Introduction
Email marketing success depends more and more on knowing how and where people get their emails—not just what’s inside them. The first post talked about how email clients are spread out, but looking at device habits gives us another key piece of the puzzle. People don’t stick to just one way of checking emails.
People are always moving between devices. An email that gets read on an iPhone during the morning commute might get opened again on a laptop at work, and then later on a desktop.
When marketers keep that in mind, they’re better able to build emails that perform well across all kinds of devices—so no matter where someone is reading, the experience stays consistent and they stay engaged.
Global Device Usage for Email Access
When it comes to email access, the numbers tell us people are using all three, not just one.
| Device Type | Usage Share |
|---|---|
| Mobile | 41.6% |
| Webmail | 40.6% |
| Desktop | 16.2% |
Insights:
- Mobile and web usage are pretty close these days, so marketers shouldn’t just assume everyone’s checking email in one place.
- Even though desktop usage makes up a smaller share, it still counts—particularly in B2B or work environments, where detailed layouts and attachments come into play.
- That means a mobile‑first mindset should come alongside a continued focus on web and desktop.
Mobile Email Behavior: iPhone Dominance
When it comes to mobile, Apple devices are the clear leader—so focusing on iOS optimization really matters.
| Mobile Device | Share |
|---|---|
| iPhone | 90.5% |
| Android | 4.9% |
| iPad | 3.0% |
Key Implications:
- Basically, designing for mobile means designing for iPhone users. So things like responsive layouts, how images scale, button sizes, and dark mode—all of that should be tested on iOS first.
- Android and iPad users make up a smaller share, but testing on them can still help avoid small issues that might affect certain people.
- Going with a mobile‑first approach affects how easy your emails are to read and click, and it shapes overall engagement—since mobile is often the first place people interact with emails.
Webmail Behavior: Gmail Leads the Browser Experience
When it comes to web‑based email, things are still pretty concentrated — Gmail controls the majority of browser access.
| Webmail Client | Market Share |
|---|---|
| Gmail | 86.3% |
| Yahoo Mail | 10.5% |
| Outlook.com | 2.8% |
Key Insights:
- Gmail browser users expect emails to show up correctly, no matter how tight the rules are on HTML and CSS.
- That means you've got to test things like inline styles, complex layouts, and custom fonts to make sure they're consistent in webmail.
- Marketers should handle webmail optimization separately from mobile, even if some of the content is the same. It helps keep the experience consistent.
Desktop Email Behavior: Apple Mail and Outlook Lead
| Desktop Client | Share |
|---|---|
| Apple Mail | 62.9% |
| Outlook | 36.2% |
Insights:
- On macOS, Apple Mail shows emails pretty consistently, but Outlook can get messy—especially with emails that rely heavily on HTML.
- People who use desktop tend to spend more time on emails, read attachments, or do things that need the layout to be just right.
- For desktop optimization, stick with stability and clarity. Flashy interactive elements are risky — they might not hold up well in Outlook.
Multi-Device Behavior: Implications for Email Design
What these numbers really show is how often people switch between devices—and that leads to a few important things to keep in mind:
- Responsive design just needs to work, no matter what device someone is using. Whether they’re reading on an iPhone, looking at it in a browser, or using a desktop email app, your email should adjust without any issues.
- Put the key stuff where it's easy to see and tap—no matter the device. And stick to a flexible layout; fixed widths can get messy on mobile or in a browser.
- The important stuff should always be easy to find and click, regardless of the device. Stick to flexible layouts too—fixed widths can cause problems on mobile or in browsers.
Here’s the strategy: don’t try to make your email look perfect on every device. Instead, focus on the most important ones—iPhone, Gmail on the web, and Apple Mail on desktop. As for the rest, you just want it to function and not have any major hiccups.
Testing and Validation Across Devices
Even after you figure out which devices and email clients to focus on, rendering problems can still happen. Different CSS support, layout engines, and display environments all get in the way. During the design phase, these issues are easy to miss—but once people open your email on different platforms, they can really throw off the experience.
Common challenges include:
- Layouts that don’t look the same across mobile, webmail, and desktop clients
- Dark mode messing with colors and making things hard to read
- Fonts and spacing looking different depending on the device
- Images that scale weirdly or don’t show up at all in some environments
Since so many people switch between devices, testing your email in just one place isn’t really enough. Something that looks fine on an iPhone could still act up in Gmail webmail or Outlook on desktop. So it’s important to test across different environments.
These days, a lot of people use email previews to manage inboxes, and that's exactly what they're made for. When marketers check how an email shows up on major clients and devices—like iPhone, Gmail on the web, and Outlook on desktop—they can catch problems early and make sure the key parts are clear and working right.
Platforms like ASC, for instance, give teams email preview tools so they can see how their emails behave in high‑impact environments before hitting send. That cuts down on issues after sending and helps with overall consistency.
Recommended Approach:
- Prioritize testing in the main environments (iPhone, Gmail, Apple Mail)
- Check key things like layout structure, button visibility, and image display
- Review dark mode behavior and fallback scenarios
- Make inbox previews a regular part of your pre‑send workflow
By adding inbox previews to the email creation process, marketers can move from just fixing problems after they happen to catching them early—leading to a more consistent and reliable experience across different devices.
Conclusion
Keeping an eye on device usage trends is just as important as figuring out how the email client market breaks down. Here are a few key things marketers should keep in mind in 2026:
- Mobile, web, and desktop each have their own role, but most people are using mobile (mainly iPhone) and Gmail on the web.
- Emails have to be responsive, consistent, and flexible—people switch between devices all the time, after all.
- Test on the devices most people actually use. That way, you can help make sure it works well for them—even if it's not perfect on the less common ones.
When you use what you know about devices to guide your design, testing, and content planning, you're more likely to keep people engaged, avoid mistakes, and keep things consistent on the platforms that count.






