I am evaluating 3rd party services to handle our webapps email.

Requirements:

  • Tracking bounces
  • HTML email
  • Customer headers
  • Incoming email queue (Post email to some URL?)
  • Spam filtering of incoming email
  • Handle SMTP server issues, authentication, whitelisting, keys, etc
  • Support attached images as well as embedded images from an URL
  • Reasonable performance (don't have hard numbers but most email should pass in under 15 secs)
  • Cheap

I ran across postmark and sendgrid, I guess there are more. What do you think?

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This this perhaps more appropriate for ServerFault? – p.campbell Sep 19 '10 at 15:10
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Don't think so. These platforms are more than SMTP servers, they have APIs, etc, so a decision has implications for your programmers perhaps more so than for your sysadmins – flybywire Sep 19 '10 at 15:38
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closed as not constructive by Kev Sep 10 '11 at 15:40

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5 Answers

up vote 45 down vote accepted

The email services I have come across with robust API integration are:

I'm using CritSend for my web app (approx. 35000 users) and it works well. SendGrid and CritSend are priced very similarly, though CritSend is basically a buy credits then use them model, whereas SendGrid requires you to pay a basic monthly fee and then pay extra if you exceed your quota. It works out basically the same, but with SendGrid you have to pay a minimum amount each month (which still counts towards email credits) whereas CritSend has no minimum. Both services offer free credits on signing up then charge around $1 per 1000 emails sent. SendGrid appears to have much a more active customer relations operation, tweeting and blogging regularly. Communication is important!

EDIT: I've just received an email from CritSend informing me that they have reduced their prices by about 50%, which means they are now about $1 for 2000 emails, making them cheaper than SendGrid. They've also started a blog and overhauled their website. Good to see their PR starting to take shape.

I haven't used PostMark, though their pricing is 50% more expensive than SendGrid and CritSend. Their presentation is much more professional/refined than CritSend or SendGrid.

SocketLabs I only heard of because of Brian's answer to this question.

MailChimp have a robust API but are more focussed on campaign sending than individual emails. Their presentation, reporting and setup are all very professional and user friendly.

Amazon Simple Email service are newer than the others, though I am sceptical of their service due to the self-service nature being a potential target for nefarious activities. I'll update this if I hear anything to the contrary.

EDIT: I recently tried to sign up for SendGrid to give them a proper try and discovered that they wouldn't approve the application without getting to look at my product website, which didn't have a website yet due to early stage implementation. I explained to them about the product and never heard back. Seeing as I was in the middle of writing the mail send code, this was somewhat annoying, as compare to CritSend who approved my account without any issues.

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+1 Very informative. – BigJoe714 Sep 30 '10 at 13:50
Another alternative which is less expensive than these is Elastic Email. (elasticemail.com) – Joshua Apr 1 '11 at 4:09
according to current pricing elasticemail looks a just a little bit more expensive than sendgrid and critsend. – Dave Sumter May 10 '11 at 9:11
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Nathan's answer is great. Recently Amazon SES (Simple Email Service) was launched, which is another option. And mailchimp has added transactional email support for paying customers (using Amazon SES)

I wanted to bit more info about their free trials and pricing:

Free Trials:
SendGrid: 200 emails/day 200 emails/mo.
SocketLabs: 500 emails/mo.
Amazon SES: 2000 emails/mo. (Amazon EC2 customers)
CritSend: 1000 emails total
Postmark: 1000 emails total
Elastic Email: 1000 emails total

Pricing:
SendGrid: 0.45 - 1.000 per 1000 emails (charged monthly)
SocketLabs: 0.79 - 3.90 per 1000 emails (charged monthly)
Amazon SES: 0.10 per 1000 emails
CritSend: 0.28 - 0.50 per 1000 emails
Postmark: 1.50 per 1000 emails
ElasticEmail: 0.40 - 1.000 per 1000 emails

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FYI SendGrid has 200 emails/day (not month) – gsiener Mar 22 '11 at 14:00
Amazon SES scares me a bit - often users of Amazon's cloud service have really burnt Amazon's IP addresses with spammy mailing practices. I can't help but wonder how Amazon's self-serve nature will impact their ability to retain a high deliverability rate. – Nathan Ridley Apr 1 '11 at 13:07
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In the past few months, Rackspace has done a deal with SendGrid that lets Rackspace Cloud users send 40,000 emails a month using SendGrid for free. – stevendaniels Jul 4 '11 at 23:51
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Postmark only sends transaction email, and it appears those are the types of email you want to send (welcome emails, receipts, notifications, etc.) Other email providers will send these as well, but will also send bulk email (newsletters, marketing campaigns), and this category is treated differently by ISPs. The price premium reflects the focus on transactional email and the effort expended perfecting our reputation and deliverability in that area.

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I was a little dubious about this distinction, but you're right -- and here is an article on Postmark's help site that makes this really clear: support.postmarkapp.com/customer/portal/articles/… – Dan Esparza Feb 10 at 16:20
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Check out SocketLabs Email On-Demand. http://www.socketlabs.com/od. They have been doing email delivery forever and have a robust reporting system and API.

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I tried sendgrid and they were unable to provision my free account so I try them. Customer service is terrible. Would advise against it.

I was asked to elaborate this response so I will: I signed up for sendgrid to give the product a try. I was evaluating different solutions and after reading a bunch of threads decided sendgrid looked awesome. Plus their customers service reached out to me directly on twitter. I signed on to their service and couldn't use it cause they need to make sure I wasn't a spammer. I understood that - it's saturday and I it's a legitimate business problem they need to solve. So I had to stop my development and wait for sendgrid to give me an ok. Except they didnt. Instead they send a HTML email with all those banners and stuff saying they couldn't aprove my account (for a trial) for some reason related to Spammers. I'm no celebrity but it's pretty easy to use google and find out I'm a software developer from a reputable company that is not focused on spam... I was trying to evaluate sendgrid for a service that will probably send thousands of emails a minute in the future but I now think they are as they look. Kind of cool but then feels clunky and enterprisey with lame responses from customer service (and bad service, making their problem the customers problem). I would suggest you try something else, something smaller where people actually have decent customer service.

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