What is a Return-Path address?

What is a Return-Path address?

The Return-Path address (also called envelope-from or bounce address) is the technical address used by the sending server to identify the actual sender of a message at the SMTP protocol level.

It is not always visible to the end user, but it plays an essential role in email transport.
This is the address that receives:

  • delivery failure notifications (bounces),

  • and is used for certain anti-spam checks (SPF, DMARC, etc.).

Simplified example:

Return-Path: <bounces@example.com>
From: Marie Dupont <marie@example.com>
To: contact@company.com

Here, the email appears to come from “Marie Dupont”, but technically, it is bounces@example.com that is used by the sending server.

Diagram:

À quoi sert-elle concrètement ? -> What is it actually used for?

  • Identifying the real sending server (used for SPF).

  • Handling automatic replies (errors, full mailboxes, invalid addresses).

  • Allowing anti-spam or security systems to perform checks on an authentic and traceable address.

Official reference (RFC)

The management of the Return-Path field is defined in the following standard:

RFC 5321 – Simple Mail Transfer Protocol (SMTP)
Section 4.4. Trace Information

Direct link to the RFC (in English):
https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5321#section-4.4

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