How to Create Visually Appealing Emails That Get Read

Good email design comes down to clarity, consistency, and hierarchy, not clever creativity. Follow these practical principles and your emails will be easier to read and harder to ignore.

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How to Create Visually Appealing Emails That Get Read

Let's be honest, inboxes are busy. Really busy.

If your email doesn't look good at first glance, it probably won't get read, no matter how good the offer is.

The good news? Creating visually appealing emails doesn't mean over-designing or reinventing the wheel. It's about clarity, hierarchy, and making things easy (and enjoyable) for the reader.

Here's how to do it properly.

1. Start with a clear structure

Before you think about colours, fonts or images, think about layout.

Every good email should answer these questions immediately:

  • What is this email about?
  • What do you want me to do?
  • Why should I care?

A simple structure that works almost every time:

  • Headline
  • Supporting text
  • Visual or product
  • Call-to-action (CTA)

White space is your friend here. Let things breathe. Crowded emails feel overwhelming and get skipped.

2. Less fonts, more consistency

One of the biggest mistakes in email design is using too many fonts.

Stick to:

  • One font family
  • Two weights (regular + bold)
  • Clear size hierarchy (headline vs body text)

Email clients don't support fancy fonts consistently, so choose safe, reliable options. Clean typography will always look more premium than something "trendy" that breaks on half your audience's devices.

3. Design for mobile first (always)

Most people open your emails on their phones, often while multitasking.

That means:

  • Short paragraphs
  • Clear buttons (not tiny text links)
  • Images that scale properly
  • No side-by-side content that becomes unreadable on mobile

If you have to zoom in to read your own email, something needs fixing.

4. Use images with purpose

Images should support your message, not compete with it.

Good image rules:

  • High quality only (no blurry or pixelated visuals)
  • Relevant to the content
  • Not overloaded with text
  • Still makes sense if images don't load

Never rely on images alone to carry your message. Your email should still work with images turned off.

5. Keep colours on-brand (and readable)

Strong branding builds trust, but readability comes first.

A few simple tips:

  • High contrast between text and background
  • One primary brand colour for buttons and highlights
  • Avoid using too many colours in a single email

If everything is "important", nothing is.

6. Make your CTA impossible to miss

Your call-to-action should be obvious without being aggressive.

Best practices:

  • One primary CTA per email
  • Button over text link (especially on mobile)
  • Clear, action-driven copy (e.g. "Shop the Collection", "Book your spot", "Read More")

The CTA should stand out visually, but still feel like it belongs in the design.

7. Consistency beats creativity

This might sound surprising, but consistency often outperforms creativity in email marketing.

When subscribers recognise your layout, fonts and style, they:

  • Trust your emails more
  • Read them faster
  • Engage more consistently

You don't need a brand-new design every send. You need a strong, recognisable system that works.

Good design makes it easier to say yes

A visually appealing email isn't about doing more, it's about doing the right things well.

Clear layout. Clean design. Strong hierarchy.

When your emails are easy to read and good to look at, your message has room to land and your results follow. Good design isn't just about looking good. It's about making it easier for people to say yes.

Frequently asked questions

How many fonts should I use in a marketing email?
Stick to one font family with two weights, regular and bold. More than that creates visual noise and risks breaking across different email clients.
Should I design emails for mobile or desktop first?
Mobile first. Most subscribers open emails on their phones, often while doing something else. Short paragraphs, large buttons, and single-column layouts hold up far better on small screens.
How many CTAs should a marketing email have?
One primary CTA per email. Multiple competing calls-to-action split attention and reduce clicks. Use a button rather than a text link, especially for mobile readers.
Do I need to redesign my email template regularly to keep subscribers engaged?
No. Consistency tends to outperform novelty. When subscribers recognise your layout and style, they trust your emails more and read them faster. A reliable system beats a different design every send.