Mailchimp Used to Be Great. What Happened?
The rise and fall
Founded by Ben Chestnut and Dan Kurzius as a side project. Bootstrapped. No VC money. Built slowly and profitably for 20 years — one of the most impressive bootstrapping stories in tech.
Launches “Forever Free” plan: 2,000 subscribers, 12,000 emails/month. Revolutionises email marketing by making it accessible to everyone. Small businesses flood in. Mailchimp becomes synonymous with email marketing.
Tries to become an “all-in-one marketing platform” instead of just email. Adds websites, social media scheduling, CRM. Drops its Shopify integration in a power play. Starts losing focus.
Intuit buys Mailchimp for $12 billion. The founders cash out. The company begins its transformation from beloved indie tool to corporate enterprise product.
Free plan gutted from 2,000 subscribers to 500. Prices increased across all tiers. UI becomes bloated with features nobody asked for. Long-time users leave in droves for Kit, Beehiiv, and MailerLite. The monkey remains. The soul doesn’t.
What went wrong
Where to go instead
Free up to 10,000 subscribers. Built for bloggers, course creators, and small businesses. Does what old Mailchimp did, but better. Full review →
Free up to 2,500 subscribers with growth tools included. If newsletters are your primary channel, this is the modern replacement. Full review →
Free up to 1,000 subscribers with automations and A/B testing. The closest thing to what Mailchimp’s free plan used to be. Full review →
The bottom line
Mailchimp isn’t terrible. It still works. Millions of businesses still use it. But it’s no longer the best option for anyone, at any price point, in any category. It’s the default choice for people who haven’t looked at alternatives yet. If you’re still on Mailchimp, this is your sign to look around. The tools that replaced it are genuinely better. For comparisons: free email tiers roundup · Beehiiv vs Kit showdown