to the DNS server for your domain depends on who provides your DNS service. Consult the documentation for your DNS service for specific instructions.
Instructions for popular providers
It can take up to 72 hours for DNS record changes to be confirmed. Stripe lets you know whether your domain has been verified.
Troubleshoot DNS issues
If your domain hasn’t been verified after 72 hours, try the following:
Correct any typos. You can check your domain records in the Dashboard’s Customer emails settings by clicking Verify domain to filter issues.
Make sure you don’t have any records that share the same name as the provided CNAME records. CNAME records must be the only record present for a record name.
Make sure the added record names don’t include your domain twice. Some providers automatically append DNS record names with the domain name. For example, to create a record with the name bounce.example.com, enter only
bounce
in the Name field.Check that the DNS records are published. You can verify this by using a DNS lookup tool, which displays the published records for your domain.
If you’ve tried all of our troubleshooting recommendations and are still having trouble verifying your domain, contact your DNS provider.
DNS records
Each category of record that needs to be configured has a purpose.
Record Category | Type | Purpose |
---|---|---|
Stripe proof-of-ownership | TXT | Before you can send email from a domain, we must confirm ownership of the domain you plan to use. |
Mail From Domain | CNAME | This specifies the source of the message to the receiving email server and the Sender Policy Framework (SPF) policy to allow sending. |
DomainKeys Identified Mail (DKIM) | CNAME | These allow a mail server to verify that a third party didn’t modify a message in transit. |
Caution
After we verify the domain, don’t delete the provided DNS records from your domain. Stripe frequently checks these records. If a record becomes invalid or goes missing, we notify you. Also, make sure to correct DNS records within 48 hours. If you don’t, we send customer emails from stripe.com until you resolve the problem.
Sender authentication (DMARC)
To use a custom email domain, you need to set up a DMARC policy for your domain. Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting & Conformance (DMARC) shields your domain from impersonation attacks, such as phishing. Notably, major email providers like Google and Yahoo now necessitate DMARC for those sending bulk emails.
You publish DMARC policy as a DNS TXT record. The record’s name is always _
, and the value comprises tag-value pairs that symbolize your policy. Additionally, you can learn about all the supported tags and their uses, but let’s cover some of the most significant tags:
Tag | Description | Sample value |
---|---|---|
v required | The protocol version. This must always be DMARC1. | v=DMARC1 |
p required | The policy for domain. The possible values are: none, quarantine, reject. | p=none |
rua optional | Address(es) to receive aggregate reports | rua=mailto:report@example.com |
If you’re new to DMARC, we suggest beginning with a p=none
policy for initial monitoring, then switch to either quarantine
or reject
in due course. After you’ve settled on the appropriate policy, you must incorporate the following DNS record into your domain:
Type | Name | Value |
---|---|---|
TXT | _ | Your DMARC policy. For example: v=DMARC1; p=none; rua=mailto:report@example. |
Caution
We don’t currently support strict SPF alignment. Make sure your DMARC policy doesn’t have aspf=s
.
If you’re already using this domain to send email, use caution when adding DMARC to make sure that it doesn’t interfere with your existing configuration. Consult an email or IT professional before adding or modifying this record.
Set your sending domain
If Stripe has verified your domain, you’ll see a Verified badge under the Verification column in your Customer email settings. Customer emails are now sent from your domain. You can send a test email by clicking the overflow menu ().
Whenever a customer replies to your emails, their responses are sent to the support email address you specified in your public business information.
Change email domains
We must verify each domain that you want to set as your sending domain. To switch to a new domain, return to Add your domain. You can always switch back to sending your customer emails using stripe.
.
When you’re no longer using a domain to send customer emails, you can remove it from your Customer email settings. In the Your custom email domains section, click the overflow menu () next to the domain name and select Remove domain. After removing the domain from your Dashboard, remove the unused DNS records from your DNS service.
Instructions for popular providers
Use the same email domain on multiple Stripe accounts
You can use the same email domain on multiple Stripe accounts by following the steps described above. To verify the domain, create one TXT record for each account, or if your provider doesn’t support this, create a single TXT record with one account per line.