How to white list in Cox Email

If you’re using email from Cox Communications and not receiving email from certain senders, you may want to check your spam folder and add the sender’s email address to your email account’s white list (or safelist), check blocked senders, and check your filter settings. Spam filtering is an excellent tool email providers use to help manage the unending flow of unwanted email messages sent every day. Often, this process happens silently behind the scenes, but the process can become very apparent when you don’t receive a message you need. To keep your inbox clean from unwanted emails and to help protect you against malicious messages, Cox Email has various spam-fighting methods. Here we cover the things you can do in your Cox Email account to help keep the email you want out of spam.

Mark legitimate email as Not Spam

If you’re not getting email you’re expecting in your inbox, the first thing is to check your Spam folder. If you find messages in your Spam folder that shouldn’t be there, you can mark them as not spam to help teach the Cox Webmail spam filtering software that you think that type of message is legitimate. To mark a message as not spam:

  1. Sign into your Cox Webmail account on a computer
  2. Select the WebMail Inbox
  3. Select your Spam folder
  4. Find and select the desired message
  5. Select the Not Spam button
    If you don’t see a not spam button, select the menu in the email message (three dot/line menu), then select not spam.

You should check your spam folder routinely for legitimate messages as your spam folder is emptied regularly. Marking a message as not spam won’t guarantee that future messages from that sender won’t be marked as spam, but the more you do it, the more likely it will be that the message will be delivered to your inbox. For more surefire ways, see the other options below.

Add sender to Exceptions List

In your Cox WebMail preferences, you’ll find a blocked senders list that shows the senders or domains you’ve blocked (if any) from sending you messages. In the same place, you can enter single email addresses or entire domains (e.g. domain.com) that you allow to send you email. Essentially, this is Cox Mail’s version of a white list (or safelist).

  1. Sign in to your Cox Webmail account on a computer
  2. Go to the WebMail Inbox
  3. Select Preferences
  4. Under General Email Preferences, select Blocked Senders
  5. Enter the sender or domain you want to allow in the Exceptions List.
  6. Select Add
  7. Select Save

Send spam to your inbox

If you’ve tried all the above but the messages you want are still landing in your spam folder, you can modify the way Cox handles spam by changing your preferences for spam emails to have them marked as spam, but still delivered to your inbox.

  1. Sign in to your Cox Webmail account on a computer
  2. Select the gear ⚙ icon in the top right, then Settings
  3. On the left, select Inbox (if not already expanded) then select Spam settings
  4. Select the Mark as Spam and deliver to Inbox option
  5. Select Save

For more help

Receiving

If you need more help receiving email messages as a Cox Email user, visit their support site.

Sending

If you’re an email sender having trouble sending email to Cox Email users, visit the Cox Email Postmaster site.

Did this guide work for you?

Let us know if this guide for Cox Email worked for you in the comments below. While we strive to keep our guides up-to-date and relevant, sometimes things change without notice. If you find something is different in your Cox Email account from this guide, let us know what you had to do differently. Thanks for your help and input!

Photo by Mikaela Wiedenhoff on Unsplash

6 replies on “How to white list in Cox Email”

Interface has changed, leaving no apparent way (at all) to control Spam filtering (this was confirmed to me, to the extent of their knowledge, by “tier 2” support at Cox. This is untenable.

Options have changed and this option to provide exceptions or move everything from SPAM into your inbox is no longer available. Very frustrating since it is putting everything from .church into spam.

ICLOUD SEARCH GIVES WRONG TESULT.

A search on “Apple” or “iCloud results in a short iCloud entry that ends abruptly, thus:
“… in your junk folder, you can use an option to…”

However, scrolling through the provider icons results in the actual iCloud entry.

I DID NOT SEE THE FOLLOWING COVERED FOR COX:

cox email has a nasty option to immediately delete suspected spam without informing the user. I suspect this might be the default; I have come across several users who had this option set, but knew nothing about it. Unless someone has every possible legitimate sender in their whitelist, I think this is a bad option. If there is a lot of spam, have it sent to the spam folder. If there is not much spam, have it go to the inbox, but flagged as spam.
I hope this is helpful.

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