DMARCeye launches globally with AI-guided DMARC tools
DMARCeye, a DMARC monitoring platform developed within Czech email marketing provider Ecomail, is expanding globally as a standalone product with its own team, roadmap and branding.
The service monitors DMARC data for email domains and presents the findings as guidance rather than raw reports. It targets IT, security and marketing teams, along with agencies that manage multiple domains.
DMARC (Domain-based Message Authentication, Reporting and Conformance) is an email authentication standard used to reduce spoofing and phishing. It builds on SPF and DKIM. Organisations often start with a monitor-only policy, then move to enforcement policies that instruct receiving mail servers to quarantine or reject unauthenticated messages.
Ecomail built DMARCeye in 2024 after Google and Yahoo tightened authentication requirements for bulk senders and demand increased in Central Europe, its home market.
Ecomail tested the platform in production across thousands of domains in a high-volume sending environment that delivers more than 1 billion emails per month.
Guided Enforcement
DMARCeye is designed to show who is sending email on a customer's behalf and to flag configuration problems. It also provides domain-specific steps for moving from monitoring to full enforcement, including monitoring, alerting and guidance on changes to SPF, DKIM and DMARC settings.
It is positioned as an option for teams without specialist DMARC expertise, with contextual instructions provided alongside monitoring output.
DMARCeye also supports the Model Context Protocol (MCP), a structured way to connect datasets to AI tools. The company said this lets customers connect DMARC data to AI assistants such as ChatGPT.
"Gradual DMARC enforcement is essential for modern domain security. But most teams still get stuck at monitoring and never reach safe enforcement," said Jan Tlapák, Chief Executive Officer and co-owner of Ecomail.
"That's why DMARCeye goes beyond dashboards and gives teams personalized next steps. In addition to AI domain analysis inside the DMARCeye platform, we support MCP, an AI-native integration that lets teams easily connect their DMARC data to a GPT interface, so they can ask questions and get specific recommendations," Tlapák said.
Adoption Snapshot
DMARCeye shared aggregated figures from domains it has monitored since February 2024. It reported that 43.7% of domains with DMARC remained set to "p=none," commonly used for monitoring, while 19.3% had reached "p=reject," a stricter enforcement setting.
It also reported that 6.0% of enforcing domains used staged rollouts with percentage settings below 100%. DMARC includes a mechanism that applies enforcement to only a share of messages, which is often used to reduce the risk of misconfiguration during transitions.
DMARCeye said many organisations instead enforce at 100% immediately, an approach it said can disrupt legitimate email during policy changes.
Tools And Pricing
Alongside its monitoring service, DMARCeye is expanding a set of free mini-tools for checking common email authentication settings, including a DMARC record configurator and checkers for DNS, SPF, DKIM and BIMI.
DMARCeye offers a free plan for a single domain with a monitoring cap of 5,000 emails per month. Standard pricing starts at USD $4 per domain per month, with custom plans available for larger organisations.
DMARCeye remains owned by Ecomail, which has more than 12,000 customers. It is the fourth standalone tool built by Ecomail's engineering team, following Ecomail, Topol.io and Lettr.
Topol.io is an embeddable drag-and-drop email editor for software providers. Lettr is a transactional email platform for developers.
Product Portfolio
Ecomail also linked DMARCeye to a wider product set it calls Big Good, described as an ecosystem of tools for marketing professionals and developers working across email communication, content, security and design.
"DMARCeye represents the same philosophy that drove the development of Topol and Lettr: it's a lightweight tool that solves a specific problem extremely well, without bloated complexity or functionality that overlaps with other tools," said Jakub Stupka, co-founder of Ecomail.
"As new market needs arise, we'll keep spinning out specialized, standalone products based on our intimate knowledge of email infrastructure," Stupka said.