Cart abandonment costs ecommerce brands $18 billion per year. These 9 abandoned cart email templates include actual subject lines, full email copy, and a proven 3-email recovery sequence timed at 1 hour, 24 hours, and 72 hours.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 14 min
70.19% average abandonment rate. 7 out of 10 people leave without buying.
The average cart abandonment rate is 70.19%, according to Baymard Institute’s analysis of 49 studies (2024). That means 7 out of 10 people who add items to their cart will leave without buying. For a store doing $100,000/month in revenue, that represents roughly $233,000 in lost sales sitting in abandoned carts every single month.
Abandoned cart email: An automated message sent to a shopper who added products to their cart but left the site before completing the purchase. Typically sent as a sequence of 2-3 emails over 72 hours.
But here’s what makes cart abandonment different from other “lost” traffic: these aren’t casual browsers. They selected a product, added it to their cart, and in many cases entered their email address. They were close. Cart recovery emails convert at 4.64% on average (Klaviyo, 2024), which makes them the highest-ROI automated email you can build.
| Cart Abandonment Stat | Value | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Average cart abandonment rate | 70.19% | Baymard Institute, 2024 |
| Revenue recoverable via email | 3-14% of abandoned carts | Klaviyo, 2024 |
| Average cart email open rate | 41.18% | Omnisend, 2024 |
| Average cart email click rate | 9.50% | Omnisend, 2024 |
| Average cart email conversion rate | 4.64% | Klaviyo, 2024 |
| Top reason for abandonment | Extra costs (shipping, tax, fees) | Baymard Institute, 2024 |
“Most brands send one generic ‘you forgot something’ email and call it a day. That recovers about 3% of abandoned carts. A properly sequenced 3-email flow with escalating incentives recovers 10-14%. The difference on a $500K/year store is $35,000-$55,000 in recovered revenue.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Send 1 hour after abandonment. No discount, no urgency. Just a nudge.
The first email in any cart recovery sequence should be a gentle reminder, not a hard sell. Send it 1 hour after abandonment. No discount, no urgency. Just a nudge. This first email alone recovers 40-50% of all cart recovery revenue, according to Rejoiner’s 2023 data.
Subject line: You left something in your cart
When to send: 1 hour after abandonment
Hey [First Name],
You left [product name] in your cart. It’s still there, but we can only hold it for a limited time.
[Product image]
[Product name]
[Price]
Need help? Reply to this email or call us at [phone number].
[Brand] Team
Why it works: No cleverness, no tricks. Some people genuinely forgot or got distracted. A clean reminder with the product image and a direct link to their cart is all they need. The “limited time” mention creates soft urgency without a fake countdown timer.
Subject line: Still thinking it over? Here’s some help.
When to send: 1 hour after abandonment
Hey [First Name],
We noticed you were checking out [product name]. If something stopped you, we want to help.
Common questions about [product name]:
[Product image]
[Product name] – [Price]
[Brand] Team
Why it works: Addresses the top reasons people abandon carts (unexpected shipping costs, return policy concerns, sizing uncertainty) proactively. This removes friction instead of adding pressure.
Urgency-based subject lines increase open rates by 22%.
Urgency works, but only when it’s real. Fake countdown timers and “only 2 left!” messages erode trust. The best urgency-based cart emails use genuine scarcity (actual inventory levels, real time-limited pricing) or the natural urgency of cart expiration. Urgency-based subject lines increase open rates by 22%, per a 2024 Mailchimp analysis of 12,000+ ecommerce campaigns.
Subject line: [Product name] is selling fast
When to send: 24 hours after abandonment
Hey [First Name],
Quick heads up: [product name] is one of our top sellers this week, and stock is getting low.
We can’t guarantee it’ll be here tomorrow.
[Product image]
[Product name]
[Price]
[X] left in stock
[Brand] Team
Why it works: Real inventory numbers (“7 left in stock”) are more credible than “selling fast!” on its own. Only use this template when stock levels are actually low. Sending fake scarcity signals trains customers to ignore your emails.
Subject line: Your cart expires tonight
When to send: 24 hours after abandonment
[First Name],
Your saved cart with [product name] expires at midnight tonight. After that, we can’t guarantee the price or availability.
[Cart summary with product image, name, price]
Cart total: [amount]
Questions? We’re here: [support email or chat link]
Why it works: Cart expiration is real urgency (most platforms do clear carts after a period). The time deadline (“midnight tonight”) is specific. The inclusion of the cart total reminds them they already did the work of selecting items.
Only in your third email (72 hours). Never lead with a discount.
Offer a discount only in your third email (72 hours after abandonment), not your first. If you lead with a discount, you train customers to abandon carts deliberately to get a coupon. Brands that offer discounts in their first cart email see a 28% increase in intentional cart abandonment over time, according to a 2023 Drip analysis. Save the incentive for people who genuinely need a push.
Subject line: 10% off your cart. Just this once.
When to send: 72 hours after abandonment (Email 3 only)
Hey [First Name],
We don’t usually do this, but we noticed [product name] has been sitting in your cart for a few days.
Here’s 10% off to help you decide: COMEBACK10
[Product image]
[Product name][Original price] [Discounted price]
This code expires in 48 hours.
[Brand] Team
Why it works: “We don’t usually do this” frames the discount as special, not standard practice. The strikethrough price makes the savings visible. A 48-hour expiry creates real urgency. And “just this once” in the subject line prevents customers from expecting discounts every time.
Subject line: We’ll cover shipping on your order
When to send: 72 hours after abandonment
Hey [First Name],
Shipping costs are the #1 reason people don’t finish checkout. So we’re removing them.
Use code FREESHIP to get free shipping on the [product name] in your cart.
Your cart:
[Product name] – [Price]
Shipping: $[amount] FREE
Total: [Price]
Code expires in 24 hours.
Why it works: Free shipping outperforms percentage discounts for cart recovery. Baymard Institute data shows 48% of cart abandonments happen because of unexpected extra costs (shipping being #1). This template directly addresses the most common objection. Showing the cart summary with the shipping cost struck through makes the value obvious.
Recovers an additional 2-3% that previous emails missed.
The breakup email is your final attempt. If the discount in Email 3 didn’t work, one last email at 5-7 days acknowledges the relationship is ending and gives them a final chance. Breakup emails recover an additional 2-3% of abandoned carts that previous emails missed, per SaleCycle’s 2024 data.
Subject line: Should we clear your cart?
When to send: 5-7 days after abandonment (optional Email 4)
Hey [First Name],
We’ve sent you a couple of emails about the [product name] in your cart. This is the last one.
If you’re not interested, no hard feelings. We’ll clear your cart and stop emailing you about it.
But if you still want it:
[Product image]
[Product name] – [Price]
Either way, we’ll be here when you need us.
[Brand] Team
Why it works: The respectful tone stands out. “No hard feelings” and “This is the last one” are honest signals that build long-term trust. Some people aren’t ready to buy now but will remember you positively for not being pushy. The “Should we clear your cart?” subject line creates curiosity and consistently outperforms more aggressive final emails.
The difference between recovering 3% and recovering 14%.
Timing is the difference between recovering 3% and recovering 14% of abandoned carts. Send too early and you interrupt someone who’s still browsing. Send too late and they’ve already bought from a competitor. Here’s the sequence that works, based on aggregate data from Klaviyo, Omnisend, and SaleCycle (2024):
| Timing | Strategy | Incentive | Expected Recovery | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Email 1 | 1 hour | Simple reminder | None | 40-50% of total recovery |
| Email 2 | 24 hours | Urgency or social proof | None | 25-30% of total recovery |
| Email 3 | 72 hours | Incentive (discount or free shipping) | 10-15% off or free shipping | 20-25% of total recovery |
Why 1 hour, not immediately? Immediate cart abandonment emails feel invasive. The shopper might still be on your site, comparing products, or checking their bank balance. One hour gives them time to return on their own while your email is still timely.
Why 24 hours for Email 2? This hits their inbox the next day, often at a similar time to when they were shopping. It’s a natural reminder point without being aggressive.
Why 72 hours for the discount? By day 3, anyone who was going to buy without a nudge has already done so. The discount at this point targets genuine fence-sitters without training first-day shoppers to wait for a deal.
The complete flow using templates from this page:
Across all 9 templates and hundreds of cart recovery campaigns, five patterns separate high-performing cart emails from emails that get ignored:
1. Product image is mandatory. Cart emails with the abandoned product image see 2x higher click rates than text-only cart emails (Barilliance, 2023). The image triggers visual recognition and reignites desire. Always include it.
2. One product, one CTA. If the cart had multiple items, show all of them but use a single “Return to cart” button. Don’t create individual “Buy this” buttons for each product. Multiple CTAs dilute click-through by 37%.
3. Escalate incentives, don’t lead with them. Email 1 = no offer. Email 2 = social proof or urgency. Email 3 = discount or free shipping. This sequence protects your margins on people who would have bought anyway, and only discounts for those who need the push.
4. Use the real product name. “[First Name], your Nike Air Max 90s are waiting” outperforms “[First Name], you left something behind” every time. Personalization using the actual product name increases click-through by 18%, per Barilliance data.
5. Mobile-first design. 72% of cart abandonment emails are opened on mobile (Litmus, 2024). Keep your email width under 600px. Use a single-column layout. Make your CTA button at least 44×44 pixels (Apple’s minimum tap target).
These templates are starting points. Here’s how to make them perform for your specific store:
Match the incentive to your margins. If your average product margin is 20%, a 15% discount leaves almost nothing. Consider free shipping, a small gift, or bundled savings instead of percentage discounts. A $5 flat discount often feels more tangible than “10% off” on a $40 product.
Segment by cart value. High-value carts ($200+) deserve a different approach than $25 carts. For high-value carts, lead with support (“Need help deciding?”) and social proof. For low-value carts, the simple reminder often does the trick without any incentive.
Test subject lines aggressively. The subject line determines whether your recovery email gets opened. Run A/B tests on every email in the sequence. Based on data from 100,000+ cart recovery emails, these subject line styles perform best:
| Subject Line Type | Avg. Open Rate | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Product-specific | 46% | “Your [Product Name] is waiting” |
| Question-based | 44% | “Still thinking about it?” |
| Urgency | 42% | “Your cart expires tonight” |
| Incentive | 40% | “10% off your cart. Just this once.” |
| Generic | 31% | “Don’t miss out!” |
Exclude recent buyers. Nothing kills trust faster than sending a cart recovery email to someone who already purchased. Set your automation to suppress anyone who completed checkout. Check this weekly because automation tools occasionally fail to sync with order data.
Welcome sequences that convert new subscribers into customers, with actual copy to steal.
Subject lines organized by type: curiosity, urgency, personalization, and more.
End-to-end content strategy from email automation to full-funnel conversion.
The average cart abandonment rate is 70.19%, according to Baymard Institute’s analysis of 49 different studies (2024). This means roughly 7 out of every 10 online shoppers who add items to their cart leave without completing the purchase. Mobile abandonment rates are even higher at 85.65%.
Send 3 abandoned cart emails: a reminder at 1 hour, social proof or urgency at 24 hours, and a discount or free shipping offer at 72 hours. Some brands add a 4th “breakup” email at 5-7 days. Data from Klaviyo shows that 3-email sequences recover 69% more revenue than single-email approaches.
Send your first cart abandonment email 1 hour after the cart is abandoned. Sending immediately feels intrusive (the shopper may still be on your site), and waiting longer than 4 hours allows intent to cool. Rejoiner’s data shows that 1-hour timing recovers 16% more revenue than emails sent at 24 hours.
Only in your third email, at 72 hours. Offering discounts in the first email trains customers to abandon carts intentionally, which increases intentional abandonment by 28% over time (Drip, 2023). Save the incentive for genuine fence-sitters. Free shipping often outperforms percentage discounts because it directly addresses the #1 reason for cart abandonment.
A good abandoned cart email conversion rate is 4-5%. The average is 4.64% according to Klaviyo’s 2024 data. Top-performing ecommerce brands achieve 8-10% conversion rates on their cart recovery sequences. If you’re below 3%, review your email timing, subject lines, and whether you’re including the product image.
We build automated email sequences that recover 10-14% of abandoned carts. From first email to full lifecycle automation, we handle the strategy, copy, and setup.
Can social proof recover abandoned carts?
Second most effective technique after discounts. 5-8% recovery without cutting margins.
Social proof is the second most effective cart recovery technique after discounts, recovering 5-8% of abandoned carts without cutting into your margins. A 2024 Yotpo study found that emails containing customer reviews have a 15% higher conversion rate than those without. Use social proof in your second email (24 hours) when the simple reminder hasn’t worked.
Template #5: The Review Highlight
Subject line: What 2,847 customers say about [product name]
When to send: 24 hours after abandonment
Hey [First Name],
Still deciding on [product name]? Here’s what people who bought it are saying:
★★★★★ “[Real review quote]”
– [Reviewer name], verified buyer
★★★★★ “[Real review quote]”
– [Reviewer name], verified buyer
★★★★☆ “[Real review quote]”
– [Reviewer name], verified buyer
[Product name] | [Price] | Rated 4.7/5 from 2,847 reviews
Complete your order →
Why it works: Three reviews, not one. Including a 4-star review alongside 5-star reviews actually increases credibility (a perfect score looks filtered). The subject line with the specific review count (2,847) is more compelling than “see what others think.” Real customer names and “verified buyer” tags add authenticity.
Template #6: The Bestseller Proof
Subject line: [Product name] was our #1 seller last month
When to send: 24 hours after abandonment
Hey [First Name],
Good taste. [Product name] was our bestselling [category] last month, with [number] orders.
You left it in your cart, and we wanted to make sure you don’t miss out.
[Product image]
[Product name] – [Price]
#1 in [category] | [number] sold last month
Get yours →
[Brand] Team
Why it works: “Good taste” validates the reader’s choice. Bestseller status with specific numbers (“437 orders last month”) creates social proof without needing individual reviews. Works especially well for products that don’t have many reviews yet.