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This guide walks you through adding the required DNS records for Lettr using Hostinger’s DNS management. Hostinger is a web hosting provider that offers DNS hosting for domains managed through its hPanel dashboard. You will configure a sending domain (CNAME, DKIM TXT, and DMARC TXT records) and, optionally, an inbound domain (MX records), tracking domain (two CNAME records), and storage domain (CNAME and two TXT records).

Sending Domain Setup

A sending domain authenticates your outgoing emails with DKIM and DMARC, ensuring they are delivered reliably and not marked as spam. This requires a CNAME record for domain verification, a TXT record for DKIM signing, and a TXT record for DMARC policy. To create a sending domain in Lettr:
  1. Select Domains in the navigation panel
  2. Select Sending Domains
  3. Click Create Sending Domain
  4. Enter your desired sending subdomain (e.g. mailing.company.com)
  5. Click Create Domain
Use a subdomain (e.g. mailing.company.com) instead of the root domain (company.com). A subdomain provides proper reputation segmentation and is required if you also plan to receive emails with Lettr.
Click your new domain in the Sending Domains list. This will display a list of DNS records that need to be configured. Keep this page open — you will need these values soon.

Configure Hostinger DNS

Log in to your Hostinger hPanel and navigate to DomainsDomain Portfolio. Click Manage next to the domain you want to configure, then open the DNS / Nameservers tab and select DNS records.
If your domain was purchased through Hostinger or your nameservers already point to Hostinger, skip nameserver configuration entirely. Your domain is already using Hostinger’s nameservers by default — proceed directly to adding the DNS records below.
If you registered your domain elsewhere but want to manage DNS on Hostinger, you must first update the nameservers at your registrar to Hostinger’s nameservers. Your assigned nameservers are shown in your hPanel under WebsitesDashboardPlan Details. They typically follow the format ns1.dns-parking.com and ns2.dns-parking.com, but the exact values vary by account — always use what your panel shows.
Until the nameservers are updated, any records you add in Hostinger will not resolve.

Add CNAME Record

The CNAME record verifies domain ownership with Lettr’s email infrastructure. Copy the CNAME values from Lettr to Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select CNAME from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname value from Lettr (without your domain suffix). For example, paste only mailing.
  3. Set Target (Points to) to the Value from Lettr.
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. mailing, not mailing.company.com). If you paste the full hostname, the resulting record will resolve as mailing.company.com.company.com, which will fail verification.

Add TXT Record (DKIM)

The DKIM record adds a cryptographic signature to your outgoing emails, allowing recipients to verify they were sent by an authorized sender. Copy the TXT values from Lettr to Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select TXT from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname value from Lettr (without your domain suffix). For example, paste only scph0126._domainkey.mailing.
  3. Set TXT Value to the Value from Lettr.
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. scph0126._domainkey.mailing, not scph0126._domainkey.mailing.company.com).

Add TXT Record (DMARC)

The DMARC record tells receiving mail servers how to handle emails that fail authentication checks, protecting your domain from spoofing. Copy the TXT values from Lettr to Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select TXT from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname value from Lettr (without your domain suffix). For example, paste only _dmarc.mailing.
  3. Set TXT Value to the Value from Lettr (e.g. v=DMARC1;p=none;).
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. _dmarc.mailing, not _dmarc.mailing.company.com).

Verify Your Sending Domain

After adding all three DNS records, go back to Lettr and click Verify DNS Records. DNS propagation can take up to 24–48 hours, though it typically completes within a few minutes.

Inbound Domain Setup

An inbound domain allows Lettr to receive emails on your behalf. This requires three MX records that direct incoming mail to Lettr’s mail servers.

Add Inbound Domain to Lettr

To create an Inbound domain in Lettr:
  1. Select Domains in the navigation panel
  2. Select Inbound Domains
  3. Click Create Inbound Domain
  4. Enter your desired inbound subdomain (e.g. inbound.company.com)
  5. Click Create Domain.
Click on your new domain in the Inbound Domains list. This will display the MX records that need to be configured.

Add MX Records

MX records tell other mail servers where to deliver emails addressed to your domain. Copy the MX values from Lettr to Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select MX from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname value from Lettr (without your domain suffix). For example, paste only inbound.
  3. Set Mail server (Points to) to rx1.sparkpostmail.com.
  4. Set Priority to 10.
  5. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  6. Click Add Record.
  7. Repeat this process for the second (rx2.sparkpostmail.com) and third (rx3.sparkpostmail.com) MX records, each with priority 10.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. inbound, not inbound.company.com).
All emails sent to the domain or subdomain where MX records are configured will be routed to Lettr. Use a dedicated subdomain (e.g. inbound.company.com) to avoid affecting your primary email.

Verify Your Inbound Domain

After adding all three MX records, go back to Lettr and click Verify DNS Records. DNS propagation can take up to 24–48 hours, though it typically completes within a few minutes.

Tracking Domain Setup

A tracking domain allows Lettr to track email opens and link clicks using your own custom domain instead of the default Lettr tracking domain. This requires two CNAME records: one for the SSL certificate and one for routing tracking traffic to Lettr’s infrastructure.

Add Tracking Domain to Lettr

To create a Tracking domain in Lettr:
  1. Select Domains in the navigation panel
  2. Select Tracking Domains
  3. Click Create Tracking Domain
  4. Enter your desired tracking subdomain (e.g. tracking.company.com)
  5. Click Create Domain
Click on your new domain in the Tracking Domains list. This will display the CNAME records that need to be configured.

Add SSL Certificate CNAME Record

The SSL Certificate CNAME record provisions an SSL certificate for your custom tracking domain, enabling secure HTTPS connections for tracked links. Add the record in Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select CNAME from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname from Lettr (without your domain suffix).
  3. Set Target (Points to) to the Value from Lettr.
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. tracking, not tracking.company.com).

Add Traffic CNAME Record

The Traffic CNAME record routes click and open tracking requests from your custom domain to Lettr’s tracking servers. Add the record in Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select CNAME from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname from Lettr (without your domain suffix).
  3. Set Target (Points to) to the Value from Lettr.
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. tracking, not tracking.company.com).

Verify Your Tracking Domain

After adding both CNAME records, go back to Lettr and click Verify DNS Records.

Storage Domain Setup

A storage domain lets you serve email assets (images, attachments) from your own custom domain instead of the default Lettr storage URL. This requires two TXT records for certificate validation and ownership verification, and a CNAME record for routing asset requests to Lettr’s storage infrastructure.

Add Storage Domain to Lettr

To create a Storage domain in Lettr:
  1. Select Domains in the navigation panel
  2. Select Storage Domains
  3. Click Create Storage Domain
  4. Enter your desired storage subdomain (e.g. assets.company.com)
  5. Click Create Domain
Click on your new domain in the Storage Domains list. This will display the TXT and CNAME records that need to be configured.

Add TXT Record (Certificate Validation)

The Certificate Validation TXT record provisions an SSL certificate for your custom storage domain, enabling secure HTTPS delivery of email assets. Add the record in Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select TXT from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname from Lettr (without your domain suffix).
  3. Set TXT Value to the Value from Lettr.
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion, just as with the CNAME record above.

Add TXT Record (Hostname Pre-validation)

The Hostname Pre-validation TXT record verifies ownership of the storage domain before Lettr provisions a custom hostname for it. Add the record in Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select TXT from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname from Lettr (without your domain suffix).
  3. Set TXT Value to the Value from Lettr.
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion, just as with the CNAME record above.

Add CNAME Record (Domain Routing)

The Domain Routing CNAME record routes asset requests from your custom domain to Lettr’s storage infrastructure. Add the record in Hostinger:
  1. In the DNS records tab, select CNAME from the Type dropdown.
  2. Set Name (Host) to the Hostname from Lettr (without your domain suffix).
  3. Set Target (Points to) to the Value from Lettr.
  4. Leave TTL at the default (14400).
  5. Click Add Record.
Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the record name. Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. assets, not assets.company.com).

Verify Your Storage Domain

After adding all three records, go back to Lettr and click Verify DNS Records.

Troubleshooting

Hostinger automatically appends your domain to the Name (Host) field. If you paste the full hostname (e.g. mailing.company.com), the resulting record will resolve as mailing.company.com.company.com, which will fail verification.Always paste only the subdomain portion (e.g. mailing, scph0126._domainkey.mailing, _dmarc.mailing).
Hostinger DNS changes are typically applied within minutes, but external resolvers may take longer to pick up the changes. If verification fails after adding records, check the following:
  • Wait at least 30 minutes before your first verification attempt. Most records propagate within 1–2 hours.
  • Confirm the records exist using command-line tools:
# Check CNAME record
dig CNAME mailing.yourdomain.com +short

# Check DKIM record
dig TXT scph0126._domainkey.mailing.yourdomain.com +short

# Check DMARC record
dig TXT _dmarc.mailing.yourdomain.com +short

# Check MX records (inbound)
dig MX inbound.yourdomain.com +short

# Check tracking domain CNAME
dig CNAME track.yourdomain.com +short

# Check storage domain CNAME
dig CNAME assets.yourdomain.com +short
  • Use a web tool like dnschecker.org to verify propagation across multiple DNS servers worldwide.
If your records are saved in Hostinger but not resolving, confirm that your domain registrar is pointing to Hostinger’s nameservers. You can check this with:
dig NS yourdomain.com +short
The output should include your assigned Hostinger nameservers (e.g. ns1.dns-parking.com, ns2.dns-parking.com). Your exact nameservers are shown in hPanel under WebsitesDashboardPlan Details. If the output shows a different provider’s nameservers, update them at your domain registrar.
Standard CNAME records cannot be used at the root of a domain (e.g. company.com). If you enter @ as the name for a CNAME record, Hostinger will silently convert it to an ALIAS record on save — it will not appear as CNAME in the list. Always use a subdomain (e.g. mailing.company.com) for your sending, tracking, and storage domains.
A common mistake is selecting the wrong type from the Type dropdown in Hostinger’s DNS records tab:
RecordCorrect Type
Sending verificationCNAME
DKIMTXT
DMARCTXT
Inbound mailMX
Tracking SSL certificateCNAME
Tracking trafficCNAME
Storage certificate validationTXT
Storage hostname pre-validationTXT
Storage domain routingCNAME
Remove any existing A or CNAME records for the same hostname before adding new CNAME records. Hostinger does not automatically remove conflicting records. Duplicate or conflicting records on the same hostname will cause verification failures.
The DKIM TXT value is a long string. After saving the record, re-open the DNS records tab and locate the record to confirm the full value is displayed in the TXT Value column. If it appears truncated, delete the record and re-add it, pasting the full value carefully into the TXT Value field.
If your DNS records are correctly configured (confirmed with dig or dnschecker.org) and verification still fails after 48 hours, contact Lettr support at support@lettr.com or through the in-app chat. Include your domain name and the output of the dig commands above.