What Drip Really Costs
Drip starts at $39/month for 2,500 contacts — but bills for the peak subscriber count reached during the billing period, not end-of-cycle. Run a list-growth campaign and prune contacts afterward, and you still pay for the high-water mark. At 10,000 contacts: $154/month. At 50,000: $699/month.
Total Cost of Ownership
A 3-person team at Drip's published rate of $39/seat/month. The subscription is 12% of the real cost.
Subscription cost
$39/seat x 3 seats x 12 months
$1,404/yr
Labor cost
15 hrs/month x $50/hr loaded rate x 12 months
$9,000/yr
Error & rework cost
$100/month x 12 months
$1,200/yr
Total Cost of Ownership
$11,604/yr
Labor rate based on BLS ECEC June 2025 ($45.65/hr private industry total compensation, rounded to $50). Your actual numbers depend on team size, role mix, and usage. Run it with your own data.
What the invoice doesn't show
Peak-period 'high-watermark' billing — Drip charges the highest active subscriber count reached during a billing period, not end-of-cycle. A promotional list import followed by hygiene pruning still triggers the elevated rate, potentially adding $50–$215 to a single month's invoice without any change in your usable list.
Steep tier jumps punish organic list growth — $39/month at 2,500 contacts becomes $154/month at 10,000 and $699/month at 50,000. The move from 10,000 to 25,000 contacts alone adds approximately $215/month — a 140% price increase for 2.5× the list size, before a single additional email is sent.
SMS marketing is permanently unavailable to new accounts — Drip restricts its SMS feature to legacy accounts created before the cutoff date. Any business signing up today cannot access email + SMS within Drip at any price, forcing a separate tool (typically $39+/month) alongside a full Drip subscription.
No free plan; trial caps at 100 email sends in 14 days — unlike Omnisend (free to 250 contacts, 500 emails/month) or MailerLite (free to 250 subscribers), Drip offers no permanent free tier. Its trial limits new accounts to 2,500 contacts and just 100 total email sends — too little to validate any meaningful automation sequence before committing to paid.
Why this category is changing
Drip's pricing architecture was built for the platonic DTC operator: a lean, fully engaged subscriber list where every contact represents a known customer. In practice, ecommerce lists accumulate a substantial tail of dormant contacts from checkout opt-ins, pop-up captures, and paid acquisition — contacts that drive up the monthly invoice regardless of whether they ever open another email. Because Drip bills by peak active subscriber count rather than engagement rate or send volume, any tactic that temporarily inflates a list — seasonal promotions, gated discounts, re-engagement campaigns — becomes a billing event even after those contacts are cleaned out. An AI-first alternative rewires this incentive: platforms that charge by email volume sent (Brevo) or that automatically exclude unsubscribed contacts from billing (Omnisend) align cost with actual usage, and AI-driven segmentation actively surfaces dormant contacts for suppression — reducing your bill as a byproduct of more precise targeting rather than treating raw list size as revenue for the vendor.
Omnisend
Free to 250 contacts (500 emails/month); Standard from $16/month; Pro from $59/month with unlimited email sends and bundled SMS credits
Ecommerce-native email and SMS with AI-powered segmentation, a built-in product recommender, and Forms AI. Only bills for 'billable contacts' — unsubscribed contacts are excluded automatically — so list hygiene reduces invoices directly. Standard plan reaches 10,000 contacts for approximately $115/month versus Drip's $154.
Brevo
Free (300 emails/day); Starter from $9/month (5,000 emails/month); Business plans from $18/month
Charges by email volume sent, not contact headcount — store unlimited contacts and pay only for what you send. A large, partially dormant list costs nothing extra to maintain; you pay only when you run a campaign. Includes automation, segmentation, and transactional email in a single subscription with no legacy-tier gatekeeping on SMS.
MailerLite
Free to 250 subscribers; Comfort from $12/month; Power from $25/month (unlimited automations, unlimited sends)
Subscriber-based pricing that runs roughly half of Drip's cost at equivalent list sizes — $73/month for 10,000 subscribers versus Drip's $154. AI writing assistant and smart sending are included on the Power plan. Unlimited automations and unlimited email sends make high-frequency ecommerce sequences affordable without tier traps.
StackCut doesn't sell or recommend any of these tools. We show them for context. The decision is yours.
How we calculate TCO
Total Cost of Ownership includes subscription fees, labor (valued at $50/hr based on BLS ECEC data), and estimated error costs. Error cost is inherently speculative and can be set to $0 for a conservative estimate. All defaults are sourced from published benchmarks and adjustable in our methodology.
Other email marketing cost breakdowns
What ActiveCampaign Really Costs
ActiveCampaign's real cost goes far beyond the sticker price. Contact-tier jumps, add-on fees, and stealth price hikes can double your bill. See the math.
What Brevo Really Costs
Brevo's free tier caps at 300 emails/day with forced branding. Add SMS credits, branding removal fees, and Marketing Premium — here's the full TCO breakdown.
What Constant Contact Really Costs
Constant Contact's $12/mo Lite plan caps sends at 10x contacts and blocks all automations. At 10,000 contacts, Lite jumps to $120/mo — see the full TCO.
What Kit (ConvertKit) Really Costs
Kit (ConvertKit) free plan blocks automations entirely. After a 35% price hike in September 2025, Creator starts at $39/mo. At 25K subscribers, costs rival enterprise tools. See the real TCO.
What GetResponse Really Costs
GetResponse's Marketer plan — needed for A/B testing and automation — climbs from $48/mo to $168/mo as lists grow. Annual plans offer no refunds. Here's what it really costs.
What HubSpot Marketing Really Costs
HubSpot Marketing Hub Professional starts at $890/mo plus a mandatory $3,000 onboarding fee. Contact tier jumps, add-ons, and annual lock-in push real costs far higher.
What Klaviyo Really Costs
Klaviyo starts at $20/mo but real costs average $1,500/mo. SMS emoji fees, auto-upgrades, and a forced 20% surcharge at scale add up fast.
What Mailchimp Really Costs
Mailchimp starts at $13/mo but most teams pay 5-10x that. Ghost contacts, overage fees, and serial price hikes since the Intuit acquisition add up fast.
What Marketo Really Costs
Marketo's real cost isn't $1,295/mo. With database overages, $50K implementations, and dedicated admins, expect $100K+/yr. See the full TCO breakdown.
FAQ
Drip costs: quick answers
How much does Drip really cost?
The subscription is only part of it. For a 3-person team, the $1,404/year Drip subscription grows to an estimated $11,604/year total cost of ownership once labor and error costs are included. StackCut lets you adjust every assumption to your own numbers.
What are the most common Drip complaints?
Peak-period 'high-watermark' billing — Drip charges the highest active subscriber count reached during a billing period, not end-of-cycle. A promotional list import followed by hygiene pruning still triggers the elevated rate, potentially adding $50–$215 to a single month's invoice without any change in your usable list. Steep tier jumps punish organic list growth — $39/month at 2,500 contacts becomes $154/month at 10,000 and $699/month at 50,000. The move from 10,000 to 25,000 contacts alone adds approximately $215/month — a 140% price increase for 2.5× the list size, before a single additional email is sent. SMS marketing is permanently unavailable to new accounts — Drip restricts its SMS feature to legacy accounts created before the cutoff date. Any business signing up today cannot access email + SMS within Drip at any price, forcing a separate tool (typically $39+/month) alongside a full Drip subscription.
What is the best AI alternative to Drip?
Teams replacing Drip most often look at Omnisend, Brevo, and MailerLite. StackCut takes no referral fees and recommends no specific tool. It shows the financial case so you can decide.
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