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ConvertKit vs GetResponse

Side-by-side total cost of ownership: subscription fees, labor, hidden costs, and AI alternatives.

By Shawn Yeager

Published pricing

The subscription is only part of the cost.

 ConvertKitGetResponse
Published rate$33/seat/mo$16/seat/mo
Team size modeled15
Annual subscription$396/yr$935/yr

What the invoice doesn't show

ConvertKit

Kit's Newsletter plan (free) supports up to 10,000 subscribers but blocks visual automations, sequences, and third-party integrations. The features that make email marketing effective require Creator ($39/mo, up 35% since September 2025) or Creator Pro ($79/mo).

Pricing scales steeply with subscriber count after the September 2025 increase. At 25,000 subscribers, Creator costs $99/mo and Creator Pro $166/mo. At 55,000 subscribers, Creator Pro hits $340/mo — well into enterprise tool pricing for what remains a creator-focused platform.

Kit lacks built-in A/B testing for email content (only subject lines). There's no send-time optimization, no multivariate testing, and limited segmentation compared to marketing automation platforms at similar price points.

Kit's visual automation builder, while praised for simplicity, can't handle complex conditional logic. Users report needing to build workarounds with tags and segments for workflows that tools like ActiveCampaign handle natively.

GetResponse

A/B testing, contact tagging, and unlimited automation workflows are absent on the $15/mo Starter plan — accessing them requires Marketer at $48/mo (annual) for 1,000 contacts, the tier most growing businesses actually need from day one.

Contact-tier pricing scales harshly: the Marketer plan jumps from $88/mo at 10,000 contacts to $168/mo at 25,000 contacts (annual billing) — a 91% price increase for a 2.5× list-growth milestone most businesses cross within two or three years.

GetResponse bills on peak subscriber count, not monthly average — a temporary list spike moves you to the next tier for the full billing cycle. Contacts duplicated across multiple lists count separately, inflating your billable total above your true audience size.

Annual prepayment carries no refund protection: cancel a 12-month plan after three months and you forfeit the remaining nine months of payment. GetResponse's published policy explicitly states no refunds are issued for any reason.

What teams are switching to

Replacing ConvertKit

Beehiiv

Free (2.5K subs), $49/mo (Scale), $109/mo (Max)

Newsletter platform built for growth with AI writing tools, built-in referral program, and ad network for monetization. Free plan includes unlimited sends and up to 2,500 subscribers. Designed for the creator economy Kit pioneered.

MailerLite

Free (500 subs), $10/mo Growing Business, $20/mo Advanced

Full visual automation on paid plans starting at $10/mo vs Kit's $29/mo. AI writing assistant, A/B testing (not just subject lines), and send-time optimization included. More features at a lower price point.

Buttondown

Free (100 subs), $9/mo (Basic), $29/mo (Professional)

Minimalist newsletter tool for writers who want clean design without bloat. Markdown-native editor, built-in analytics, and paid subscription support. Free for up to 100 subscribers.

Replacing GetResponse

Brevo

Free: 300 emails/day, unlimited contacts; Starter: $9/mo (5K emails/mo); Business: $18/mo (5K emails/mo, advanced automation). Scales by email volume, not contacts.

Prices by emails sent per month, not list size — unlimited contacts are included on every plan. A 25,000-subscriber list emailed twice a month costs the same as a 5,000-subscriber list at the same frequency, eliminating the per-contact tax that drives GetResponse bills upward as lists grow. Advanced automation is available at $18/mo, not locked behind a mid-tier plan.

MailerLite

Free: up to 250 subscribers, 2,500 emails/mo; Comfort: from $12/mo; Power: from $25/mo (unlimited automations, unlimited team seats). 10% annual discount.

Unlimited email sends on all paid plans with A/B testing and dynamic email available on Comfort — features GetResponse reserves for its Marketer tier. Billing excludes unsubscribers and hard bounces from the contact count, so the number you pay for reflects your actual reachable audience rather than your historical peak.

beehiiv

Launch: free up to 2,500 subscribers, unlimited sends; Scale: $43/mo (automations, ads, paid subs, 0% revenue take); Max: $96/mo (white-label, audio, RSS-to-email, unlimited team seats).

Built for newsletter and creator-economy use cases with 0% take rate on paid subscriptions — a direct contrast to platforms that skim revenue. Automations, ad network access, and paid subscription tooling are included on the $43/mo Scale plan, and the free tier supports up to 2,500 subscribers with unlimited email sends, no contact-count upsells.

StackCut doesn't sell or recommend any of these tools. We show them for context. The decision is yours.

Total Cost of Ownership

Subscription fees plus labor and error costs, modeled at $50/hr loaded rate (BLS ECEC).

Cost ComponentConvertKitGetResponse
Annual subscription$396$935
Labor cost$9,000$9,000
Error & rework cost$1,200$1,200
Total Cost of Ownership$10,596/yr$11,135/yr
Est. AI alternative$5,088/yr$5,088/yr

Labor rate based on BLS ECEC June 2025 ($45.65/hr private industry total compensation, rounded to $50). Team sizes differ because each vendor targets different market segments. Your actual numbers depend on team size, role mix, and usage. Run it with your own data.

Which one fits your team?

Both ConvertKit and GetResponsecost more than their published pricing suggests. The right choice depends on your team size and how you weigh each tool's trade-offs.

ConvertKit starts at $33/seat/mo , but watch for Kit's Newsletter plan (free) supports up to 10,000 subscribers but blocks visual automations, sequences, and third-party integrations. The features that make email marketing effective require Creator ($39/mo, up 35% since September 2025) or Creator Pro ($79/mo).

GetResponse starts at $16/seat/mo , but watch for A/B testing, contact tagging, and unlimited automation workflows are absent on the $15/mo Starter plan — accessing them requires Marketer at $48/mo (annual) for 1,000 contacts, the tier most growing businesses actually need from day one.

An AI-native alternative may replace the workflow at a fraction of the TCO.

See all SaaS cost comparisonsBrowse alternatives for every tool

FAQ

ConvertKit vs GetResponse: quick answers

Is ConvertKit or GetResponse cheaper?

On total cost of ownership, ConvertKit runs about $10,596/year (1-person team) versus $11,135/year for GetResponse (5-person team) once labor and hidden costs are counted, not just the published subscription. Adjust the inputs to your own team to compare them directly.

What can replace ConvertKit or GetResponse?

ConvertKit is often replaced by Beehiiv and MailerLite; GetResponse by Brevo and MailerLite. StackCut shows the cost case for each AI-first alternative without taking referral fees.

What are the hidden costs of ConvertKit and GetResponse?

ConvertKit: Kit's Newsletter plan (free) supports up to 10,000 subscribers but blocks visual automations, sequences, and third-party integrations. The features that make email marketing effective require Creator ($39/mo, up 35% since September 2025) or Creator Pro ($79/mo). GetResponse: A/B testing, contact tagging, and unlimited automation workflows are absent on the $15/mo Starter plan — accessing them requires Marketer at $48/mo (annual) for 1,000 contacts, the tier most growing businesses actually need from day one.

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