You enter your company email.
Click verify.
Nothing happens — or worse, it says “Verification Failed.”
But when you try a Gmail address?
It works instantly.
This Isn’t a Broken Link
If the link were expired, you’d see an expiration message.
If the server were down, everyone would be blocked.
This is different.
Some platforms restrict verification based on domain rules.
- Corporate domains with firewall filtering
- School (.edu) addresses with outbound restrictions
- Enterprise spam filtering systems
- Custom domain authentication policies
Your email isn’t invalid.
It’s just not considered “open domain.”
Why Platforms Do This
Public providers like Gmail or Outlook are easy to validate.
Corporate servers? Not always.
Verification systems check:
- Domain reputation score
- SMTP response reliability
- Authentication handshake timing
If your company blocks certain automated checks,
the platform may silently reject verification.
Quick Comparison
- Gmail → Open routing → Instant confirmation
- Corporate email → Internal routing → Delayed or blocked
- School email → Policy-based filters → Limited response
That’s why switching email sometimes fixes everything.
If verification fails only with your work or school address,
the restriction isn’t about your account.
It’s about the domain’s communication policy.