Beginning June 16, 2025, Salesforce updated the data retention policy for Marketing Cloud Engagement. Subscriber and journey engagement data is now retained and accessible for 730 days. Data older than 730 days is no longer accessible via Email Studio tracking reports, Analytics Builder reports, or SOAP API requests. The policy applies differently based on contract date: accounts with contracts dated April 10, 2024 or later have data older than 730 days deleted; accounts with contracts dated before April 10, 2024 retain a raw copy of older data that becomes inaccessible and is deleted upon contract renewal. This article covers which reports are affected, how to export historical tracking data before it becomes inaccessible, and answers to frequently asked questions about the policy.
Update as of April 28, 2025:
The retention duration has been updated to 730 days. Additionally, the launch date has been revised from May 15, 2025 to June 16, 2025.
You can use Automation Studio to create data extract activities. These activities can be configured to run on a schedule that you specify. You can set up automations to compress your data and send it to an external location such as Amazon Simple Storage Service (Amazon S3). For more information, see Data Extract Activity.
General guidelines for setup
Email Studio can export send and engagement data for individual messages.
You can also export dashboards from Analytics Studio and send them to your preferred destination.
Salesforce updates retention policies to ensure data is accurately managed, and to comply with data management and regulation standards.
The list of impacted reports is subject to change.
Beginning on June 16, 2025 subscriber engagement data is retained for 730 days. Therefore, you can access only the most recent 730 days of data.
If your contract is dated before April 10, 2024, we retain a copy of the raw send and engagement data older than 730 days. However, you will not be able to access this data through the UI, reports, or APIs. Upon contract renewal, this data will be deleted.
Yes, the 730-day data retention limit applies to orgs built on both first-party and Hyperforce architectures.
No. Data in Intelligence reports for Engagement is retained for 2 years. For more information, see Overview of Data in Intelligence Reports.
No. Data retention policies for data extensions are managed by Marketing Cloud Engagement admins.
Currently, most data views only contain data from the previous 6 months (this was already a standard limit and was not changed as a result of this new data retention policy).
Data Extract Activity in Automation Studio
https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=sf.mc_as_use_a_data_extract_activity.htm&type=5
Overview of Data in Intelligence Reports for Engagement
https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=sf.mc_dat_data_overview.htm&type=5
Data Retention Policy for Data Extensions
https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=sf.mc_cab_manage_data_retention_policy.htm&type=5
Data Views in Automation Studio
https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=sf.mc_as_data_views.htm&language=en_US&type=5
Automatic Backup of Data Extensions for Data Overwrite Investigation (005232935)
https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=005232935&type=1
Marketing Cloud Engagement: Automate Data Extension Backups to SFTP Using Automation Studio
https://help.salesforce.com/s/articleView?id=005232935&type=1
002231187

We use three kinds of cookies on our websites: required, functional, and advertising. You can choose whether functional and advertising cookies apply. Click on the different cookie categories to find out more about each category and to change the default settings.
Privacy Statement
Required cookies are necessary for basic website functionality. Some examples include: session cookies needed to transmit the website, authentication cookies, and security cookies.
Functional cookies enhance functions, performance, and services on the website. Some examples include: cookies used to analyze site traffic, cookies used for market research, and cookies used to display advertising that is not directed to a particular individual.
Advertising cookies track activity across websites in order to understand a viewer’s interests, and direct them specific marketing. Some examples include: cookies used for remarketing, or interest-based advertising.