Sender review 2026
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Sender has been building a reputation as an affordable email marketing platform since 2012, and today it counts more than 180,000 businesses in its user base. The platform handles newsletters, automation workflows, transactional emails, and SMS under one roof, whereas many competitors split those features across multiple pricing tiers or reserve them for higher-cost plans.

We’ve been reviewing email marketing software at TechRadar Pro for over a decade, covering platforms from Mailchimp and Brevo to ActiveCampaign and Omnisend year after year. This Sender review is based on hands-on testing across the platform’s automation, template, and form-building tools, cross-referenced against official documentation and verified user reviews.

My experience with Sender

screenshot of Sender email marketing platform

(Image credit: Sender)

Creating an account takes about two minutes and requires no credit card, which sets the right expectations from the start. The dashboard is clean and easy to navigate, and you can launch your first campaign without sitting through a tutorial. For anyone coming over from pricier tools like Mailchimp, that combination of low friction and lower cost tends to land well.

Our experience confirmed what many longtime users report: Sender works best when your campaigns are relatively straightforward. The drag-and-drop builder is functional and fast, but you won’t find advanced layout controls or content blocks that match what Klaviyo or ActiveCampaign offer at comparable price points. For simple newsletters, welcome sequences, or abandoned cart reminders, Sender is a capable and cost-effective tool, provided you understand where its ceiling sits.

Sender review: Features

screenshot of Sender email marketing platform

(Image credit: Sender)

Sender covers the core email marketing toolkit without obvious gaps. You get a drag-and-drop email builder, a library of pre-built templates, a visual automation builder, subscriber segmentation, signup forms, and popups, including spin-to-win and exit-intent variants. Transactional email is also included at every tier, which is worth noting since many platforms treat it as a separate product.

The visual automation builder is one of Sender’s stronger tools. You can map out multi-step workflows, set behavioral triggers like link clicks or cart abandonment, and combine email and SMS steps in a single flow. Pre-built automation templates cover common use cases such as welcome sequences and re-engagement campaigns, which cuts setup time considerably for straightforward programs.

That said, Sender shows its limits at the edges of the feature set. The template library skews toward basic designs, which can be a real constraint if you’re producing brand-heavy campaigns. There’s also no built-in CRM, so you’ll need Zapier or a direct integration to keep your marketing and sales data synced. And while deliverability essentials like SPF/DKIM authentication and double opt-in are supported, there’s no dedicated deliverability dashboard. If your open rates drop, diagnosing the cause takes more detective work than it should.

Sender review: User experience

The interface prioritizes simplicity, and for most users, that approach pays off. Creating a campaign takes a handful of clicks, and the drag-and-drop builder doesn’t require any design background to produce something functional. Most users report being ready to send their first campaign within minutes of signing up.

A few rough edges show up once you move beyond the basics. Managing larger subscriber lists or building more granular segments can feel fiddly, with some actions requiring more steps than you’d expect. If your team is international, it’s also worth knowing that the platform currently supports only four interface languages: English, Lithuanian, Polish, and Spanish. For most small businesses, though, Sender stays accessible without getting in the way.

Sender review: Customer support

Customer support is one area where Sender stands out against similarly priced tools. The company offers 24/7 live chat with an average response time measured in seconds, and users on G2, Capterra, and Trustpilot consistently praise both the speed and quality of responses. For a platform at this price point, that level of access is unusual.

Free plan users have the same live chat access as paid subscribers, which matters if you’re evaluating the free tier as a long-term option rather than a trial. Support is also available through a help center and by email, though live chat is the fastest route for anything time-sensitive.

Sender review: Pricing

Plan

Price (monthly)

Subscribers

Notes

Free

$0

2,500

15,000 emails per month; includes Sender branding on emails and forms.

Standard

From $10

1000 to 200,000

Removes branding and adds SMS credits and multi-user access.

Professional

From $20

1000 to 200,000

Adds a dedicated IP address, animated countdown timers, in-email review collection, ecommerce reporting, and free SMS credits matching the value of your plan.

Enterprise

Custom

Custom

Unlimited sends, a dedicated success manager, and advanced user permissions.

The free plan is one of the most practical entry points in the market. At 2,500 subscribers and 15,000 monthly emails, it gives you room to run a real newsletter operation without any time limit. The main tradeoff is the Sender branding on outgoing emails and forms, which disappears as soon as you move to any paid plan. Both Standard and Professional scale from 1,000 to 200,000 subscribers, so you’re not forced into a dramatic price jump the moment your list grows.

The Professional plan earns its premium over Standard with features that matter for active marketers. A dedicated IP keeps your sender reputation separate from other users on shared infrastructure, and the ecommerce-specific reporting covers metrics like revenue per campaign that Standard doesn’t surface. On annual billing, Standard costs $7/month and Professional $14/month, which is worth factoring in if you’re confident the platform fits your needs long-term.

Note that all listed prices exclude VAT, which varies by country.

Sender review: Specs

Spec

Details

Free plan

2,500 subscribers; 15,000 emails/month

Automation

Visual builder with behavioral triggers

SMS

Available on all plans; credits purchased on Standard

Integrations

WordPress, WooCommerce, Shopify, Zapier

Support

24/7 live chat, help center, email

Should I buy Sender?

Attribute

Notes

Score

Features

Solid core toolkit; limited for complex campaigns

3.5/5

Performance

Good deliverability; no dedicated reporting dashboard

3.5/5

Design

Clean interface; templates are functional but dated

3.5/5

Value

Among the most generous free plans on the market

4.5/5

Buy it if…

  • You want a free plan that doesn’t have a countdown clock. Sender’s free tier supports 2,500 subscribers and 15,000 monthly emails with no expiry date, which is more room to operate than Mailchimp, Brevo, or Omnisend’s equivalent offerings.
  • You’re running straightforward email workflows. The visual automation builder handles welcome sequences, abandoned cart reminders, and re-engagement campaigns without requiring a developer or a lengthy onboarding process.
  • Support access matters to you at any budget. Live chat is available on every plan, including free, and Sender’s response times are consistently faster than most competitors at this price point.

Don’t buy it if…

  • You need design-heavy, on-brand campaigns. The template library is functional but limited, and the editor lacks the advanced layout options available in tools like Klaviyo or ActiveCampaign.
  • Your stack relies on a CRM for contact management. Without a built-in CRM, you’ll need Zapier or a native connector to keep your marketing and sales data aligned, which adds friction for CRM-heavy teams.
  • Your list is scaling fast, and your automation needs are growing. Once you push past basic triggers and simple segments, the platform’s constraints become more apparent, and upgrade costs step up in fixed increments.

Also consider

  • Mailchimp: It offers a broader integration ecosystem and more sophisticated audience segmentation tools. It’s a better fit if you’re running a complex marketing tech stack, though pricing rises sharply as your list grows.
  • Brevo: Brevo (or Sendinblue) includes a built-in CRM and stronger transactional email capabilities, making it worth evaluating if contact management is central to how your team operates.
  • Omnisend: Built specifically for ecommerce, with native Shopify and WooCommerce connections and pre-built workflows for post-purchase sequences and product recommendations.

How I tested Sender

  • Set up a free account and built campaigns across newsletter, automation, and transactional email categories to test the builder and workflow tools end-to-end.
  • Tested subscriber segmentation, form creation, and pop-up builder against typical small business use cases, including list growth and re-engagement.
  • Evaluated pricing tiers against competitor platforms and cross-checked all features and pricing claims against Sender’s official documentation, pricing page source, and verified user reviews.

Testing Sender involved working through its three core use cases: broadcast email, automated workflows, and list building. I built multi-step automations using the visual builder, created segmented subscriber lists, and set up signup forms and exit-intent popups. Pricing figures were verified directly against Sender’s official pricing page. User feedback from verified review platforms informed my assessment of support quality and day-to-day usability.

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 Sender packs automation, segmentation, and SMS into an affordable email marketing tool with a useful free plan — built for small businesses and solo operators. Read More Latest from TechRadar US in Reviews 

By ali

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