| name | cloudflare-email-routing |
| description | Complete guide for Cloudflare Email Routing covering both Email Workers (receiving emails) and Send Email bindings (sending emails from Workers). Use when: setting up email routing, creating email workers, processing incoming emails, sending emails from Workers, implementing email allowlists/blocklists, forwarding emails with custom logic, replying to emails automatically, parsing email content, configuring MX records for email, troubleshooting email delivery issues, or encountering email worker errors. Prevents 8 documented issues: "Email Trigger not available" errors, destination address verification bugs, Gmail rate limiting, SPF permerror issues, worker call failures, test event loading issues, activity log discrepancies, and limited debugging on free plans. Keywords: Cloudflare Email Routing, Email Workers, send email, receive email, email forwarding, email allowlist, email blocklist, postal-mime, mimetext, cloudflare:email, EmailMessage, ForwardableEmailMessage, EmailEvent, MX records, SPF, DKIM, email worker binding, send_email binding, wrangler email, email handler, email routing worker, "Email Trigger not available", "failed to call worker", email delivery failed, email not forwarding, destination address not verified |
| license | MIT |
Cloudflare Email Routing
Status: Production Ready ✅ Last Updated: 2025-10-23 Latest Versions: postal-mime@2.5.0, mimetext@3.0.27
What is Cloudflare Email Routing?
Cloudflare Email Routing provides two complementary capabilities:
- Email Workers - Receive and process incoming emails with custom logic (allowlists, blocklists, forwarding, parsing, replying)
- Send Email - Send emails from Workers to verified destination addresses (notifications, alerts, confirmations)
Both capabilities are free and work together to enable complete email functionality in Cloudflare Workers.
Quick Start (10 Minutes)
Part 1: Enable Email Routing (Dashboard)
Prerequisites: Domain must be on Cloudflare DNS
- Log in to Cloudflare Dashboard → select your domain
- Go to Email > Email Routing
- Select Enable Email Routing → Add records and enable
- This automatically adds MX records, SPF, and DKIM to your DNS
- Create a destination address:
- Custom address:
hello@yourdomain.com - Destination: Your personal email (e.g.,
you@gmail.com) - Verify the destination address via email
- Custom address:
- ✅ Basic email forwarding is now active
What you just did: Configured DNS and basic forwarding. Now let's add Workers for custom logic.
Part 2: Receiving Emails with Email Workers
1. Install Dependencies
npm install postal-mime@2.5.0 mimetext@3.0.27
Why these packages:
postal-mime- Parse incoming email messages (headers, body, attachments)mimetext- Create email messages for sending/replying
2. Create Email Worker
Create src/email.ts:
import { EmailMessage } from 'cloudflare:email';
import PostalMime from 'postal-mime';
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
// Parse the incoming message
const parser = new PostalMime.default();
const email = await parser.parse(await new Response(message.raw).arrayBuffer());
console.log('From:', message.from);
console.log('To:', message.to);
console.log('Subject:', email.subject);
// Forward to verified destination
await message.forward('your-email@example.com');
},
};
3. Configure Wrangler
Update wrangler.jsonc:
{
"name": "email-worker",
"main": "src/email.ts",
"compatibility_date": "2025-10-11"
}
4. Deploy and Bind
npx wrangler deploy
# In Cloudflare Dashboard:
# Email > Email Routing > Email Workers
# Select your worker → Create route → Enter address (e.g., hello@yourdomain.com)
What you just did: Created a Worker that logs and forwards emails.
Part 3: Sending Emails from Workers
1. Configure Send Email Binding
Update wrangler.jsonc:
{
"name": "my-worker",
"main": "src/index.ts",
"compatibility_date": "2025-10-11",
"send_email": [
{
"name": "EMAIL",
"destination_address": "notifications@yourdomain.com"
}
]
}
CRITICAL: destination_address must be:
- A domain where you have Email Routing enabled
- A verified destination address in Email Routing settings
2. Send Email from Worker
import { EmailMessage } from 'cloudflare:email';
import { createMimeMessage } from 'mimetext';
export default {
async fetch(request, env, ctx) {
// Create email message
const msg = createMimeMessage();
msg.setSender({ name: 'My App', addr: 'noreply@yourdomain.com' });
msg.setRecipient('user@example.com');
msg.setSubject('Welcome to My App');
msg.addMessage({
contentType: 'text/plain',
data: 'Thank you for signing up!',
});
// Send via binding
const message = new EmailMessage(
'noreply@yourdomain.com',
'user@example.com',
msg.asRaw()
);
await env.EMAIL.send(message);
return new Response('Email sent!');
},
};
3. Deploy
npx wrangler deploy
What you just did: Configured your Worker to send emails to verified addresses.
Email Workers: Complete Guide
Runtime API
EmailEvent Handler
export default {
async email(message: ForwardableEmailMessage, env: Env, ctx: ExecutionContext) {
// Process email here
},
};
Parameters:
message- ForwardableEmailMessage objectenv- Environment bindings (KV, D1, secrets, etc.)ctx- Execution context (waitUntil for async operations)
ForwardableEmailMessage Properties
interface ForwardableEmailMessage {
readonly from: string; // Sender email
readonly to: string; // Recipient email
readonly headers: Headers; // Email headers
readonly raw: ReadableStream; // Raw email message
readonly rawSize: number; // Size in bytes
// Methods
setReject(reason: string): void;
forward(rcptTo: string, headers?: Headers): Promise<void>;
reply(message: EmailMessage): Promise<void>;
}
Common Patterns
Pattern 1: Allowlist
Only accept emails from approved senders:
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
const allowList = [
'friend@example.com',
'coworker@company.com',
'support@vendor.com',
];
if (!allowList.includes(message.from)) {
message.setReject('Address not on allowlist');
return;
}
await message.forward('inbox@yourdomain.com');
},
};
When to use: Contact forms, private email addresses, team inboxes
Pattern 2: Blocklist
Reject emails from specific senders or domains:
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
const blockList = [
'spam@badactor.com',
'@suspicious-domain.com', // Block entire domain
];
const isBlocked = blockList.some(pattern =>
message.from.includes(pattern)
);
if (isBlocked) {
message.setReject('Sender blocked');
return;
}
await message.forward('inbox@yourdomain.com');
},
};
When to use: Spam filtering, blocking harassers, domain-level blocks
Pattern 3: Parse and Store
Extract email content and store in D1 or KV:
import PostalMime from 'postal-mime';
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
// Parse email
const parser = new PostalMime.default();
const rawEmail = new Response(message.raw);
const email = await parser.parse(await rawEmail.arrayBuffer());
// Store in D1
await env.DB.prepare(
'INSERT INTO emails (from_addr, subject, text, received_at) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)'
).bind(
message.from,
email.subject,
email.text,
new Date().toISOString()
).run();
// Forward to inbox
await message.forward('inbox@yourdomain.com');
},
};
When to use: Email archiving, ticket systems, support inboxes, audit logs
Pattern 4: Auto-Reply
Send automatic replies with custom logic:
import PostalMime from 'postal-mime';
import { createMimeMessage } from 'mimetext';
import { EmailMessage } from 'cloudflare:email';
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
// Parse incoming email
const parser = new PostalMime.default();
const email = await parser.parse(await new Response(message.raw).arrayBuffer());
// Create reply
const msg = createMimeMessage();
msg.setSender({ name: 'Support Team', addr: 'support@yourdomain.com' });
msg.setRecipient(message.from);
msg.setHeader('In-Reply-To', message.headers.get('Message-ID'));
msg.setSubject(`Re: ${email.subject}`);
msg.addMessage({
contentType: 'text/plain',
data: `Thank you for your message about "${email.subject}". We'll respond within 24 hours.`,
});
// Send reply
const replyMessage = new EmailMessage(
'support@yourdomain.com',
message.from,
msg.asRaw()
);
await message.reply(replyMessage);
// Also forward to team inbox
await message.forward('team@yourdomain.com');
},
};
When to use: Out-of-office replies, support ticket acknowledgments, automated responses
Pattern 5: Conditional Routing
Route emails to different destinations based on content:
import PostalMime from 'postal-mime';
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
const parser = new PostalMime.default();
const email = await parser.parse(await new Response(message.raw).arrayBuffer());
const subject = email.subject.toLowerCase();
// Route based on subject keywords
if (subject.includes('urgent') || subject.includes('critical')) {
await message.forward('oncall@yourdomain.com');
} else if (subject.includes('invoice') || subject.includes('payment')) {
await message.forward('billing@yourdomain.com');
} else if (subject.includes('support') || subject.includes('help')) {
await message.forward('support@yourdomain.com');
} else {
await message.forward('inbox@yourdomain.com');
}
},
};
When to use: Department routing, priority filtering, category-based inboxes
Send Email: Complete Guide
Configuration
Single Destination (Simple)
{
"send_email": [
{
"name": "EMAIL",
"destination_address": "notifications@yourdomain.com"
}
]
}
Behavior: All emails sent via env.EMAIL go to this address.
Multiple Destinations (Flexible)
{
"send_email": [
{
"name": "EMAIL",
"allowed_destination_addresses": [
"notifications@yourdomain.com",
"alerts@yourdomain.com",
"user@gmail.com"
]
}
]
}
Behavior: Can send to any address in the list.
Multiple Bindings (Organized)
{
"send_email": [
{
"name": "NOTIFICATIONS",
"destination_address": "notifications@yourdomain.com"
},
{
"name": "ALERTS",
"destination_address": "alerts@yourdomain.com"
}
]
}
Behavior: Use different bindings for different purposes.
Sending Emails
Basic Text Email
import { EmailMessage } from 'cloudflare:email';
import { createMimeMessage } from 'mimetext';
const msg = createMimeMessage();
msg.setSender({ name: 'My App', addr: 'noreply@yourdomain.com' });
msg.setRecipient('user@example.com');
msg.setSubject('Welcome!');
msg.addMessage({
contentType: 'text/plain',
data: 'Welcome to our service!',
});
const email = new EmailMessage(
'noreply@yourdomain.com',
'user@example.com',
msg.asRaw()
);
await env.EMAIL.send(email);
HTML Email
import { EmailMessage } from 'cloudflare:email';
import { createMimeMessage } from 'mimetext';
const msg = createMimeMessage();
msg.setSender({ name: 'My App', addr: 'noreply@yourdomain.com' });
msg.setRecipient('user@example.com');
msg.setSubject('Welcome!');
// Add both plain text and HTML versions
msg.addMessage({
contentType: 'text/plain',
data: 'Welcome to our service!',
});
msg.addMessage({
contentType: 'text/html',
data: '<h1>Welcome!</h1><p>Thanks for joining us.</p>',
});
const email = new EmailMessage(
'noreply@yourdomain.com',
'user@example.com',
msg.asRaw()
);
await env.EMAIL.send(email);
Email with Custom Headers
import { EmailMessage } from 'cloudflare:email';
import { createMimeMessage } from 'mimetext';
const msg = createMimeMessage();
msg.setSender({ name: 'My App', addr: 'noreply@yourdomain.com' });
msg.setRecipient('user@example.com');
msg.setSubject('Password Reset');
// Add custom headers
msg.setHeader('X-Priority', '1');
msg.setHeader('X-Application-ID', 'my-app-123');
msg.addMessage({
contentType: 'text/plain',
data: 'Click here to reset your password...',
});
const email = new EmailMessage(
'noreply@yourdomain.com',
'user@example.com',
msg.asRaw()
);
await env.EMAIL.send(email);
DNS Configuration
Automatic Setup (Recommended)
When you enable Email Routing in the dashboard, Cloudflare automatically adds:
MX Records - Direct email to Cloudflare's servers
yourdomain.com. 300 IN MX 13 amir.mx.cloudflare.net. yourdomain.com. 300 IN MX 86 linda.mx.cloudflare.net. yourdomain.com. 300 IN MX 24 isaac.mx.cloudflare.net.SPF Record - Authorize Cloudflare to send on your behalf
yourdomain.com. 300 IN TXT "v=spf1 include:_spf.mx.cloudflare.net ~all"DKIM Records - Sign outgoing emails
Automatically configured per domain
Manual Setup (Advanced)
If you need to migrate from another provider:
- Go to Email > Email Routing > Settings
- Select Start disabling > Unlock records and continue
- Edit DNS records as needed
- When ready, Lock DNS records to protect Email Routing
WARNING: Changing MX records will break Email Routing. Only do this if migrating providers.
Known Issues Prevention
This skill prevents 8 documented issues:
Issue #1: "Email Trigger not available to this workers"
Error: Testing email workers fails with "Email Trigger not available to this workers"
Source: workers-sdk #3751
Why It Happens: Wrangler dev doesn't fully support email triggers; testing must be done via deployed Workers
Prevention:
- Always deploy email workers before testing
- Use
wrangler tailfor live debugging - Use dashboard "Test Email Event" feature (when working)
Issue #2: Destination Address Verification Bug
Error: Verified destination addresses show as "unverified" in Email Worker forwarding
Source: Community reports (Cloudflare Community)
Why It Happens: Bug in dashboard where addresses only show verified if also used in regular routing rules
Prevention:
- Create a regular forward rule for each destination address first
- Then use the same addresses in Email Workers
- Verify addresses before deploying workers
Issue #3: Gmail Rate Limiting
Error: "421: Our system has detected an unusual rate of unsolicited mail originating from your IP address"
Source: Community reports
Why It Happens: Gmail may flag Cloudflare's IP ranges as suspicious due to shared infrastructure
Prevention:
- Implement proper SPF/DKIM/DMARC records
- Don't send bulk emails through Email Routing
- Use transactional email services (e.g., SendGrid, Mailgun) for high volume
- Rate-limit your sending (max 50-100 emails/hour for personal use)
Issue #4: SPF Permerror with MailChannels
Error: SPF permerror when routing through MailChannels
Source: Community discussion
Why It Happens: SPF record chain breaks when forwarding through multiple services
Prevention:
- Use Email Routing's native send capabilities instead of MailChannels
- If using MailChannels, configure SPF includes correctly
- Test with MXToolbox SPF checker
Issue #5: Limited Logging on Free Plan
Error: Cannot see worker logs or email processing details
Source: Community reports
Why It Happens: Free plan has limited log retention and streaming
Prevention:
- Use
wrangler tailduring development for live logs - Use
console.log()extensively in email workers - Store critical data in D1/KV for debugging
- Upgrade to Workers Paid plan for better observability
Issue #6: Activity Log Discrepancies
Error: Emails show as "Dropped" in Activity Log even when successfully forwarded
Source: Community reports
Why It Happens: Dashboard bug showing incorrect status
Prevention:
- Check actual email delivery instead of relying on dashboard
- Use
wrangler tailto verify processing - Implement your own logging in D1/KV
- Test with real emails to confirm delivery
Issue #7: Test Email Event Loading Indefinitely
Error: Dashboard "Test Email Event" button remains in loading state forever
Source: workers-sdk #9195
Why It Happens: Bug in dashboard testing interface (unresolved as of 2025-10)
Prevention:
- Don't rely on dashboard testing feature
- Use
curlwith local development instead (see Local Development section) - Deploy and test with real emails
- Use
wrangler tailto monitor processing
Issue #8: Worker Call Failures
Error: "Rejected reason: Unknown error: failed to call worker: Worker call failed for 3 times, aborting…"
Source: workers-sdk #9069, Community reports
Why It Happens: Worker crashes due to runtime errors, timeouts, or memory issues
Prevention:
- Add comprehensive error handling with try/catch
- Set timeouts for external API calls
- Log errors to D1/KV before rejecting
- Use
ctx.waitUntil()for non-critical operations - Test with various email formats (plain text, HTML, attachments)
Local Development
Receiving Emails
Wrangler simulates email reception via HTTP POST:
# Start dev server
npx wrangler dev
# In another terminal, send test email
curl http://localhost:8787 -X POST \
--data-binary @- << EOF
From: sender@example.com
To: recipient@yourdomain.com
Subject: Test Email
This is a test email body.
EOF
What happens: Wrangler logs the email processing and shows where forwarded emails would go.
Sending Emails
Wrangler writes sent emails to local .eml files:
// Your worker code
await env.EMAIL.send(message);
Output in terminal:
[wrangler:inf] send_email binding called with the following message:
/tmp/miniflare-abc123/files/email/message-123.eml
View the email:
cat /tmp/miniflare-abc123/files/email/message-123.eml
Configuration Files Reference
Complete wrangler.jsonc (Both Receive + Send)
{
"$schema": "node_modules/wrangler/config-schema.json",
"name": "email-worker",
"main": "src/email.ts",
"account_id": "YOUR_ACCOUNT_ID",
"compatibility_date": "2025-10-11",
"observability": {
"enabled": true
},
// Send email binding
"send_email": [
{
"name": "NOTIFICATIONS",
"destination_address": "notifications@yourdomain.com"
},
{
"name": "ALERTS",
"allowed_destination_addresses": [
"alerts@yourdomain.com",
"admin@yourdomain.com"
]
}
],
// Optional: Add other bindings
"d1_databases": [
{
"binding": "DB",
"database_name": "email-archive",
"database_id": "YOUR_DATABASE_ID"
}
],
"kv_namespaces": [
{
"binding": "EMAIL_CACHE",
"id": "YOUR_KV_ID"
}
]
}
TypeScript Types
Environment Bindings
interface Env {
// Send email bindings
EMAIL: SendEmail;
NOTIFICATIONS: SendEmail;
ALERTS: SendEmail;
// Other bindings
DB: D1Database;
EMAIL_CACHE: KVNamespace;
}
interface SendEmail {
send(message: EmailMessage): Promise<void>;
}
Full Type Definitions
import { EmailMessage } from 'cloudflare:email';
interface ForwardableEmailMessage {
readonly from: string;
readonly to: string;
readonly headers: Headers;
readonly raw: ReadableStream;
readonly rawSize: number;
setReject(reason: string): void;
forward(rcptTo: string, headers?: Headers): Promise<void>;
reply(message: EmailMessage): Promise<void>;
}
declare module 'cloudflare:email' {
export class EmailMessage {
constructor(from: string, to: string, raw: string | ReadableStream);
}
}
Complete Setup Checklist
Email Routing Setup
- Domain is on Cloudflare DNS
- Email Routing enabled in dashboard
- MX, SPF, DKIM records automatically added
- At least one destination address verified
- Test basic forwarding with a custom address
Email Workers (Receiving)
-
postal-mime@2.5.0installed -
mimetext@3.0.27installed - Email worker created with
async email()handler - Worker deployed:
npx wrangler deploy - Worker bound to email route in dashboard
- Test with real email to route address
- Verify logs with
wrangler tail
Send Email (Sending)
-
send_emailbinding configured inwrangler.jsonc -
destination_addressorallowed_destination_addressesspecified - All destination addresses verified in Email Routing
- Worker code uses
env.EMAIL.send() - Worker deployed:
npx wrangler deploy - Test sending email via Worker endpoint
- Confirm email delivery to recipient
Troubleshooting
Problem: "Email Trigger not available to this workers"
Solution:
- Deploy your worker:
npx wrangler deploy - Test with real emails, not local simulation
- Use
wrangler tailto monitor processing
Problem: "Destination address not verified"
Solution:
- Check Email Routing > Destination addresses in dashboard
- Click "Resend verification" if needed
- Create a regular forwarding rule first (workaround for bug)
- Verify all addresses before deploying workers
Problem: Gmail rejects emails with 421 error
Solution:
- Verify SPF/DKIM records are configured (automatic with Email Routing)
- Reduce sending rate (max 50-100/hour for personal use)
- Don't send unsolicited emails or bulk mail
- Consider transactional email service for high volume
Problem: Emails not forwarding from Email Worker
Solution:
- Check worker is bound to correct email route in dashboard
- Verify destination address is verified
- Use
wrangler tailto see processing logs - Check for errors in worker code (try/catch around forward())
- Confirm MX records are still pointing to Cloudflare
Problem: Cannot see worker logs
Solution:
- Use
wrangler tail --format prettyfor live logs - Add extensive
console.log()statements in worker - Store debug info in D1 or KV for later inspection
- Upgrade to Workers Paid plan for better log retention
Problem: Worker crashes with "failed to call worker"
Solution:
- Add try/catch error handling around all operations
- Set timeouts for external API calls
- Test with different email formats (plain text, HTML, attachments)
- Check worker doesn't exceed CPU/memory limits
- Use
ctx.waitUntil()for non-blocking operations
Advanced Topics
Parsing Email Attachments
import PostalMime from 'postal-mime';
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
const parser = new PostalMime.default();
const email = await parser.parse(await new Response(message.raw).arrayBuffer());
// Access attachments
if (email.attachments && email.attachments.length > 0) {
for (const attachment of email.attachments) {
console.log('Attachment:', attachment.filename);
console.log('Type:', attachment.mimeType);
console.log('Size:', attachment.content.length);
// Store in R2
await env.BUCKET.put(
`emails/${Date.now()}-${attachment.filename}`,
attachment.content
);
}
}
await message.forward('inbox@yourdomain.com');
},
};
Email-Based Task Creation
import PostalMime from 'postal-mime';
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
const parser = new PostalMime.default();
const email = await parser.parse(await new Response(message.raw).arrayBuffer());
// Extract task from email subject
const taskMatch = email.subject.match(/\[TASK\](.*)/i);
if (taskMatch) {
const taskDescription = taskMatch[1].trim();
// Create task in D1
await env.DB.prepare(
'INSERT INTO tasks (description, created_by, created_at) VALUES (?, ?, ?)'
).bind(
taskDescription,
message.from,
new Date().toISOString()
).run();
// Send confirmation
await message.reply(new EmailMessage(
'tasks@yourdomain.com',
message.from,
`Task created: ${taskDescription}`
));
}
},
};
Email-Triggered Workflows
export default {
async email(message, env, ctx) {
// Trigger Cloudflare Workflow based on email
if (message.from.endsWith('@trusted-domain.com')) {
await env.WORKFLOW.create({
params: {
emailFrom: message.from,
emailTo: message.to,
receivedAt: new Date().toISOString(),
},
});
}
await message.forward('inbox@yourdomain.com');
},
};
Dependencies
Required:
postal-mime@2.5.0- Parse incoming email messagesmimetext@3.0.27- Create email messages for sending
Built-in:
cloudflare:email- EmailMessage class (no installation needed)
Optional:
@cloudflare/workers-types- TypeScript type definitions
Official Documentation
- Email Routing: https://developers.cloudflare.com/email-routing/
- Email Workers: https://developers.cloudflare.com/email-routing/email-workers/
- Send Email: https://developers.cloudflare.com/email-routing/email-workers/send-email-workers/
- Runtime API: https://developers.cloudflare.com/email-routing/email-workers/runtime-api/
- Local Development: https://developers.cloudflare.com/email-routing/email-workers/local-development/
- postal-mime: https://www.npmjs.com/package/postal-mime
- mimetext: https://www.npmjs.com/package/mimetext
Package Versions (Verified 2025-10-23)
{
"dependencies": {
"postal-mime": "^2.5.0",
"mimetext": "^3.0.27"
},
"devDependencies": {
"@cloudflare/workers-types": "^4.20251014.0",
"wrangler": "^4.44.0"
}
}
Questions? Issues?
- Check
references/common-errors.mdfor detailed troubleshooting - Review
references/dns-setup.mdfor DNS configuration help - See
references/local-development.mdfor testing patterns - Check official docs: https://developers.cloudflare.com/email-routing/
- Use
wrangler tailfor live debugging - Verify all destination addresses are verified in dashboard