Confirmed Open Rate (COR)

Confirmed Open Rate (COR) is a metric used in email marketing to measure the number of recipients who opened an email. As the standard ’email open’ tracks every open event, COR counts only those opens you can be sure about.

Most email platforms track “opens” by placing a tiny invisible image (a tracking pixel) inside. This image sends an event to the system saying that the email has been opened. This method sounds simple, but it has a few issues.

First, it depends on the recipient enabling images in their email. If they don’t, the pixel never loads, so the open isn’t tracked, even if the person read the email. Conversely, some email clients or devices preload images, triggering a false open even if the email was never read. Plus, these days, privacy settings like Apple’s Mail Privacy Protection make tracking even trickier by automatically loading these pixels regardless of user behaviour.

The Confirmed Open Rate attempts to get a more accurate signal by adding a second layer of confirmation and/or ruling out opens that happened too quickly for a human to open the email. Rather than logging an open based on the tracking pixel alone, COR counts only those opens backed up by a secondary action, like a click. So, if someone opens your email and clicks on a link inside, that’s considered a “confirmed open.”

Keep expanding your knowledge

Emerce E-Commerce Live! 2026
28 May
Emerce Digital Marketing Live! 2026
29 May
Digital Marketing Festival 2026 
02 Jun
How to build emails that work in dark mode
From answers to action: how chatbots make appointment booking smarter for municipalities
The AI Inbox: what is it and what do you need to take into account?
Gmail AI Overviews: what are they and what do they mean for email marketing?
What is a WhatsApp chatbot? How it works, benefits and use cases
Create emails for humans and AI: Why accessibility matters more than ever
Study Choice & Strategy Congress
09 Jun