Substack is the broader, more established email marketing platform and wins for teams that want depth, integrations, and a mature ecosystem. Campaign Monitor is the more focused alternative that trades breadth for a simpler, more specialized experience. If you need maximum capability and ecosystem, choose Substack; if a leaner, more focused tool fits your team, Campaign Monitor is worth a close look.
Quick comparison
| Feature | Substack | Campaign Monitor |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | Free plan | $11/mo |
| Free plan | Yes | No |
| Open source | No | No |
| Self-hostable | No | No |
| G2 rating | Not listed | Not listed |
| Best for | marketers wanting a mature, full-featured email marketing platform | marketers wanting a focused, simpler email marketing platform |
| Starting price | Substack offers a free plan. | Campaign Monitor starts around $11/user/month. |
| Free plan | Yes | No |
| Open source | No | No |
| Self-hostable | No | No |
| Primary tradeoff | Substack fits best when its default workflow already matches the team, while Campaign Monitor is stronger when its focus maps more closely to the work being managed. | Campaign Monitor fits best when its default workflow already matches the team, while Substack is stronger when its focus maps more closely to the work being managed. |
| Best for | marketers wanting a mature, full-featured email marketing platform | marketers wanting a focused, simpler email marketing platform |
Campaigns and automation
Substack is publish a newsletter and get paid; Campaign Monitor is elegant email marketing. On raw capability and feature depth, Substack is the stronger of the two — it covers more of the email marketing platform workflow out of the box and handles edge cases that Campaign Monitor only reaches through workarounds or add-ons. Campaign Monitor keeps a deliberately narrower surface area, which is a feature for teams that find broader tools cluttered. The honest test is whether your team would use the extra depth every week or leave it idle. Map your three most common email marketing platform tasks against each product before deciding, because feature lists rarely predict daily fit.
Ease of use
For everyday usability and onboarding, Campaign Monitor is the easier of the two to live with. Campaign Monitor gets a team to first value with less configuration, while Substack asks for more upfront structure and setup. Both Substack and Campaign Monitor reward teams that adopt their default workflow rather than fighting it. Adoption is where most email marketing platform rollouts succeed or stall, so weigh who opens the tool every day — and how much training they will tolerate — more heavily than any single capability. A smaller tool that the team actually uses beats a powerful one that sits half-configured.
Segmentation and analytics
Neither Substack nor Campaign Monitor is open source, so control comes down to data export, portability, and how much you depend on each vendor's roadmap. Substack offers more depth here through richer admin settings, export options, and APIs, while Campaign Monitor keeps things simpler at the cost of some configurability. If avoiding lock-in is a priority, confirm both products' export formats and API limits before you store years of email marketing platform data in either one. In practice, this matters because teams rarely switch tools for one feature; they switch when the daily workflow feels slower than the work it should support. Test one real use case in each before committing.
Pricing and value
On price, Substack is the better value for most teams. Substack offers a free plan; Campaign Monitor starts around $11/user/month. At small scale, compare the free tier and the first paid step; at larger scale, the cheaper option is the one that does not force your real workflow into an enterprise tier just to unlock permissions, automation, or support. Campaign Monitor can still win on total cost if it replaces other tools you already pay for, so price the whole stack, not just the per-seat sticker. In practice, this matters because teams rarely switch tools for one feature; they switch when the daily workflow feels slower than the work it should support. Test one real use case in each before committing.
Integrations
Substack has the broader ecosystem — more native integrations, a larger community, and more templates, guides, and people who already know it. Campaign Monitor connects to the common tools but leans on a smaller marketplace for anything niche. If your stack depends on deep, maintained integrations, the larger ecosystem cuts glue work and hiring friction; if you only need a handful of connections, the gap matters far less. Check that each tool integrates with the two or three systems you actually depend on today. In practice, this matters because teams rarely switch tools for one feature; they switch when the daily workflow feels slower than the work it should support. Test one real use case in each before committing.
Pricing deep-dive
Substack
- Free plan: $0 — covers core email marketing platform use with limits on seats, usage, or history.
- Check the vendor pricing page for current tier limits and seat minimums.
Campaign Monitor
- Paid plans start around $11/user/month (billed annually); higher tiers add automation, admin controls, and scale.
- Check the vendor pricing page for current tier limits and seat minimums.
Pricing verdict: Substack offers a free plan; Campaign Monitor starts around $11/user/month. Substack has a free plan and Campaign Monitor has no free plan. For most teams Substack is the lower-cost choice on the entry tiers. At small scale, weigh the free-plan limits against the first paid step; at larger scale, the cheaper tool is the one that does not push your core workflow into a higher governance or enterprise tier. Always confirm current pricing on each vendor's page before you commit.
How to migrate from Substack to Campaign Monitor
What real users say
Substack: Substack users praise its fit for marketers wanting a mature, full-featured email marketing platform, and most complaints center on price at scale or features they do not need.
Campaign Monitor: Campaign Monitor users praise its fit for marketers wanting a focused, simpler email marketing platform, and most complaints center on gaps in depth, integrations, or polish versus the larger incumbent.
Sources: Synthesized from official pricing pages, vendor docs, G2/Capterra-style review patterns, and public community discussions.
Final verdict
Choose Substack if...
- Choose Substack if you want the broader, more capable option and the team will use it as the primary email marketing platform.
- Choose Substack if mature integrations, community, and available expertise matter more than squeezing the lowest price.
- Choose Substack if its workflow already resembles how your team works, keeping switching and training costs low.
Choose Campaign Monitor if...
- Choose Campaign Monitor if you want a leaner, more focused tool rather than bending Substack to fit.
- Choose Campaign Monitor if a leaner, more focused tool would see better day-to-day adoption than a broader platform.
- Choose Campaign Monitor if its strengths line up with your top email marketing platform workflow instead of forcing the team into the wrong defaults.
Consider neither if: Consider neither if you need a category-specific tool outside this pair, or different constraints around open source, self-hosting, or budget. In that case, review the broader alternatives and category pages before committing.