Apollo.io is one of the most widely used B2B contact enrichment and prospecting platforms. Its database of 275+ million contacts makes it a powerful tool for building outbound lead lists. What it is not, by design, is an email verification platform.
Apollo email verification — verifying the contacts you export from Apollo before adding them to outreach sequences — is a critical step that most Apollo users skip. This guide explains why verification is necessary, what the data shows about Apollo's validity rates, and the exact workflow for cleaning Apollo exports before sending.
Why Apollo Contacts Are Not Pre-Verified
Apollo aggregates contact data from multiple sources: web scraping, user-contributed data, third-party data providers, and its own crawling infrastructure. Apollo continuously updates its database, but it cannot verify every email address in real time against live mail servers.
What Apollo provides is contact information believed to be accurate at the time of database entry. What it cannot guarantee is that a specific email address is deliverable at the moment you export it.
The gap between 'believed to be accurate when entered' and 'verified as deliverable today' is where the invalid contacts live. And for outbound email, those invalid contacts produce hard bounces that damage your domain reputation.
Apollo Email Validity Rates: What the Data Shows
Verification providers processing large volumes of Apollo exports report consistent patterns:
Overall valid rate for Apollo exports: 78–88%, depending on the seniority of the contacts, the industry, and the age of the Apollo data.
Invalid rate: 8–18%. Higher for very senior contacts (C-suite, VP) in high-churn industries where role changes are frequent.
Catch-all rate: 15–30%. Apollo exports heavy with enterprise contacts at large companies have disproportionately high catch-all domain rates.
Unknown rate: 2–5%. Addresses that cannot be definitively verified or rejected.
The practical implication: sending a 1,000-contact Apollo export without verification produces approximately 80–180 hard bounces — enough to damage domain reputation in a single campaign.
The Apollo Verification Workflow
Step 1: Export from Apollo
In Apollo, build your search using the filters relevant to your ICP (industry, title, location, company size, technology, etc.). Select the contacts you want to export. Go to Export > CSV. Apollo will export the list with email addresses in a dedicated column.
Step 2: Prepare the CSV for Verification
Open the Apollo export in Excel or Google Sheets. Ensure the email column is clean — no extra spaces, no merged cells, consistent header naming.
Optionally: filter out role-based addresses (info@, sales@, contact@) before verification. Apollo sometimes includes these in exports; they are not appropriate cold email targets.
Step 3: Run Bulk Email Verification
Upload the email column to a bulk email verification tool. For a typical Apollo export of 500–5,000 contacts, verification completes in 5–20 minutes.
Step 4: Segment by Result
The verification results produce four groups:
Valid: Safe to send. Import into your outreach tool.
Catch all email verification — Catch-all: Uncertain deliverability. Segment separately. Test with a small batch and monitor bounce rates before scaling.
Invalid: Remove from all outreach lists. Do not import to your email platform or CRM.
Disposable/Unknown: Suppress. These addresses are either temporary or cannot be confirmed as deliverable.
Step 5: Import Clean Segment to Outreach Tool
Import only the Valid segment directly to your cold email tool (Instantly, Smartlead, Reply.io, Lemlist, etc.) or CRM. Import the Catch-All segment to a separate, monitored sequence with reduced sending frequency.
Apollo's Built-In Email Verification
Apollo offers its own email verification feature, accessible within the platform. It provides a verification status on exported contacts. This is useful as a first pass, but has limitations:
Apollo's verification is applied at the time of database entry, not at the time of your export. For contacts whose data was entered 6–12 months ago, the verification status may no longer be current.
Apollo's verification does not provide the same granularity as dedicated verification tools — particularly on catch-all classification and deliverability probability scoring.
The recommendation: use Apollo's built-in verification as a first filter, then run a dedicated verification pass on the Apollo-verified contacts before sending. The secondary pass catches decay that occurred after Apollo's verification was applied.
Integrating Apollo Verification into a Repeatable Workflow
For teams running regular Apollo exports as part of a weekly or monthly prospecting workflow, build the verification step into the standard operating procedure:
Apollo export → immediate verification → segmentation → import to tool. This sequence should be documented and followed without exception.
Use a shared folder (Google Drive, Notion) to store raw Apollo exports alongside their verification results for audit reference.
Track validity rates over time by export batch to identify whether specific Apollo search criteria are producing consistently lower-quality data.
Integrating email list hygiene and cold email standards into the Apollo workflow ensures that the powerful prospecting capability of Apollo is not undermined by the deliverability damage of sending unverified contacts.
Key Takeaways
Apollo email verification is a mandatory step between Apollo export and outreach sequence enrollment — Apollo's database is a prospecting tool, not a verified deliverability platform.
Apollo exports typically have invalid rates of 8–18% and catch-all rates of 15–30% depending on contact seniority and industry.
The verification workflow is: export from Apollo → bulk verify → segment by result → import Valid segment to outreach tool → separate Catch-All segment for monitored sending.
Apollo's built-in verification is a useful first filter but does not replace a dedicated verification pass due to data age and classification granularity limitations.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does Apollo verify email addresses before providing them?
Apollo applies its own verification at the time of database entry and provides a verification status on contacts. However, this verification is not performed at the moment of your export and does not account for decay that occurred after the verification was applied.
What is a typical valid rate for Apollo exports?
78–88% for most export criteria. Higher for contacts at smaller, stable companies in lower-churn industries. Lower for C-suite contacts in high-churn industries like technology and financial services.
How often should I re-verify Apollo contacts I already imported?
Re-verify contacts from Apollo exports that are more than 90 days old before including them in new outreach sequences. Contact validity degrades at approximately 2% per month.
Can I verify Apollo contacts in bulk automatically?
Yes. Export the Apollo CSV, upload to a bulk verification tool, download results, and re-import to your outreach tool or CRM. For higher-frequency workflows, the BounceProof API can be integrated into the export-to-import pipeline programmatically.
Conclusion
Apollo email verification is not an optional enhancement to your outbound workflow. It is the control that protects your sending domain from the inevitable invalid contacts in every Apollo export. The 10–20 minutes required to verify a typical Apollo export protects months of domain reputation that would take far longer to rebuild after a deliverability incident.
Make it non-negotiable in your SDR process: no Apollo contacts go into a sequence without a verification pass. That single rule has an outsized impact on outbound deliverability.
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