This tutorial is going to show you how to set up Postfix SMTP relay with Mailjet on Ubuntu. Postfix is a popular open-source SMTP server. Previously I wrote an article how to easily set up a full-blown email server on Ubuntu with iRedMail, which helped a lot of readers run their own email server.

However, some readers told me that port 25 is blocked by hosting provider or ISP as a way to control email spam, so they couldn’t send email. Vultr would unblock port 25 if you ask them to, and Hostwinds doesn’t block port 25 at all, so I recommend using Hostwinds VPS Some other hosting providers or ISPs like DigitalOcean would refuse to unblock port 25.

SMTP Relay To The Rescue

You can bypass port 25 and send emails to outside world with SMTP relay because it uses port 587. With SMTP relay, your own email server doesn’t directly send email to the destination email address. Instead, there’s an intermediate mail server, otherwise known as smart host or relay host , that sends emails on your behalf. Your email server communicates with smart host on port 587, then the smart host talks with the recipient’s mail server on port 25.

SMTP relay can also help you get around anti-spam blacklists, if your IP address is blacklisted for whatever reason. The recipient’s mail server checks the smart host’s IP address against public anti-spam blacklists, instead of your server IP address and because SMTP relay services maintain good IP reputation, so your emails can get through IP blacklists.

Using Mailjet To Send 200 Emails Per Day For Free

There are several email service providers (ESP) that can act as smart host. Some charge a little fee, some offer free quotas every month. In this article, I’d like to show you how to use Mailjet, which is an email service providers that allows you to send 200 emails per day for free.

The nice thing about Mailjet is that it doesn’t require you to enter your credit card details when you use the free SMTP relay service. There are other ESPs that offer free quota every month but requires you to enter credit card details. (I know how frustrated it can be when you don’t have a credit card.) Mailjet is also easier to set up, compared to other ESPs.

Create an account at mailjet.com. Then on the dashboard, you can see the 3 things that you need to do.

  • Setting up SMTP
  • Managing sender addresses
  • setting up domain authentication (SPF and DKIM)

Step 1: Setting up Postfix SMTP Relay on Ubuntu

First, let’s install Postfix SMTP server on Ubuntu with the following command. If Postfix is already running on your server, then skip installing Postfix, but you still need to install the libsasl2-modules package.

sudo apt install postfix libsasl2-modules

When you see the following message, press the Tab key and press Enter.

Then choose the second option: Internet Site.

Next, set the system mail name. For example, I enter my domain name linuxbabe.com.

After Postfix is installed, open the configuration file.

sudo nano /etc/postfix/main.cf

Find the following line.

relayhost =

By default, its value is not set. You need to get this value from your mailjet account. In mailjet dashboard, click setup my SMTP.

You will see the SMTP server address and SMTP credentials.

In the Postfix config file, set the value of relayhost to in-v3.mailjet.com:587.

relayhost = in-v3.mailjet.com:587

Then add the following lines to the end of this file.

# outbound relay configurations
smtp_sasl_auth_enable = yes
smtp_sasl_password_maps = hash:/etc/postfix/sasl_passwd
smtp_sasl_security_options = noanonymous
smtp_tls_security_level = may
header_size_limit = 4096000

Save and close the file. Then create the /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd file.

sudo nano /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd

Add the SMTP relay host and SMTP credentials to this file like below. Replace api-key and secret-key with your real Mailjet API key and secret key.

in-v3.mailjet.com:587  api-key:secret-key

Save and close the file. Then create the corresponding hash db file with postmap.

sudo postmap /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd

Now you should have a file /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd.db. Restart Postfix for the changes to take effect.

sudo systemctl restart postfix

By default, sasl_passwd and sasl_passwd.db file can be read by any user on the server.  Change the permission to 600 so only root can read and write to these two files.

sudo chmod 0600 /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd /etc/postfix/sasl_passwd.db

From now on, Postfix will send emails via mailjet.

Step 2: Adding Sender Addresses

You need to add sender domain or sender address in order to send email via mailjet. In mailjet dashboard, click manage sender addresses. You can validate your entire domain or specific email addresses.

Step 3: Setting up Domain Authentication

In this step, we need to set up SPF and DKIM record, which is strongly recommended if you want your emails to land in recipient’s inbox rather than spam folder.

  • SPF: Sender Policy Framework. This is a DNS record that specifies what IP addresses are allowed to send email from your domain.
  • DKIM: DomainKeys Identified Mail. Mailjet will digitally sign your emails with a private key. The DKIM record contains a public key that allows recipient’s email server to verify the signature.

In mailjet dashboard, click setup domain authentication. By default, SPF status and DKIM status are both in error. Click manage button and follow the instructions to add SPF and DKIM records.

After SPF and DKIM records are created, wait a few moments and refresh the mailjet web page. Your new DNS records can take some time to propagate on the Internet, depending on your DNS hosting service. If SPF and DKIM records are set up correctly and propagation is complete, mailjet would tell you that SPF and DKIM record are good.

Sending Test Email

Now we can send a test email with mailx command like below.

sudo apt install bsd-mailx

echo "this is a test email." | mailx -r from-address -s hello to-address

You can also send a test email from your webmail client or desktop mail client. It is also a good idea to test your email score at https://www.mail-tester.com. As you can see, I got a perfect score.

Wrapping Up

That’s it! I hope this tutorial helped you set up Postfix SMTP relay on Ubuntu to bypass port 25 or IP blacklists. As always, if you found this post useful, then subscribe to our free newsletter to get more tips and tricks. Take care.

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