How much does email marketing cost for a small business per month?

For most small businesses, email marketing costs between $0 and $100 per month. Your subscriber count is the main variable. A list under 500 people can start for free. A list of 5,000 typically runs $30 to $60 per month. A list of 25,000 can reach $150 to $300 per month depending on the platform and features you need.

What you pay also depends on how many features you actually use, whether you pay monthly or annually, and a few costs most platforms do not advertise upfront. Here we break it all down for you.


Email marketing cost by list size

Most email platforms price by subscriber count. The table below shows what you can expect to pay across common list sizes, based on current pricing from popular tools. All figures reflect monthly billing at the entry-level paid tier unless noted.

List Size Typical Monthly Range What You Get at This Tier
0 to 500 Free to $30/mo Most platforms offer a free or low-cost entry plan. Basic automation, templates, and sign-up forms included.
501 to 1,000 $25 to $80/mo Paid plans kick in. Automation and landing pages available on most tools. Cost varies widely by platform.
1,001 to 2,500 $35 to $100/mo Full feature access on most mid-tier plans. Segmentation, A/B testing, and analytics standard at this range.
2,501 to 5,000 $60 to $140/mo Most small businesses land here. Behavioral automation and advanced reporting often available.
5,001 to 10,000 $85 to $190/mo Growing lists see costs increase noticeably. Platform choice matters more here. Price differences between tools widen.
10,001 to 25,000 $150 to $280/mo Cost spread widens at this tier. E-commerce-focused platforms with advanced revenue tracking sit at the high end. General-purpose tools cost significantly less.
25,001 to 100,000 $275 to $850/mo Pricing varies significantly. Annual billing and platform negotiations can reduce costs meaningfully at this scale.
100,001+ $920+/mo Enterprise and high-volume pricing applies. Most platforms require custom quotes or dedicated account management at this scale.

Note: Ranges are estimates based on publicly available monthly rates from multiple email marketing platforms as of April 2026. Your actual cost will vary depending on the platform, features, and billing cycle you choose.

The wide range at each tier reflects how differently platforms price their features. Two tools serving the same list size can charge $10 apart or $80 apart, depending on what you need. An e-commerce business that wants purchase-triggered automation and revenue tracking will pay more than a service provider who sends a weekly newsletter.

Free vs. Paid email marketing: What you actually get

Free plans are real. Many small businesses run their email for months on a free tier before they need to upgrade. The question is what you give up.

Feature Free Plans Paid Plans
Subscriber limit 250 to 10,000 depending on the platform Scales with your plan; most allow unlimited with billing tiers
Email sends Often capped monthly (e.g., 1,000 to 12,000 sends/mo) Unlimited or high-volume allowance based on list size
Automation Limited or none; some tools remove automation on free tier Full automation including behavioral triggers on most plans
Landing pages Often not included or limited to one Included on most paid plans; unlimited on higher tiers
Platform branding Usually present on emails and forms Removed on most paid plans
A/B testing Rarely included Standard on mid-tier and above
Customer support Email or chat only; sometimes delayed or limited Phone, chat, and email support; priority access on higher plans
Analytics Basic open and click rates Advanced reporting, sales tracking, audience insights

A free plan works well when you are building your list and figuring out what your audience responds to. The friction point comes when you want to automate follow-up sequences, run A/B tests, or remove the platform’s logo from your emails. That is the natural upgrade moment.

One thing to check before signing up for any free plan: confirm what happens when you exceed the limit. Some platforms automatically upgrade you and charge your card. Others pause your account. Knowing this before you hit the wall saves a headache.

Hidden costs to watch out for

The monthly fee is straightforward. These costs are less obvious.

Paying for unsubscribed contacts

Some platforms count every contact in your account toward your billing tier, including people who unsubscribed. If 20% of your 5,000-person list has opted out, you could be paying for 1,000 contacts who will never receive another email from you.

Check your platform’s billing policy before assuming your subscriber count matches your billable count. AWeber, for example, bills only on active subscribers. Mailchimp has historically charged for unsubscribed contacts as well.

Duplicate contacts across lists

If your platform counts subscribers per list rather than per account, the same person on two lists counts as two billable contacts. This is a known issue with platforms that use siloed list structures rather than a single subscriber database. A contact database built around tags and segments avoids this entirely.

E-commerce transaction fees

If you sell products through your email platform’s built-in checkout or landing pages, check whether the platform takes a percentage of each transaction. These fees typically range from 0.5% to 2% depending on your plan. On a $50,000 revenue year driven through email, a 1% fee adds $500 to your annual cost.

Overages and automatic upgrades

Some platforms automatically upgrade your account and charge you the new rate when you exceed your subscriber limit. Others pause sending until you upgrade manually. Neither is ideal if it catches you off-guard. Set a calendar reminder when your list is approaching its tier limit so you can make the decision on your terms.

Add-on tools you might already have

Many small businesses pay for separate tools, such as landing page builders, form builders, or link-in-bio pages, that their email platform already includes.

If you are paying for a standalone landing page tool, check whether your email platform has one built in. The overlap is common enough that auditing your stack can save $20 to $50 per month without losing any functionality.

How to reduce what you pay for email marketing

There are five ways most small businesses can reduce their email marketing cost without reducing what they get.

Pay annually instead of monthly

Annual billing typically saves 10% to 33% compared to paying month to month. On a $30/month plan, that is $36 to $120 back per year. If you have used a platform for more than three months and plan to stay, switching to annual billing is the easiest cost reduction available.

Switch platforms and use a free migration

If you are on a plan that costs more than your current needs justify, moving platforms is less painful than it used to be. Many tools offer free migration services that move your contacts, segments, and automations over for you. The switching cost is mostly time, not money, and the long-term savings can be meaningful at higher list sizes.

Audit what your email platform already includes

Before renewing any subscription in your marketing stack, check whether your email platform already covers it. Common overlaps include landing page builders, sign-up form tools, link-in-bio pages, and basic e-commerce checkout. Paying for a standalone landing page tool when your email platform has one built in is a cost you do not need to carry.

Clean your list regularly

Subscribers who have not opened an email in 12 months are unlikely to open one in month 13. Keeping them on your list costs money every billing cycle.

A simple re-engagement campaign followed by a list purge of non-responders can drop your subscriber count by 10% to 30%, which may move you down a pricing tier.

AWeber’s research of over 1,200 small business owners found that only 20% of those with 500 or fewer subscribers say their email strategy is effective. Among those with larger lists, that number more than doubles. A smaller active list is worth more than a larger dormant one but a growing engaged list is worth more than either.

Check for nonprofit or student discounts

Many platforms offer 15% to 30% discounts for qualifying nonprofit organizations and students. These discounts are not always advertised prominently. If you run a nonprofit, ask before you pay full price.

How to find email marketing pricing that fits your budget

The right platform is the one that matches where your business is now and where it is going in the next 12 months. Overpaying for features you do not use yet is a common mistake when starting out. Underpaying and outgrowing your platform six months in is the other one.

A few things worth comparing across platforms before you decide:

  • Does the platform bill on active subscribers only, or does it count unsubscribed contacts?
  • Is automation included at the plan you are considering, or locked behind a higher tier?
  • Does it include a landing page builder, so you are not paying for that separately?
  • What does customer support look like? Phone support during the hours you work is worth paying for if you are not technical.
  • What is the annual billing discount?

AWeber is built for small businesses and includes email workflow automations, tagging, a landing page builder, and the Newsletter Assistant AI writing tool starting at $15 per month. It also offers 24/7 phone, chat, and email support on every paid plan, which is not standard at this price point. If you are switching from another platform, AWeber’s migration team moves your contacts, segments, and automations over at no cost.

For businesses that want their entire email system set up and ready to run without doing it themselves, AWeber offers a Done For You service. Experts build your templates, landing pages, forms, and welcome sequence in seven days for a one-time setup fee.

Read more: How to Choose the Best Email Marketing Platform for Your Small Business

Frequently Asked Questions

Is free email marketing good enough for a small business?

A free plan is a legitimate starting point for a list under 500 subscribers. Most free tiers include basic email templates, sign-up forms, and limited automation. The main trade-offs are platform branding on your emails, restricted automation, and limited support. Once email is generating consistent revenue for your business, upgrading to a paid plan typically makes financial sense.

What is the cheapest way to do email marketing?

The cheapest way to start is a free plan from a platform that includes automation, such as AWeber. To reduce ongoing costs, pay annually rather than monthly, clean inactive subscribers off your list regularly, and audit whether your email platform already includes tools you are paying for separately.

Which email marketing platforms have the most predictable pricing for a growing list of contacts?

Platforms with the most predictable pricing are those that bill on active subscribers only, publish their full pricing tiers publicly, and do not charge transaction fees or count unsubscribed contacts toward your total.

AWeber publishes its full subscriber-tier pricing at aweber.com/pricing.htm, so you can see exactly what you will pay at any subscriber level before you commit. Platforms that charge based on email volume rather than subscriber count, such as Brevo, offer a different kind of predictability: your bill stays flat as long as your send frequency does not change, even if your list grows. The least predictable pricing models are those that count duplicate or unsubscribed contacts as billable or add transaction fees on top of your monthly rate.

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