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How to export iPhone contacts for a newsletter import
Running a newsletter import? You probably hit the same wall everyone else does: your contact list lives on your iPhone, but the tools the newsletter import runs on expect a CSV. iOS doesn't export to CSV natively. This guide walks through the path from iPhone to your campaign tool.
What the tools want
Mailchimp, ConvertKit, Beehiiv all accept CSV with Email as the unique key.
Field requirements vary, but the core fields are: a name (often split into first/last), a phone number (E.164 strongly preferred), and an email address. Some platforms add extras. Opt-in date, source, consent text. That have to come from your sign-up flow, not from your iPhone.
Get the contacts out
Three ways: Mac Contacts > Export, iCloud.com > vCard then convert, or Pluck on iPhone with the right CSV export options. For repeated use, Pluck's preset support saves a lot of clicking.
Pluck's full-export option includes name + phone + email + iOS labels. The phone column gets normalized to E.164 by default. The duplicate finder runs as part of the export so you don't accidentally send the same person two messages.
Tweaks specific to a newsletter import
Newsletter tools care about email, not phone. Pluck's 'email + name' export option drops the phone column entirely, which is what you want for these tools.
Per-country grouping in Pluck is useful here if your newsletter import spans regions. Country-specific opt-in rules mean US contacts and EU contacts often need to be split into separate sends, with different disclaimers.
Common pitfalls
Three things go wrong most often in this flow. First: phone format inconsistency (covered above. Pluck's E.164 mode fixes it). Second: missing fields. iPhone contacts often have only a phone OR an email, not both, so plan for partial rows. Third: dupes. Same person, two formats, two rows. Run duplicate detection before upload.
Backing up before upload
Before any bulk operation on your contact list, take a backup. How to back up iPhone contacts without iCloud explains the vCard route. Pluck creates one in one tap. If anything goes sideways with your newsletter import tool, you can re-import the vCard and start over.
Wrap up
Most of the friction in a newsletter import flow isn't the campaign tool. It's the file you're feeding it. Get the CSV right (E.164 phones, deduped, fields you actually need), and the rest of the campaign falls into place.
Get Pluck for iPhone
Pluck does the steps in this guide on your iPhone, with no server, no account, and no analytics. Group your contacts by country, find duplicates the iOS tool misses, and export to CSV, Excel, TXT, or vCard.