Ready-to-use welcome email templates across SaaS, ecommerce, B2B, media, and fitness. Each includes the actual subject line, full email copy, and a complete 3-email welcome sequence framework.
Last updated: March 2026 · Reading time: 12 min
4x more opens, 5x more clicks than standard marketing emails.
A welcome email is the first message a new subscriber or customer receives after signing up, and it generates 4x more opens and 5x more clicks than standard marketing emails, according to Invesp (2024). That makes it the single highest-performing email you’ll ever send. Waste it on a generic “thanks for signing up,” and you’ve burned your best shot at a first impression.
Welcome email: An automated message triggered immediately after a user subscribes, registers, or makes their first purchase. It confirms the action, sets expectations, and drives a specific next step.
We selected the 10 templates below based on three criteria:
| Criteria | What we looked for |
|---|---|
| Clarity | Does it tell the reader exactly what to expect and what to do next? |
| Personality | Does it sound like a human wrote it, not a template engine? |
| Action | Does it include one clear CTA, not five competing links? |
Welcome emails with a single CTA produce 371% more clicks than those with multiple CTAs, per WordStream data. Every template below follows that principle.
“The welcome email isn’t about saying thanks. It’s about establishing the value exchange. You tell them what they’ll get, how often, and what to do right now. Skip any of those three and your open rates on email #2 will drop by half.”
Hardik Shah, Founder of ScaleGrowth.Digital
Get the user to their first “aha” moment. That’s the only job.
SaaS welcome emails need to do one thing above all else: get the user to their first “aha” moment. Product-led growth companies like Slack, Notion, and Canva treat the welcome email as step one of onboarding, not a branding exercise. The average SaaS trial-to-paid conversion rate sits at 14-25% (Totango, 2023), and the welcome email directly influences whether users ever log back in.
Subject line: Your [Product] account is ready. Here’s your first win.
When to send: Immediately after signup (within 60 seconds)
Hey [First Name],
You’re in. Your [Product] account is live.
Most new users get their first [key outcome] within 8 minutes. Here’s how:
Step 1: [Specific action, e.g., “Create your first project”]
Step 2: [Specific action, e.g., “Import your data from Google Sheets”]
Step 3: [Specific action, e.g., “Invite one teammate”]
That’s it. Three steps and you’ll see why 12,000+ teams use [Product] every day.
Questions? Hit reply. A real person answers every email.
[Your name]
[Title] at [Company]
Why it works: It skips the preamble, sets a time expectation (“8 minutes”), gives three concrete steps, and uses social proof (“12,000+ teams”) without being pushy. One CTA button. One goal.
Subject line: A quick note from [Founder Name] (+ what’s next)
When to send: Immediately after signup
Hey [First Name],
I’m [Founder Name], and I built [Product] because [one-sentence origin story, e.g., “I was tired of losing track of client feedback across 4 different tools”].
You just signed up, so here’s what happens next:
I read every reply personally. If something’s confusing or broken, tell me.
Glad you’re here,
[Founder Name]
Why it works: Early-stage SaaS can’t compete on brand recognition, but they can compete on founder authenticity. This template sets expectations for the next 3 emails (reducing unsubscribes) and makes the user feel like they’re joining something real, not signing up for spam.
52% higher conversion rates when a discount code is included.
Ecommerce welcome emails convert at 52% higher rates when they include a discount code, according to Omnisend’s 2024 email marketing report. But the best ecommerce welcome emails go beyond the coupon. They establish brand identity and create urgency without feeling desperate.
Subject line: Welcome to [Brand]. Here’s 15% off your first order.
When to send: Within 2 minutes of email signup
Hey [First Name],
Welcome to [Brand]. You’ve got great taste.
Here’s your first-timer code: WELCOME15
Use it on anything in the store. It’s good for 7 days.
What people are buying right now:
P.S. We ship free on orders over $50. Your code stacks with that.
The [Brand] Team
Why it works: Discount code front and center, 7-day expiry creates soft urgency, bestseller list reduces decision paralysis, and the P.S. line adds a stacking incentive. No brand story, no CEO letter. Just value.
Subject line: You just joined 85,000+ [Brand] customers
When to send: Immediately after first purchase
Hey [First Name],
Your order is confirmed (check your inbox for the shipping details).
While you wait, here’s the 30-second version of who we are:
We started [Brand] in [year] because [one sentence problem]. Today, 85,000+ customers trust us for [category], and we’ve shipped over [number] orders with a 4.8-star average rating.
What to expect from us:
Thanks for your first order. We don’t take it for granted.
[Brand] Team
Why it works: Combines order confirmation with brand introduction. The social proof is specific (85,000 customers, 4.8 stars), and the “what to expect” list reduces buyer’s remorse while setting up future email engagement.
Deliver immediate value and position the sender as a resource.
B2B welcome emails shouldn’t mimic B2C. Your subscriber signed up for industry expertise, not personality-driven content. The best B2B welcome emails deliver immediate value and position the sender as a resource. B2B emails have an average open rate of 15.1% (Campaign Monitor, 2024), but welcome emails in B2B consistently outperform at 50%+ open rates because the subscriber’s intent is fresh.
Subject line: Your [resource name] is attached
When to send: Immediately after lead magnet download
Hi [First Name],
Here’s the [resource name] you requested: Download PDF
Quick context on what’s inside:
The section on [topic] usually gets the most questions. If anything’s unclear, reply and I’ll clarify.
I’ll send you one more email on Thursday with a related [resource/case study]. After that, you’ll only hear from us when we have something worth your time.
[Name]
[Title] at [Company]
Why it works: Delivers what was promised immediately (no teasing). Previews the contents so they actually open the attachment. Sets expectations for email frequency and gives them control. The “reply and I’ll clarify” line opens a sales conversation without asking for one.
Subject line: You’re in. Here’s what to expect every [Tuesday/week].
When to send: Immediately after newsletter signup
Hi [First Name],
You just subscribed to [Newsletter Name]. Here’s the deal:
What you’ll get: One email every [frequency] covering [topic]. Real data, real examples. No filler.
What you won’t get: Sales pitches, sponsored content, or emails more than once a week.
Our 3 most-read issues:
Start with whichever catches your eye.
[Name]
Editor, [Newsletter Name]
Why it works: The “what you won’t get” line is the strongest element. It addresses the reader’s #1 fear (inbox spam) head-on. Linking to popular back-issues provides immediate value and establishes authority through social proof (open counts).
23% higher engagement on the second email when back-issue links are included.
Newsletter welcome emails have a unique challenge: you need to prove value before the next issue ships. Morning Brew, The Hustle, and similar publications use welcome emails to drive habit formation. According to Newsletter Glue’s 2024 data, newsletters that send a welcome email with back-issue links see 23% higher engagement on their second email.
Subject line: Welcome aboard. Start here.
When to send: Immediately
Hey [First Name],
You just joined [number] other [audience description, e.g., “marketers, founders, and ops people”] who read [Newsletter Name].
Your first regular issue drops [day]. Until then, here are our greatest hits:
If you have 2 minutes:
[Short article title]
If you have 5 minutes:
[Medium article title]
If you want the deep cut:
[Long-form article title]
One favor: move this email to your Primary tab (Gmail) or add [email] to your contacts. That way we won’t end up in Promotions.
See you [day],
[Name]
Why it works: The tiered reading options respect the reader’s time. The Gmail Primary tab request is practical and improves deliverability. No ask for a purchase or share. Just value.
Subject line: Ok, you’re in. Quick ground rules.
When to send: Immediately
[First Name],
Welcome. Here’s how this works:
Every [day] morning, you’ll get an email from me. It takes about [X] minutes to read. It covers [topic] with a focus on [angle].
Some ground rules:
The last issue was about [topic]. Give it a read and let me know what you think.
[Name]
Why it works: The “ground rules” framing is unexpected and creates a sense of direct relationship. Rule #2 (“tell me if it’s boring”) is disarming. This tone works for creator-led newsletters where personality is the product.
67% of new gym members who don’t attend within 72 hours become long-term no-shows.
Fitness and wellness subscribers act fast or not at all. According to Exercise.com’s 2024 industry report, 67% of new gym members who don’t attend within the first 72 hours of signing up become long-term no-shows. The same urgency applies to digital fitness. Your welcome email needs to move them from intent to action before motivation fades.
Subject line: Your first workout is ready (takes 20 minutes)
When to send: Immediately after signup
Hey [First Name],
You signed up. That’s step one. Here’s step two:
Your Day 1 Workout (20 minutes, no equipment):
That’s it. Do it today. Tomorrow I’ll send your Day 2 plan.
You’ve got this,
[Trainer Name]
Why it works: No app tour, no feature overview, no brand story. Just a workout they can do in 20 minutes. The specificity (3 sets x 12 reps) removes all ambiguity. The promise of “Day 2 tomorrow” creates an open loop that drives tomorrow’s open rate.
Subject line: Quick question before we start
When to send: Immediately after signup
Hey [First Name],
Before we send you anything, one quick question:
What’s your #1 goal right now?
Click one, and we’ll customize everything you get from us. Your workout plans, meal ideas, and weekly tips will all match that goal.
No click? No problem. We’ll start you with our most popular beginner plan (used by 14,000+ members).
[Brand] Team
Why it works: Segmentation disguised as personalization. Each link tags the subscriber and triggers a goal-specific automation. The “no click, no problem” fallback prevents friction. And “14,000+ members” adds social proof without being heavy-handed.
A 3-email sequence converts 90% better than a single welcome email.
A single welcome email converts well. A 3-email welcome sequence converts 90% better, per Omnisend’s 2024 automation benchmarks. The framework below works across every industry. Send Email 1 immediately, Email 2 at 24 hours, Email 3 at 72 hours.
| Timing | Goal | Subject Line Formula | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Email 1: The Confirmation | Immediately | Confirm, deliver, set expectations | “Welcome to [Brand]” or “You’re in” |
| Email 2: The Value Drop | 24 hours later | Prove value with content or quick win | “The [resource] I promised” or “Most people skip this” |
| Email 3: The Nudge | 72 hours later | Drive conversion action (purchase, trial, booking) | “Quick question” or “[First Name], did you see this?” |
Subject: Welcome to [Brand]. Here’s what’s next.
Hi [First Name],
Thanks for signing up. Here’s your [resource/code/access]: [deliver it].
Over the next few days, you’ll get 2 more emails from me:
After that, you’ll hear from us [frequency]. You can unsubscribe anytime.
[CTA button]
Subject: The [resource] I mentioned yesterday
Hi [First Name],
Yesterday I mentioned I’d send you [specific value]. Here it is:
[Deliver a piece of genuinely useful content: a guide, tip, case study, or exclusive data point]
The key takeaway: [one-sentence summary of the value].
[CTA: “Read the full guide” or “Try it yourself”]
One more email coming on [day]. It’s about [topic].
Subject: Quick question, [First Name]
Hi [First Name],
You signed up [3 days ago], and I’m curious: have you had a chance to [specific action from Email 1]?
[For SaaS]: If not, here’s a 90-second video showing exactly how: [link]
[For ecommerce]: Your WELCOME15 code expires in 4 days. Here’s what’s trending: [2-3 product links]
[For B2B]: If [problem your product solves] is still on your plate, here’s how [Company X] fixed it in [timeframe]: [case study link]
[CTA button]
If you’ve got questions, just reply. I read every email.
This 3-email framework generates measurably more revenue than a single welcome email. The timing matters: 24 hours gives them time to engage with Email 1. 72 hours creates enough gap that Email 3 doesn’t feel pushy, but enough proximity that they still remember signing up.
Five patterns that separate high-performing welcome emails from forgettable ones.
After analyzing these 10 templates and hundreds of welcome emails across industries, five patterns consistently separate high-performing welcome emails from forgettable ones:
1. One CTA per email. Every high-performing template above has a single primary action. Not three. Not a navigation bar full of links. One button, one goal. Emails with a single CTA see 371% more clicks (WordStream).
2. Expectation setting. Eight of the 10 templates explicitly tell the reader what happens next. “Tomorrow I’ll send…” or “You’ll hear from us every Tuesday.” This reduces unsubscribes by 25-30% because the reader knows what’s coming.
3. Immediate value delivery. None of these templates make the reader wait for value. The SaaS emails give a quick-start guide. The ecommerce emails give a discount. The fitness email gives a workout. Value first, ask second.
4. Specificity over generics. “12,000+ teams” beats “thousands of customers.” “4.8-star rating” beats “great reviews.” “20 minutes, no equipment” beats “quick and easy workout.” Specific numbers build trust.
5. Plain text beats heavy design. Welcome emails with minimal HTML formatting outperform heavily designed emails by 17% on click-through rate, according to HubSpot’s 2024 email research. Most templates above use simple formatting. The product should be in the app, not the email.
Make them yours in 15 minutes or less.
Copy-pasting templates word-for-word won’t work. Here’s how to make them yours in 15 minutes or less:
Replace brackets with real data. Every [placeholder] should become a specific number, product name, or feature. “[Number] of customers” should be “14,847 customers” if that’s your real number. Approximations are fine (“15,000+”), but invented precision isn’t.
Match your brand voice. Template #8 (personality-forward) won’t work for a compliance software company. Template #5 (resource delivery) won’t work for a streetwear brand. Pick the template that matches your audience’s expectations, then adjust the tone.
Test subject lines first. The subject line drives 47% of open decisions (OptinMonster, 2024). Before testing email body copy, A/B test subject lines. Run each test for at least 1,000 sends or 48 hours, whichever comes first.
Set up the automation properly. Every major email platform (Klaviyo, Mailchimp, ActiveCampaign, ConvertKit) supports welcome sequence automation. Set the trigger to “new subscriber” or “first purchase,” not “manual send.” The whole point is that this runs without you touching it.
Measure what matters. Track these three metrics for your welcome sequence:
| Metric | Good Benchmark | Great Benchmark |
|---|---|---|
| Open rate (Email 1) | 50%+ | 68%+ |
| Click rate (Email 1) | 10%+ | 18%+ |
| Sequence completion rate | 35%+ open all 3 | 50%+ open all 3 |
Proven subject lines organized by type: curiosity, urgency, personalization, and more.
Copy-paste cart recovery emails with a 3-email sequence framework.
End-to-end content strategy from keyword research to conversion optimization.
Keep welcome emails between 50 and 150 words. The goal is to confirm the action, set expectations, and drive one click. Longer emails work for founder-style or resource-delivery formats, but most welcome emails should be scannable in under 30 seconds. Research from Boomerang shows emails between 50-125 words get the highest response rates.
Send your welcome email immediately, within 60 seconds of signup. Delayed welcome emails (sent hours or days later) see open rates drop by 50% or more. Use automation to trigger the email instantly. Every major email platform supports this. If you’re sending welcome emails manually, you’re losing subscribers.
For ecommerce, yes. Welcome emails with discount codes convert 52% better than those without, per Omnisend’s 2024 data. For SaaS or B2B, no. Instead, deliver immediate value through a resource, quick-start guide, or useful content. The discount approach trains ecommerce customers to buy; the value approach trains B2B subscribers to trust you.
Three emails is the optimal welcome sequence length. Send Email 1 immediately (confirmation + delivery), Email 2 at 24 hours (value drop), and Email 3 at 72 hours (conversion nudge). Some brands extend to 5-7 emails, but the first three drive 90% of the sequence’s revenue. Start with three, then add more once you have data on what your audience engages with.
A good welcome email open rate is 50% or higher. The industry average for welcome emails is 68.6% (GetResponse, 2024), compared to 21.3% for standard marketing emails. If your welcome email open rate is below 40%, check your subject line, sender name, and send timing. Also verify your emails aren’t landing in the Promotions tab or spam folder.
We build automated email systems for brands that want to turn signups into revenue. From welcome sequences to full lifecycle automation.