SG Subject Genie

Newsletter subject lines readers can't ignore

Your newsletter is competing with 110 other emails in your reader's inbox this morning. The subject line is the only thing that decides whether yours is the one they open. Here's what works.

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Newsletters live and die by the second email

The first newsletter someone opens is almost always opened — they just signed up, the curiosity is at its peak, the unsubscribe is one click away. The real test is the second send. By send number five, your subject line is the only reason your newsletter exists in the reader's attention. Open rates over 40% by send 10 are the sign of a newsletter that's going to compound; anything below 25% is a warning sign that the subject lines are doing the work of a thousand others.

The formulas that consistently win for editorial newsletters

Specificity over cleverness

'How we grew revenue 10x' is mediocre. 'How we grew from $4K to $40K MRR in 90 days (with a 2-person team)' is specific. The reader's brain processes the specificity as proof that you actually have something to say. Newsletters that lean on numbers, named companies, concrete time spans, and unusual nouns consistently outperform abstract claims.

Curiosity gaps that don't feel cheap

A curiosity gap works when the answer is genuinely worth knowing. 'You won't believe what happened next' is a cheap gap — the reader's brain has been trained to ignore it. 'The mistake that cost us our biggest customer (and why we made it again)' is a real gap. The difference is whether the reader's expectation of payoff is high enough to overcome the friction of clicking.

Pattern interrupt for engaged readers

Once readers know your newsletter, you can break the pattern. Single-word subject lines ('weird'), all-lowercase, fragments, even em-dashes alone — these work for established newsletters because the reader recognizes the sender and the unusual subject signals 'this one is different.' For a new newsletter, this just looks broken.

Concrete nouns, not adjectives

'The amazing tool we found' vs 'The spreadsheet that replaced our entire CRM'. The second is shorter, more specific, and harder to ignore. Build the habit of cutting every adjective in your subject line and replacing it with the concrete thing.

How to avoid the promotions tab

Subject line templates by newsletter format

Curated link roundups

Lead with the single most interesting item, not the count. 'Why the Notion acquisition is going to be a disaster' beats 'This week's 7 best reads on tech.' The reader joined for the editorial taste, not the list.

Deep-dive essays

Use the headline of the essay if it's strong; if not, write a subject that previews the question, not the answer. 'Why every SaaS pricing page is wrong (mine included)' invites the click in a way 'How to fix your pricing page' doesn't.

Behind-the-scenes / founder updates

Honesty wins here. 'We almost died last month' (when true) is the kind of subject line readers reward with opens for years. The catch: the body has to deliver.

30 newsletter subject lines that work

Hand-curated. Steal, adapt, test.

FAQ

What's a good open rate for a newsletter?+

For an engaged audience of 5K+, 35–50% open rates are healthy. Above 50% means strong subject-line craft and audience fit. Below 25% suggests either subject-line fatigue or list-quality issues.

Should I A/B test newsletter subject lines?+

If your list is under 5,000 active readers, the statistical power on a single send is too low to draw conclusions. Better to rotate styles week-to-week and watch the 4-week trend.

Is sentence case or lowercase better for newsletters?+

Lowercase reads as more personal and indie; sentence case reads as more editorial and trustworthy. Pick one and be consistent — readers learn your sender pattern.

Should newsletter subject lines use emojis?+

Sparingly. One emoji in maybe one of five sends, only when it genuinely adds meaning. Never use the same emoji every week — it becomes a visual ad block.

How long should newsletter subject lines be?+

30–50 characters is the sweet spot. Anything over 60 gets cut off on mobile and reads as overwritten.

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