Mailchimp vs. Constant Contact: An Honest 2026 Comparison for Small Business - 10-minute read
You are trying to choose an email marketing platform, and you keep landing on the same two names: Mailchimp and Constant Contact. Both are huge. Both have been around forever. Both have armies of fans online. And every comparison article you read seems to be quietly trying to sell you one of them.
So let me do something different here — starting with the most important disclosure I can make.
Full Disclosure Before You Read Another Word
I am a Certified Constant Contact Business Partner. That is not a marketing label — it is a designation that requires me to pass a 50-question recertification exam every year on the platform’s latest features and updates, including any new tools they add. If I do not pass, I lose certain privileges. So yes, I have a professional relationship with Constant Contact, and yes, that relationship is earned and renewed annually, not free.
I also have not personally used Mailchimp. What I know about Mailchimp comes from people who use it, from clients who have shared their experiences, and from Mailchimp’s own publicly published pricing pages and feature lists.
I am telling you this up front because most comparison articles fake firsthand experience with both products. I would rather you know exactly where I sit and exactly what kind of source I am, so you can weigh everything that follows accordingly. Now, let us get into it.
The Honest Headline: Both Platforms Are Real, and One of Them Has Been Quietly Changing
Let me give you the fair version up front.
Mailchimp is a real platform with real strengths. It is well-known, the interface is polished, the brand is famous, and at the very entry level, it is competitive on sticker price.
Constant Contact is also a real platform with real strengths. It has been around since 1995, it focuses heavily on small business users, and the support model is genuinely different from most of the industry.
Either one can work. The honest question is not “which one is better.” It is “which one is built for the kind of small business owner you actually are, in 2026?” To answer that, you have to look past the homepages and at what is actually happening with each platform.
Where Mailchimp Has Been Headed (And Why It Matters)
There is a story in Mailchimp’s pricing history that most comparison articles will not tell you, but it is the most important context I can give you.
In 2021, Mailchimp was acquired by Intuit — the company behind QuickBooks and TurboTax — for $12 billion. Since that acquisition, here is what has happened publicly to Mailchimp’s pricing and free tier, by year:
• In 2022, the free plan allowed up to 2,000 contacts.
• By 2023, the free plan was reduced to 500 contacts.
• As of 2026, the free plan caps at 250 contacts and 500 sends per month.
• Paid plan prices have increased roughly 20–30% between 2022 and 2024.
• Legacy account holders received an additional 11–13% increase in April 2026.
That is an 87.5% reduction in the free plan in four years, plus paid increases on top. None of that is opinion — it is documented in Mailchimp’s own published pricing changes over time.
The takeaway is not “Mailchimp is bad.” The takeaway is that Mailchimp’s business has been steadily moving upmarket since 2021. They are increasingly built for larger enterprise customers, and the small business owner — you — is no longer the audience they are optimizing for.
That is a fair observation about a company’s direction. And it is worth knowing before you sign up for a platform you plan to grow with.
Sticker Price vs. Real Price: The Honest Money Comparison
Here is where comparison articles usually get sneaky. They compare the lowest possible price of one platform to a higher tier of the other, and pretend that is apples to apples.
Let me give it to you straight.
At the entry level (500 contacts), the two are nearly identical on sticker price:
• Mailchimp Essentials: about $13 per month
• Constant Contact Lite: about $12 per month
A dollar a month apart. Anyone telling you Constant Contact is wildly cheaper at this tier is not being straight with you. They are essentially the same starting price.
The real difference shows up when you ask: “What am I actually getting for that dollar?”
This is where the platforms diverge in ways that matter — and where the sticker price stops being the real price.
Support: The Difference People Underestimate Until They Need It
If there is one area where these two platforms are not even close, it is here. And this is the part where, from talking to Mailchimp users over the years, I have seen the most genuine frustration.
Mailchimp: email support, often slow
Mailchimp’s lower tiers do not include live phone support. When something goes wrong — your email did not send, your list will not import, your automation is misfiring, the deadline is today — your option is to email their support team and wait. People I know who use Mailchimp have told me that wait times can run up to three days before they hear back.
Mailchimp does offer 24/7 chat and email support on paid plans, and faster priority support on the highest tier. But phone-based human assistance is not part of the standard small-business experience.
The pattern I have heard from Mailchimp users, almost universally, is this: they have learned to find workarounds for problems rather than getting them solved. That is a real skill. It is also a tax — a hidden one paid in your time, your stress, and your missed deadlines.
Constant Contact: free live phone support, six days a week
Constant Contact includes free phone support six days a week on every paid plan. You can call as many times as you need, at no extra charge. A real human picks up, listens to your problem, and helps you fix it.
That is genuinely unusual in this industry. Most platforms have offloaded customer support to chatbots and articles. Constant Contact has kept the phones open.
And one more thing about support, if you go this route: as a Certified Constant Contact Business Partner, you can also call me for free. As many times as you need. No retainer, no clock running. That is just what I do.
If you are a small business owner who handles a hundred things at once, the difference between “wait three days for an email reply” and “dial a number and get a person” is not a small detail. It is the difference between marketing that runs and marketing that stalls.
Three Hidden Cost Patterns to Watch For
Beyond sticker price, here are three ways the real bill can be higher than the marketing page suggests — things every small business owner deserves to know before committing.
1. You may pay for contacts who do not want your emails
On Mailchimp, your bill is based on your total contact count — which includes unsubscribed contacts still sitting in your account. In other words, you can pay every month for people who have already told you they do not want to hear from you. That has caught many small business owners off guard, and according to independent pricing analyses, this single quirk can inflate actual bills by 20–40% above what the pricing page advertises.
Constant Contact handles this differently. When a contact unsubscribes, the platform actively recommends removing them from your list so you stop paying for them. It is also one of the first things I tell my clients to do, because there is a bigger reason beyond billing: keeping unsubscribers on your list quietly hurts your deliverability. Email providers like Gmail and Outlook watch how recipients engage with your mail. A clean, engaged list lands in inboxes. A bloated list with disengaged contacts gets pushed to spam. So, removing unsubscribes saves you money and helps your future emails actually reach the people who want them. That is the kind of small detail you only learn from someone who works inside the platform every day.
2. The free plan is more limited than it looks
Mailchimp’s free plan caps at 250 contacts and 500 monthly sends, with Mailchimp branding on every email and no multi-step automation. For a real small business trying to actually grow, that is more of a sampler than a usable plan. It is fine to learn on. It is not a place to run a business from.
Constant Contact does not offer a forever-free plan. What it offers instead is a
30-day free trial with no credit card required, where you can load up to 100 contacts and test all of the features at full strength. Different model: trial then commit, versus stay-free-but-stuck-small. Which is better depends on what you actually want.
3. Add-on features stack up
Both platforms charge extra for some features (text message marketing, advanced previews, transactional emails). That is normal. But before you commit to either, read the fine print and ask yourself which add-ons you will actually need so the comparison is honest.
A Quick Side-by-Side, the Honest Way
Pricing at 500 contacts:
• Mailchimp Essentials: about $13/month
• Constant Contact Lite: about $12/month — nearly identical
Free option:
• Mailchimp: forever-free at 250 contacts with branding and limited features
• Constant Contact: 30-day free trial with full features, no credit card required, up to 100 contacts
Phone support:
• Mailchimp: not standard — email and chat, with potential multi-day waits
• Constant Contact: free phone support six days a week on every paid plan
Email send limits:
• Mailchimp: tied to contact tier
• Constant Contact: no daily send cap (though just because you can send daily does not mean you should — your subscribers will tire of it fast)
Contact billing on unsubscribers:
• Mailchimp: bills you based on total contacts, including unsubscribers still in your account
• Constant Contact: actively recommends removing unsubscribed contacts, so you do not pay for people who no longer want your emails — and your deliverability improves as a bonus
Direction of the business:
• Mailchimp: moving upmarket since the 2021 Intuit acquisition
• Constant Contact: still small-business-focused since 1995
So Which One Is Right for You?
Here is the honest answer, the kind I would give a friend over coffee:
Mailchimp might be fine for you if…
• You are comfortable with technology and prefer figuring things out on your own.
• You are okay waiting on email-based support when something breaks.
• You have a tiny contact list and just want to play with the basics for free.
• You do not mind paying for unsubscribed contacts as your list grows.
Constant Contact is probably better for you if…
• You want to call a real human when you have a question — and you do not want to pay extra for that privilege.
• You value time saved more than $1 a month saved.
• You want a platform that has stayed focused on small businesses since 1995.
• You like the idea of being able to call your Certified Business Partner directly when you are stuck.
Most of the small business owners I work with in Central Florida fit the second list. If you are honest with yourself about how much time you actually have to troubleshoot a platform versus how much you want to spend running your business, you probably fit the second list, too.
So, Where Does This Leave You?
Here is the honest pattern I have seen over and over with the small business owners I talk to in Central Florida. The decision is rarely really about Mailchimp versus Constant Contact. It is about a deeper question:
Do you have the time and energy to run email marketing yourself — troubleshoot a platform, write the campaigns, manage the list, learn the analytics — or would you rather have someone handle it for you while you focus on running your business?
Both answers are legitimate. Here is what each one looks like.
If you would rather have it handled for you
This is what most small business owners I work with ultimately choose, once they do the honest math on what their time is worth.
When you work with me, you get a Certified Constant Contact Business Partner running your email marketing end-to-end. That means strategy, writing, design, scheduling, list management, troubleshooting — all of it — for one steady monthly fee. The platform is handled. The support questions never reach you. You focus on your business; I focus on the marketing function. I call this your external marketing department, and for most small businesses, the time you get back is worth more than the fee.
Email me at john@thejrsolutions.com or call 407-617-2910 for a free 30-minute consultation. No pressure, no jargon, no pixie dust — If you would rather have it handled for you.
If you want to see exactly how my services and pricing work, the honest pricing guide breaks it all down. And if you are still weighing whether to hire an agency, a consultant, or do it yourself, this honest comparison may help you decide.
If you would rather run it yourself
Some small business owners have the time and the interest to handle their own email marketing. If that is you, do not let anyone talk you out of it. The DIY path can work, especially if you start with the right platform and use the support it offers.
You can start your 30-day free Constant Contact trial here — no credit card required, up to 100 contacts, full features. As a Certified Constant Contact Business Partner, I earn a commission if you sign up through that link, which is the disclosure I made at the top of this article. Whether or not you ever hire me, you can call me for free if you get stuck along the way. That offer is open to anyone who signs up through that link.
The worst move is staying stuck because you cannot decide. Either path — hiring help or starting yourself — beats doing nothing. The trick is starting.
The John Ramos Blog









