Visual vs. Text-Only Emails: Which Format Converts Better?

Neither format always wins. The right choice comes down to your audience, your goal, and where your subscriber sits in the journey, and sometimes a hybrid approach beats both.

designemail-marketinggeneralhow-to
Visual vs. Text-Only Emails: Which Format Converts Better?

If you've ever stared at a blank template wondering whether to go big on images or keep things clean with plain text, you're not alone. The short answer: both can work when you match the format to the job, the audience, and the moment.

Here's how to pick the right approach for your next send.

TL;DR

Not everyone will read every word, so here's the quick version.

  • Visual emails work well for product showcases, promotions, events, and brand storytelling. They're built to grab attention and guide the eye to a CTA.
  • Text-only emails often outperform when trust, speed, deliverability, or a human tone matter most, think sales follow-ups, onboarding nudges, and founder notes.
  • The real decider is context: audience, goal, device mix, and where your subscriber is in their journey.
  • Don't guess. A/B test layout, image usage, and CTA placement. Track click-to-open rate (CTOR), conversion rate, and revenue per send, not just opens.

What "Converts" actually means

Clicks aren't conversions. Tie your test to the right outcome before you design a single pixel.

  • Commerce: Add-to-cart, purchase, revenue per recipient
  • B2B: Demo booked, form submitted, content downloaded
  • Product: Feature adoption, trial activation, onboarding step completed
  • Events: Registration completed, calendar added

When visual emails win

1. You're selling something people need to see

  • Fashion, furniture, travel, food, events, imagery does the heavy lifting.
  • Use real context shots over sterile cut-outs. Add short caption text to make images useful without relying on them.

2. You're running a limited-time offer

  • Visual hierarchy conveys urgency: big headlines, price callouts, countdowns, and bold CTAs.
  • Keep copy tight. Every extra sentence delays the click.

3. You need brand presence at a glance

  • Consistent colours, typography, and layouts build recall across multiple sends.
  • Maintain a design system covering spacing, header and footer patterns, and button styles. Consistency converts.

4. Scannability matters

  • Readers skim. Modular blocks with spacing, icons, and dividers guide the eye.
  • Use one primary CTA per section. Don't send people on a scavenger hunt.

Risks to manage

  • Image-heavy emails carry deliverability risk if there's too little live text.
  • Slow load times on poor connections kill engagement.
  • Dark mode can flip colours and wreck contrast.
  • Client rendering varies across Outlook, Gmail, and Apple Mail.

How to reduce those risks

  • Maintain a balanced image-to-text ratio, avoid 'one giant image' emails.
  • Use live HTML text for headlines and body copy. Never bake critical copy into images.
  • Add ALT text for accessibility and image-off scenarios.
  • Build bulletproof buttons with HTML and CSS instead of image buttons.
  • Compress images, use proper dimensions, and apply modern formats where supported.

When text-only emails win

1. You want it to feel personal

  • Plain text, or lightly formatted 'hybrid plain text' with no images, looks like a human wrote it.
  • Good for founder updates, sales follow-ups, onboarding nudges, and quick check-ins.

2. Deliverability is a concern

  • Fewer images and natural-language copy reduce spam friction.
  • Particularly useful for re-engagement campaigns or when warming a new sending domain.

3. Speed is the point

  • Critical notices, transactional updates, password resets. Keep them fast and frictionless.

4. Long-form content

  • Editorial letters and thought leadership often read as more credible without heavy design around them.

Risks to manage

  • Harder to present complex offers or multiple products clearly.
  • Can look unbranded or generic if overused.

How to reduce those risks

  • Use a recognisable sender name and a consistent signature.
  • Keep paragraphs short, add white space, and write clear, descriptive link text.
  • If you need a CTA anchor, add one simple HTML button while keeping the overall plain feel.

Keep in mind

The device mix

  • If your list is 70% or more mobile, large hero images may push your CTA below the fold.
  • For visual emails, place a tappable CTA above the fold and repeat it at the end.
  • For text-only, keep line lengths short, around 40 to 60 characters, to avoid a wall of text on mobile.

Accessibility and UX that quietly lift conversions

  • ALT text for every image.
  • Sufficient colour contrast, especially in dark mode.
  • Minimum 16px body text.
  • Buttons at least 44x44px.
  • Avoid 'Click here.' Use meaningful link labels like 'View the winter collection'.
  • Never rely on colour alone to communicate state or emphasis.

The middle path: hybrid emails

You don't have to pick a side. Many high-performing campaigns use hybrid layouts:

  • Live HTML headline with a short paragraph
  • One supporting image that adds clarity, not clutter
  • A single, bold CTA
  • An optional secondary text link ('Prefer plain text? Read here.')

This keeps brand presence without hurting load time or deliverability.

Visual vs. text-only isn't a belief system, it's a strategy call. Match the format to the conversion you want, then let the data pick the winner.

Frequently asked questions

Do visual emails hurt deliverability?
They can, if the email is mostly images with very little live text. Spam filters look at image-to-text ratio. To reduce the risk, use HTML text for headlines and body copy, add ALT text to every image, and avoid 'one giant image' designs.
When should I use plain-text emails instead of designed ones?
Plain-text works well when you want the message to feel personal, sales follow-ups, founder notes, onboarding nudges. It also helps when deliverability is sensitive, such as during domain warming or re-engagement campaigns, and for transactional messages where speed matters most.
What metrics should I track to measure email conversion?
Opens are a weak signal on their own. Track click-to-open rate (CTOR), conversion rate tied to a specific action (purchase, demo booked, form submitted), and revenue per send. Define your primary conversion metric before you start building the email.
What is a hybrid email and when does it make sense?
A hybrid email combines live HTML text with minimal imagery, typically one supporting image, a bold CTA, and an optional plain-text link. It gives you brand presence without the load time or deliverability risks of a fully designed template. It's a good default for audiences with mixed device and connection profiles.