Loops vs Mailchimp in 2026: Developer-first SaaS email vs the general-purpose default
Loops is a free-to-start, contact-priced email platform built specifically for SaaS product and transactional email. Mailchimp is a 24-year-old platform spanning email, SMS, and AI content tools built for a much broader range of businesses.
Loops handles marketing, product lifecycle, and transactional email (password resets, receipts) from one account and domain. Mailchimp is not built for transactional email at all.
Loops charges no per-seat fee; the whole team can be added at no extra cost. Mailchimp's plan structure is contact-based but its Premium tier starts around $350 per month at scale.
Mailchimp reports a 99% transactional email delivery rate and sends 500 million emails daily, a scale track record Loops does not publish an equivalent figure for.
Mailchimp has shipped AI content tools broadly enough that customers have sent over 9.8 billion AI-generated emails through the platform. Loops has no equivalent AI copywriting feature.
Loops ships an MCP server and CLI for AI agent and developer workflows. Mailchimp has no native MCP integration or AI agent capability.
Loops is not built for cold outreach or lead generation and has no prospecting features. Mailchimp is also opt-in-only, but it adds SMS marketing as a second channel on paid plans that Loops does not offer.
Loops' customer list is dominated by product-led SaaS companies (Framer, Linear, Perplexity, Clerk, Reuters). Mailchimp serves a much wider range including small businesses, non-profits, and eCommerce.
Loops and Mailchimp both send email, but they were built for different people. Loops exists because SaaS teams got tired of running a marketing tool, a transactional email vendor, and a product-lifecycle system as three separate subscriptions with three separate integrations. Its whole design, contacts, events, and event properties, is built around how a product actually generates email, and developers are clearly the intended audience: a clean REST API, native SDKs for Node and Next.js, an MCP server, and no per-seat pricing. Mailchimp is the platform most non-technical founders already know, with a drag-and-drop builder, 300+ templates, and AI content tools that make sending a campaign possible without touching code. The decision mostly comes down to whether email is a product feature your developers own, or a marketing function your team runs without engineering involved.
The tools at a glance
Loops
Unified email platform for SaaS teams covering marketing, product, and transactional email from a single simple interface.
Loops was built around a specific frustration: SaaS companies running Mailchimp for newsletters, a separate transactional email vendor for password resets, and a third tool for onboarding sequences, none of which share data cleanly. Loops collapses all three into one account and one domain, built on a model simple enough to describe in a sentence: contacts, contact properties, events, and event properties. Once a developer understands those four concepts, they understand how to build any automation in the platform.
That developer orientation shows up everywhere. The REST API follows the same contact/event model as the UI, native SDKs exist for Node, Next.js, Ruby, PHP, and NuxtJS, and an npm package with 251K weekly downloads suggests this is a tool developers are actually wiring into production, not just evaluating. Native integrations with Supabase, Clerk, Stripe, PostHog, and Auth0 sync product and billing events automatically, which matters more for a SaaS company than the eCommerce and social integrations a general-purpose tool prioritizes.
The trade-off is scope. Loops explicitly does not do cold outreach or lead generation, and the feature set on segmentation and A/B testing is intentionally lean compared to enterprise platforms. Pricing is also less transparent than it should be: the free plan caps at 4,000 sends and 1,000 subscribers with Loops branding in the footer, and paid tiers use a contact-count slider that does not show clear numbers on the pricing page beyond a starting point around $49 per month.
| Feature | Free $0/mo | Paid (contact-based) Starts at ~$49/mo |
|---|---|---|
| Subscribed contacts | Up to 1,000 | Slider-based pricing |
| Email sends per month | 4,000 | Unlimited on paid |
| Transactional email | Limited | ✓ |
| Loops branding in emails | Yes (footer) | Removed |
| Team seats | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| API access | ✓ | ✓ |
| MCP server | ✓ | ✓ |
Mailchimp
Email and SMS marketing with AI content creation and a free tier for small lists.
Mailchimp has spent 24 years optimizing for one thing above all else: a non-technical person should be able to build and send a professional email campaign without help. The drag-and-drop editor and 300+ templates deliver on that, and the AI content tools extend it further, generating subject lines and copy variations inside the same builder rather than as a bolted-on separate workflow. Over 9.8 billion AI-generated emails sent through the platform is a real usage number, not a feature nobody touches.
Where Mailchimp pulls ahead of a SaaS-focused tool like Loops is breadth. SMS marketing runs alongside email from the same automation builder, and customers using both channels report up to 97% higher click rates. Segmentation covers purchase history, engagement, and demographics, with predictive segmentation on the Standard plan identifying customers likely to churn or repurchase. Over 300 integrations span eCommerce, CRM, and social platforms, covering use cases well outside what a SaaS-only tool needs to support.
What Mailchimp does not do is transactional email or product-lifecycle automation in the way Loops treats as core. There is no equivalent to triggering a password reset or a usage-milestone email from a product event with the same API model. The free plan is also considerably tighter than Loops', capping at 500 contacts and 1,000 sends per month, and support is email and chat only, with some users reporting slow response times on complex issues.
| Feature | Free $0/month | Essentials From ~$13/month | Standard From ~$20/month | Premium From ~$350/month |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Contacts | Up to 500 | Up to 500+ | Up to 500+ | Unlimited |
| Email sends per month | 1,000 | 5,000+ | 6,000+ | Unlimited |
| AI content tools | Basic | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Enhanced automations | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Predictive segmentation | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| SMS marketing | ✗ | Add-on | Add-on | Add-on |
| Transactional email | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Built for | SaaS product, marketing, and transactional email | General-purpose email and SMS marketing |
| Transactional email | Yes | No |
| Product / lifecycle event automation | Yes (event-driven) | Limited (pre-built automation templates) |
| AI content generation | No | Yes |
| SMS marketing | No | Add-on, Essentials and up |
| Per-seat pricing | No | No |
| Developer API + SDKs | Yes (Node, Next.js, Ruby, PHP, NuxtJS) | Yes (documented API) |
| MCP / AI agent integration | Yes (MCP server + CLI) | No |
| Native SaaS-stack integrations (Stripe, Supabase, Clerk) | Yes | No (300+ general integrations) |
| Free tier | Yes (up to 1,000 contacts, 4,000 sends) | Yes (500 contacts, 1,000 sends) |
| Free plan branding removed | Paid plans only | N/A on free (basic templates only) |
| Starting price (paid) | ~$49/mo | ~$13/mo |
Which should you choose?
The split here is clean because the two tools were designed for different people rather than for the same buyer with different budgets. Loops assumes a developer is going to touch the integration and that email is partly a product surface, not just a marketing channel, which is why transactional sends and event-driven automation sit at the center of the product. Mailchimp assumes no engineering involvement and optimizes for a marketer who needs templates, AI copy help, and a second channel like SMS without writing a line of code. A SaaS company forcing password reset emails through Mailchimp, or a small retailer trying to wire Loops into a checkout flow without a developer, is using the wrong tool for its actual buyer.
Bottom line
If you are a SaaS company and your product already fires events like signup, trial start, or payment, start with Loops' free plan and connect those events directly. The unified transactional and lifecycle model will save you from running a second vendor for password resets. If you are a small business, non-profit, or team without engineering resources who needs to send a professional campaign this week, Mailchimp's free plan and template library get you there faster, and the AI content tools mean you don't need a copywriter either. Businesses that outgrow Mailchimp's automation depth for eCommerce specifically should look at Klaviyo before assuming Loops is the answer, since Loops is not built for that use case at all.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use Loops instead of Mailchimp for transactional email like password resets?
Yes, that is one of Loops' core use cases. Loops handles transactional email, such as password resets and receipts, from the same account as marketing and product lifecycle email, triggered via a single API call. Mailchimp does not offer transactional email at all, so this is one of the clearest dividing lines between the two.
Is Loops cheaper than Mailchimp for a small SaaS company?
It depends on team size and contact count. Loops does not charge per seat, so a five-person team pays the same as a one-person team at a given contact count, while Mailchimp's plan cost is driven by contacts and sends regardless of headcount. For a small SaaS team with several people needing access, Loops' no-per-seat model is often the better value even before comparing feature depth.
Does Mailchimp have anything like Loops' MCP server for AI agents?
No. Loops ships a native MCP server and CLI that let AI agents trigger emails, create contacts, or fire events as part of an automated workflow. Mailchimp has no equivalent MCP integration or AI agent capability, though it does have separate AI content-generation tools built into its campaign editor.
Why would a SaaS company choose Mailchimp over Loops?
Mailchimp makes sense for a SaaS company if the team sending email is non-technical and wants a drag-and-drop builder, a large template library, and AI copywriting help without developer involvement. It also makes sense if SMS marketing is a priority, since Loops does not offer SMS at all.
Can Loops be used for cold outreach or lead generation?
No. Loops is designed for sending email to people who have already opted in, such as users of your product, and has no prospecting or inbox warm-up features. Mailchimp is also an opt-in tool and not built for cold outreach; neither platform is the right fit for that use case.
Which tool integrates better with a modern SaaS stack like Stripe or Supabase?
Loops has native integrations with Supabase, Clerk, Stripe, PostHog, Auth0, Segment, Framer, Webflow, and Bubble that sync user and billing events automatically. Mailchimp's 300+ integrations lean toward eCommerce platforms like Shopify and WooCommerce and general CRM tools rather than developer-first SaaS infrastructure.

