HubSpot lets you classify each record as marketing or non-marketing. Marketing contacts are the only ones eligible for marketing emails and count toward your paid tier. Non-marketing contacts can still be worked by sales, tracked in the CRM, and used in reporting without increasing your marketing contact bill.
If a contact is marked marketing during your billing period, it contributes to the total paid count. That includes newly imported lists that defaulted to marketing, duplicates created by integrations, and old segments you forgot to suppress.
Status changes are not retroactive. Promote a contact to marketing and it can start counting in the current period. Demote a contact to non-marketing and it stops counting going forward. Build policies that prevent accidental promotions and you will control spend predictably.
Vendors, competitors, students, job seekers, former employees, and role accounts are rarely worth paid sends. Create smart lists for these groups and flip them to non-marketing. Keep them visible to sales if needed.
Hard bounces and global unsubscribes cannot receive marketing emails. Move them to non-marketing and archive truly dead records. This improves deliverability and instantly reduces paid counts.
Duplicates hide across imports, tradeshow scans, and integrations. Use HubSpot’s dedupe tools plus email and company domain matching to merge duplicates so you are not paying twice for the same person.
In the reporting library, HubSpot includes a pre-built Marketing Contacts dashboard. It surfaces total contacts, marketing vs non-marketing volume, usage against your contact tier, and trends by period so you can monitor spend risk.
Define who qualifies as marketing. Tie it to lifecycle stage and intent. For example, a contact becomes marketing only if they fill a high-intent form, attend a demo, or hit an engagement threshold.
Maintain always-on lists for competitors, vendors, bounced, unsubscribed, role accounts, and inactive beyond 12 months. These lists automatically demote or exclude contacts to protect your count.
Make every form assign a clear purpose and default new records to non-marketing unless it is a high-intent conversion. For integrations, map fields carefully so trial signups, support tickets, or webinar guests do not auto-promote to marketing.
This single setting prevents accidental spend. Let engagement promote a contact later rather than paying for cold names now.
Use workflows that promote a contact to marketing only when they cross a defined threshold such as multiple website sessions, key page views, or qualified form fills. Add matching workflows to demote contacts that go cold after a set window.
Send a re-engagement sequence after 90 to 120 days of no activity. If a contact does not respond, demote to non-marketing and stop paying for them. Publish this policy so sales and marketing stay aligned.
Send fewer emails to marginal segments and remove those below an engagement threshold from future campaigns. This raises deliverability and keeps the paid pool focused on people who actually respond.
For seasonal campaigns, temporarily promote a cohort to marketing, execute the program, then demote non-responders. Document the cadence so it becomes a repeatable play.
Give every list and workflow an owner. Review the Marketing Contacts dashboard weekly. Add an SLA for fixing spikes within two business days. Small habits prevent large invoices.
Reducing paid contacts in HubSpot is not about shrinking your reach. It is about precision. Use the pre-built Marketing Contacts dashboard to watch your counts, enforce operational rules that prevent accidental promotions, and rely on automation to move contacts between marketing and non-marketing based on intent. You will spend less, deliver better, and keep your database healthy for sales, reporting, and AI.
No. Non-marketing contacts stay fully visible for sales, reporting, and workflows. They simply do not receive marketing emails or count toward your paid tier.
Weekly is a strong baseline. Add daily checks during big campaigns or list imports so you catch spend risks early.
Tie promotion to clear intent such as demo requests, pricing page views, or webinar attendance. Avoid promoting on low-intent actions like a single homepage visit.
Yes. Use lists or filters to segment the audience, then apply a bulk update. Test on a small slice first and document the criteria.
Set incoming records to default as non-marketing, map fields carefully, and route them through a workflow that promotes to marketing only when the contact meets your engagement criteria.