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SMS Double Opt-In vs Single Opt-In: Which Approach Builds a Better List

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Tags: sms opt-in, double opt-in, single opt-in, list quality, sms compliance, sms deliverability

SMS Double Opt-In vs Single Opt-In: Which Approach Builds a Better List

The choice between SMS double opt-in vs single opt-in is one of the most consequential decisions a marketer faces when building a subscriber list. The approach affects list growth rate, engagement metrics, deliverability, compliance posture, and long-term revenue per subscriber. Yet many teams make this decision by default rather than by design, often inheriting whatever workflow their platform shipped out of the box.

This guide breaks down both approaches with a focus on measurable outcomes: list quality, deliverability, complaint rates, and downstream engagement. The goal is to help determine the right opt-in model for a specific use case — or whether a hybrid approach makes more sense.

Defining Single Opt-In and Double Opt-In for SMS

Before comparing outcomes, it helps to establish precise definitions. The terms "single opt-in" and "double opt-in" originated in email marketing but carry slightly different implications in the SMS context due to regulatory frameworks like the TCPA and CTIA guidelines.

Single Opt-In (SOI)

In a single opt-in workflow, a subscriber provides their phone number through a web form, keyword text, or point-of-sale interaction and is immediately added to the active messaging list. The act of submitting the number constitutes consent. The subscriber typically receives a confirmation message acknowledging the subscription, but no further action is required to start receiving campaigns.

Double Opt-In (DOI)

Double opt-in adds a verification step. After the initial signup, the subscriber receives a confirmation SMS asking them to reply with a specific keyword (commonly "YES" or "CONFIRM") to finalize their subscription. Until they complete this step, they remain in a pending state and do not receive marketing messages. This two-step process verifies both the phone number's validity and the subscriber's intent.

For a deeper look at the regulatory landscape around consent types, see our guide on SMS consent and express written consent.

How Each Opt-In Approach Affects List Growth

The most immediate and visible difference between SOI and DOI is the impact on list growth velocity. Double opt-in introduces friction, and friction reduces conversion rates. The question is how much — and whether the trade-off is worth it.

Confirmation Completion Rates

Industry data on DOI confirmation rates for SMS varies, but a reasonable range based on published case studies and platform benchmarks is 60–85% completion. That means 15–40% of people who submit their phone number never confirm. Several factors influence where a program lands in that range:

Net List Growth Comparison

Assuming a 75% DOI confirmation rate, a program acquiring 10,000 signups per month would see the following difference over a quarter:

MetricSingle Opt-InDouble Opt-In (75% confirm)
Monthly signups10,00010,000
Added to active list10,0007,500
Quarterly active additions30,00022,500
Growth rate differenceBaseline-25%

A 25% reduction in list growth is significant, especially for programs in early-stage growth. However, raw subscriber count is a vanity metric if those subscribers do not engage, convert, or remain on the list. The more important question is what happens after signup.

List Quality and Engagement Metrics

This is where the comparison becomes more nuanced and where double opt-in starts to recover the ground it lost on growth rate.

Invalid Number Rates

Single opt-in lists consistently carry a higher percentage of invalid phone numbers. Sources of invalid numbers include:

Double opt-in eliminates nearly all of these. A number that successfully receives and responds to a confirmation message is, by definition, a valid mobile number with an active subscriber behind it. Programs that switch from SOI to DOI typically see invalid number rates drop from 5–12% to under 1%.

Engagement Rate Differences

Because DOI subscribers have demonstrated intent twice — once at signup and once at confirmation — they tend to engage at higher rates across key metrics:

MetricSingle Opt-In (typical range)Double Opt-In (typical range)
Click-through rate8–15%12–22%
30-day opt-out rate3–8%1–3%
Complaint rate (carrier)HigherLower
Reply engagementModerateHigher
90-day retention65–78%80–92%

The engagement gap is not trivial. Higher click-through rates translate to more revenue per message sent. Lower opt-out rates reduce list churn and lower acquisition cost per retained subscriber. And lower complaint rates directly affect deliverability, which is examined in the next section.

Revenue Per Subscriber

When engagement and retention differences are factored in, the revenue per subscriber on a DOI list often exceeds that of an SOI list by a meaningful margin. A smaller list of confirmed, engaged subscribers can outperform a larger list of unverified contacts — particularly over a 6–12 month horizon where churn compounds.

Deliverability and Carrier Compliance

Deliverability is where the stakes are highest. In the SMS ecosystem, carrier filtering is aggressive and growing more so. Messages that generate complaints, get flagged as spam, or are sent to invalid numbers contribute to poor sender reputation — which can result in message throttling or outright blocking.

How Carrier Filtering Works

Major carriers and their filtering partners (including those operating within the 10DLC ecosystem) evaluate sender behavior across several signals:

Double opt-in lists perform better on every one of these signals. The result is higher message delivery rates and lower risk of campaign-level filtering. For a detailed look at how list quality affects deliverability, see our article on SMS list hygiene mistakes that kill deliverability.

The Cost of Poor Deliverability

When messages do not reach inboxes, the sender pays for them anyway. SMS is priced per message segment sent, not per message delivered. A program sending 100,000 messages per month with a 92% delivery rate is paying for 8,000 messages that generate zero value. On a DOI list with 98%+ delivery rates, that waste drops dramatically.

The true cost of a low-quality list is not just wasted message spend — it is the compounding effect of degraded sender reputation, which reduces deliverability for every subsequent campaign.

Compliance and Legal Considerations

From a regulatory perspective, both single opt-in and double opt-in can satisfy TCPA requirements for express written consent, provided the consent language and disclosure are properly implemented at the point of collection. The TCPA does not explicitly require double opt-in.

However, double opt-in provides a stronger evidentiary record. If a subscriber disputes that they consented, having a record of both the initial signup and the confirmation reply creates a more defensible audit trail. This matters because TCPA litigation is a real and ongoing risk, with statutory damages of $500–$1,500 per unsolicited message.

CTIA Guidelines

The CTIA's Messaging Principles and Best Practices recommend confirmation messages for all opt-ins, and some shortcode programs require double opt-in as a condition of provisioning. Programs operating on shared shortcodes or applying for a dedicated shortcode should verify whether their provider mandates DOI.

International Considerations

Outside the United States, regulations vary significantly. The EU's GDPR framework, while not explicitly requiring double opt-in for SMS, has been interpreted by several data protection authorities as favoring it — particularly in Germany, where DOI is effectively standard practice. Canada's CASL similarly favors verifiable consent mechanisms. If a subscriber base spans multiple jurisdictions, DOI simplifies compliance across borders.

Implementation: Building Each Workflow

The technical implementation of each approach differs in complexity and the infrastructure required.

Single Opt-In Workflow

  1. Subscriber submits phone number via web form, keyword, or POS system.
  2. System validates the number format (E.164) and checks against existing contacts and DNC lists.
  3. Contact is added to the active list with a consent timestamp and source record.
  4. A welcome message is sent confirming the subscription and providing opt-out instructions ("Reply STOP to unsubscribe").
  5. Subscriber begins receiving scheduled campaigns.

Double Opt-In Workflow

  1. Subscriber submits phone number via web form, keyword, or POS system.
  2. System validates the number format and checks against existing contacts and DNC lists.
  3. Contact is added to the list in a pending state.
  4. A confirmation message is sent: "Reply YES to confirm your subscription to [Brand]. Msg&data rates may apply. Reply STOP to cancel."
  5. System listens for the confirmation reply within a defined window (typically 24–48 hours).
  6. Upon confirmation, the contact status is updated to active, a consent confirmation timestamp is recorded, and the welcome sequence begins.
  7. If no confirmation is received within the window, the contact remains pending and can optionally receive a single reminder before being archived.

Trackly's welcome journey automation supports both workflows natively. For DOI implementations, a multi-step sequence can be configured where the first message is the confirmation request and subsequent messages only fire once the contact's consent status moves to confirmed. Trackly's opt-out handling and reply management features process confirmation replies automatically, updating contact status without manual intervention.

Handling Edge Cases

Double opt-in introduces several edge cases that need to be handled gracefully:

When Single Opt-In Makes More Sense

Despite the quality advantages of DOI, there are legitimate scenarios where single opt-in is the more practical choice.

Transactional and Time-Sensitive Use Cases

If the primary use case is transactional messaging — order confirmations, shipping updates, appointment reminders — adding a confirmation step creates unnecessary friction and delays the delivery of information the subscriber is actively waiting for. In these cases, the signup action itself (placing an order, booking an appointment) provides strong implicit consent.

High-Trust Acquisition Channels

When subscribers opt in through high-intent channels — such as in-store signups with a sales associate, during a live event, or through a dedicated SMS keyword campaign where the subscriber initiates the interaction — the risk of invalid or unwanted signups is lower. The acquisition context itself provides a layer of verification.

Early-Stage Programs Prioritizing Growth

For programs that are just launching and need to reach a critical mass of subscribers to generate meaningful data and revenue, the 15–40% drop-off from DOI can be a real obstacle. Starting with SOI while maintaining rigorous list hygiene (removing invalid numbers, monitoring opt-out rates, segmenting by engagement) can be a pragmatic approach. Migration to DOI later, once the program is established, remains an option.

For those building a list from scratch, our guide on how to build an SMS subscriber list from scratch covers acquisition strategies that work well with either opt-in model.

When Double Opt-In Is the Stronger Choice

Conversely, there are scenarios where DOI is clearly the right approach.

Web Form Signups with Incentives

Anytime a discount, freebie, or gated content is offered in exchange for a phone number, a percentage of people will submit fake or disposable numbers just to access the incentive. DOI filters these out before they cost money.

High-Volume Programs with Deliverability Sensitivity

Programs sending hundreds of thousands or millions of messages per month operate on thin margins. Even a small percentage of invalid numbers or complaints can trigger carrier filtering that affects the entire campaign. At scale, the deliverability benefits of DOI outweigh the growth trade-off.

Regulated Industries

Healthcare, financial services, cannabis, and other regulated industries face heightened scrutiny around consent. Double opt-in provides a stronger compliance posture and a more defensible record in the event of an audit or legal challenge.

International Audiences

As noted earlier, several international jurisdictions favor or effectively require DOI. If a subscriber base includes contacts outside the US, DOI simplifies multi-jurisdictional compliance.

The Hybrid Approach: Segmented Opt-In Strategies

Many mature SMS programs do not use a single opt-in model across the board. Instead, they apply different approaches based on the acquisition channel, subscriber segment, or use case.

Channel-Based Segmentation

Acquisition ChannelRecommended ApproachRationale
Web form with incentiveDouble opt-inHigh risk of fake/invalid numbers
SMS keyword (subscriber-initiated)Single opt-inSubscriber already has phone in hand; number is verified by the act of texting
In-store POS signupSingle opt-inHigh-trust, in-person interaction
Third-party lead genDouble opt-inConsent quality from third parties is variable; DOI verifies intent
E-commerce checkoutSingle opt-inTransactional relationship established; number verified by order
Social media adDouble opt-inHigher volume of casual/low-intent signups

This hybrid model maximizes growth from high-quality channels while protecting list quality on channels with higher risk. Trackly makes this straightforward by allowing different welcome journeys per acquisition source, with or without a confirmation step, and automatically labeling contacts by their opt-in method and source.

Progressive Opt-In

Another hybrid approach is progressive opt-in, where new subscribers start with a limited message cadence (e.g., one message per week) and are invited to confirm for a higher-frequency program. This validates engagement before increasing send volume, reducing the risk of complaints from low-intent subscribers.

Measuring the Impact: Key Metrics to Track

Whichever approach is chosen, its impact should be measured rigorously. These are the metrics that matter most when evaluating an opt-in strategy:

The right opt-in model is the one that maximizes revenue per subscriber over a 6–12 month horizon — not the one that maximizes signups in the first week.

Making the Transition: Moving from SOI to DOI

For programs currently running single opt-in and considering a switch to double opt-in, here is a practical transition plan:

  1. Run a parallel test first. Split acquisition channels so that some new subscribers go through SOI and others through DOI. Run this for 60–90 days to collect enough data on confirmation rates, engagement, and deliverability differences specific to the program.
  2. Optimize the confirmation message. Before evaluating DOI performance, ensure the confirmation message is optimized. Keep it short, make the CTA clear, and if applicable, tie confirmation to the incentive ("Reply YES to get your 15% off code").
  3. Implement a reminder. Set up a single reminder message for subscribers who have not confirmed within 12–24 hours. This alone can recover a significant portion of drop-off.
  4. Do not re-confirm existing subscribers. Sending a confirmation request to an existing SOI list is risky — it will cause a large portion of the list to go inactive. Apply DOI only to new signups going forward.
  5. Segment and compare. Label subscribers by their opt-in method and compare engagement and revenue metrics over time. Let the data guide whether to expand DOI to all channels or maintain a hybrid approach.

Trackly's contact management and labeling system makes it straightforward to segment subscribers by opt-in method, track engagement scores across segments, and run A/B tests on different confirmation message variants to optimize DOI completion rates.

Summary: Choosing the Right Opt-In Approach

There is no universally correct answer to the SMS double opt-in vs single opt-in question. The right choice depends on program maturity, acquisition channels, regulatory environment, and tolerance for growth trade-offs. Here is a simplified decision framework:

FactorFavors Single Opt-InFavors Double Opt-In
Program stageEarly-stage, building initial listEstablished, optimizing for quality
Primary acquisition channelIn-store, keyword, checkoutWeb forms, ads, third-party leads
Send volumeLower volume, less deliverability riskHigh volume, deliverability-sensitive
Regulatory environmentUS-only, standard consumerMulti-jurisdictional, regulated industry
Incentivized signupsNo incentive or low-value incentiveHigh-value incentive (discount, freebie)
Litigation risk toleranceLower risk profileHigher risk profile, needs strong audit trail

For many programs, the hybrid approach — applying DOI where it matters most and SOI where the acquisition context provides sufficient verification — offers a strong balance of growth and quality. The key is to measure rigorously, segment by opt-in method, and let downstream engagement and revenue data drive the decision rather than relying on assumptions.

For teams evaluating their current opt-in strategy or building a new SMS program, Trackly's welcome journey automation and contact management tools support both models and make it straightforward to test, measure, and iterate.