✉️ Subject Lines

101 Newsletter Subject Lines That Get Opened (Substack and Beehiiv)

Updated June 2026 📰 Newsletter tips · List your newsletter free →
Most newsletter writers spend hours on their content and 90 seconds on the subject line. This is the biggest single improvement most newsletters can make. Your subject line is the only part of every issue that 100% of your subscribers will see — the content only reaches the people who open. Here are 101 proven subject line templates, organised by format, with the reasoning behind why each works.

Why Subject Lines Are the Most Underinvested Part of Any Newsletter

Most newsletter writers spend hours on content and 90 seconds on the subject line. This is backwards. Your subject line is the only part of your newsletter that 100% of your subscribers see. The content only reaches the people who open — which, for most newsletters, is fewer than half.

Improving your subject line open rate from 30% to 40% doesn't just mean 33% more readers. It means 33% more clicks, 33% more shares, 33% more conversions on everything you're selling or promoting. The compounding effect of consistently better subject lines is one of the highest-ROI improvements any newsletter writer can make.

40%Average open rate increase from optimised subject lines vs generic ones, based on A/B tests

The Fundamentals: What Makes a Subject Line Work

Before the list, the principle: great subject lines create a gap between what the reader knows and what they want to know. They're not clickbait — they're genuine promises that the email delivers on. A subject line that gets a high open rate but disappoints readers who open destroys trust over time. The goal is a subject line that accurately previews something genuinely worth reading.

Subject Lines by Category

The Specific Number Formula (Highest Consistent Performance)

The Counterintuitive Statement Formula

The Specific Situation Formula

The Genuine Question Formula

The How-To Formula (Highest Search SEO Value)

The Behind-the-Scenes Formula

The Announcement Formula

The Single Word or Short Phrase (Use Sparingly)

Subject Lines That Reliably Fail

These patterns consistently underperform across newsletter categories:

Preview Text: The Second Subject Line

Preview text (the snippet of text visible in the inbox below or next to your subject line) is the most underused real estate in email marketing. Most newsletters leave it blank, which means inboxes show the first line of your email — usually a header image alt text or "If you're having trouble viewing this email..."

Write your preview text intentionally. It should complete or contrast with your subject line — not repeat it. If your subject line is a question, your preview text can hint at the answer. If your subject line is a number ("5 things I changed"), your preview text can add intrigue ("The last one surprised me most").

How to A/B Test Subject Lines on Substack

Substack doesn't have a built-in A/B testing feature for subject lines at the time of writing. The workaround: test systematically over time by tracking your open rates in a simple spreadsheet. Note the subject line format (question, number, counterintuitive, etc.) alongside the open rate for each issue. Over 20–30 issues, you'll have enough data to see which formats work best for your specific audience.

Beehiiv has native A/B testing for subject lines — this is one of the genuine reasons writers switch platforms once they're at a scale where optimising open rates significantly moves revenue.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best email subject line formulas for newsletters?
The highest-performing newsletter subject line formulas are: specific numbers ('5 things I changed after 100 issues'), counterintuitive statements ('Why I deleted 40% of my list on purpose'), genuine questions ('Is your open rate lying to you?'), and specific situation statements ('For anyone who just hit 1,000 subscribers').
What subject lines get the highest open rates?
Subject lines that create a specific gap between what the reader knows and what they want to know consistently get the highest open rates. Avoid generic formats like 'Issue #47' or 'This week in [topic]'. Specific, honest promises that the content delivers on outperform clickbait over time.
How important is the email subject line for newsletters?
Extremely important — your subject line is the only part of your newsletter that 100% of subscribers see. Improving open rate by 10 percentage points means 10% more readers of every piece of content, 10% more clicks, and 10% more conversions. Subject line optimisation is consistently one of the highest-ROI newsletter improvements.
Should I use emojis in newsletter subject lines?
Emojis can improve open rates when used sparingly and relevant to the content. One emoji at the start or end of a subject line can increase visibility in a crowded inbox. Avoid using multiple emojis or using them in a way that feels forced — in some niches (finance, legal, healthcare) they can reduce credibility.

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