GetResponse
  • Overall EMPR Score
    3.5
  • Ease-of-use
    3.0
  • Customer Support
    2.8
  • Value for money
    2.5
  • Functionality
    3.8

👍 Pros

  • Genuinely Powerful Automation Builder
  • Unique Webinar Integration
  • Solid Segmentation Capabilities

🤷‍ Cons

  • Worst-in-Class AI Implementation
  • Aggressive Feature-Gating of Basic Capabilities
  • Interface Overwhelm From All-in-One Approach
  • Support Gaps and Billing Friction
  • Inflated Contact Counts and Rigid Billing
  • Trial Experience Designed to Create Upgrade Pressure

GetResponse started life as a straightforward email marketing platform back in 1998, founded by Simon Grabowski out of his father’s attic in Poland. Since then, it has evolved into what the company calls a “complete marketing platform” that bundles email marketing, automation, landing pages, webinars, a website builder, e-commerce tools, and even course creation into […]

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About the ESP

GetResponse started life as a straightforward email marketing platform back in 1998, founded by Simon Grabowski out of his father’s attic in Poland. Since then, it has evolved into what the company calls a “complete marketing platform” that bundles email marketing, automation, landing pages, webinars, a website builder, e-commerce tools, and even course creation into a single interface.

On paper, this sounds appealing. One platform to rule them all. However, in practice, this all-in-one approach creates a tension that runs throughout the entire GetResponse experience. The platform is constantly trying to be your email tool, your webinar host, your website builder, your course platform, and your e-commerce solution all at once. This means that the core email marketing functionality—the thing most users actually signed up for—often has to share attention (and screen real estate) with features you may never touch.

What’s particularly worth noting is how GetResponse handles pricing versus features. While they advertise plans starting at $19/month, many fundamental email marketing features are locked behind the $59/month “Marketer” tier, and that $59 only covers 1,000 contacts. To put this in perspective: you’re paying $59/month just to get basic features like contact tagging and lead scoring, and that only covers a tiny starter list. By the time you have a decent-sized list of 10,000 contacts, that Marketer plan jumps to $114/month. This is the kind of feature-gating that experienced email marketers find frustrating, as these are considered table-stakes capabilities on platforms that focus on email marketing first.

The company remains privately held and founder-led, which is relatively unusual in the ESP space. They employ around 450 people across 14 countries. They’ve made only one acquisition (an AI recommendations startup), and haven’t been acquired themselves, which does speak to a certain stability and independence.

Onboarding Process

GetResponse’s onboarding starts with a goal-selection modal asking “What’s your main goal right now?” with options ranging from growing your list to promoting e-commerce to building courses. This sounds helpful in theory: the platform will customize your dashboard based on your answer. In practice, it means the interface changes based on what you selected, which can be disorienting if you later want to explore features outside your initial choice.

During the 14-day trial, GetResponse gives you access to features from all tiers including Starter, Marketer, and Creator. They’re quite transparent about this being their strategy—there’s a persistent banner at the top of the screen (that you cannot close) reminding you that “Premium features activated” and counting down your trial days. This banner is distracting and creates a constant sense of pressure rather than letting you explore comfortably.

The more concerning issue is that features aren’t clearly labeled by tier while you’re exploring during the trial. You can get accustomed to using a feature, build it into your workflow, and then watch it disappear when you upgrade to a paid plan at a lower tier than where that feature lives. This feels like a deliberate strategy to create upgrade pressure rather than helping users make informed decisions.

GetResponse also employs onboarding gamification: complete one of their checklists and get a 10% discount on your upgrade. While gamification can be helpful, here it feels more like a conversion tactic than genuine user assistance.

The real onboarding support is reserved for MAX plan users ($1,099+/month), who receive dedicated onboarding specialists, one-on-one training sessions, and ongoing Customer Experience Manager support. For everyone else, you’re navigating the platform with chatbot guidance and video tutorials. For a platform that tries to do as much as GetResponse does, this creates a significant gap where users who need the most hand-holding get the least human guidance.

Ease of Use

This is where the all-in-one philosophy starts to work against GetResponse. The interface can feel cluttered and overwhelming, particularly for users who primarily need email marketing capabilities. There are menus, sub-menus, and feature panels for website building, webinar hosting, conversion funnels, course creation, and e-commerce, all alongside the email marketing tools you actually came for.

Users frequently report feeling lost among features they’ll never use. If you just want to craft and send email campaigns, you’ll find yourself navigating past webinar settings, landing page builders, and conversion funnel tools to get to what matters. One common sentiment captures this well: the platform is powerful, but sometimes you just want to send a newsletter without navigating through a dozen menus.

This is a sharp contrast to platforms that take a “fundamentals first” approach, where the core email marketing features are front and center and advanced features are revealed as you need them. GetResponse gives you everything at once, which can be paralyzing rather than empowering, especially for users who are just starting out or who simply don’t need a website builder baked into their email platform.

Beyond the core features, GetResponse keeps piling on additional capabilities. There’s a “Funnels” feature that promises to set up your entire lead generation flow—signup page, lead magnet delivery page, and welcome email—in one place. In practice, it feels more like a gimmick than a genuine time-saver. You could achieve the same result by setting up each piece individually, and you’d have more control over the process.

There’s also ad audience management for creating custom audiences from your email contacts and exporting them to Google Ads. Whether this is genuinely useful in 2026 is questionable—modern ad platform algorithms have gotten remarkably good at finding the right people to show your ads to, even without you manually uploading custom audiences.

GetResponse offers “Premium Newsletters” with Stripe Connect integration for creators who want to charge subscribers. And there’s a chat feature. And push notifications. Each additional feature adds cognitive overhead, menu items to navigate past, and potential for confusion—especially when many of these features require higher tiers to actually use.

To be fair, GetResponse does offer in-app guides and a resource center with tutorials. But these feel more like bandaids on a complexity problem rather than a solution. The underlying issue is that the interface tries to serve too many use cases simultaneously.

Broadcast Feature

The broadcast feature in GetResponse is called “Newsletters” and getting to it requires more clicks than necessary. You have to navigate to Email Marketing, then choose Newsletter, and then you’re presented with a modal asking whether you want to create the email yourself or use the AI generator. This kind of friction—forcing you to make decisions before you’ve even started—is a recurring theme in the platform.

If you choose to create the email yourself, you’ll find the essentials you’d expect from a mature email platform. You can create and send campaigns to your lists, schedule sends for optimal times, and use their “Perfect Timing” feature which attempts to deliver emails when each individual subscriber is most likely to engage.

However, if you choose the AI email generator, you’re in for a frustrating experience. GetResponse’s AI implementation is arguably the worst we’ve seen from any major ESP. Rather than weaving AI assistance naturally into the editing workflow—where you could optionally invoke it when helpful—GetResponse forces you through a rigid multi-step wizard.

First, you describe what your email is about. Then you must select a tone (Convincing, Informative, Formal, Friendly, Inspirational, or Neutral). Then you pick a layout and color palette. Each of these steps feels like additional mental burden rather than assistance. The tone selection in particular creates unnecessary anxiety—you find yourself wondering whether you should choose a tone at all, and if so, which one. These should be optional enhancements, not mandatory gates you have to pass through.

And after all this work, the generated results are extremely unimpressive. The AI seems more interested in demonstrating that GetResponse has AI capabilities (“look, we have AI!”) than in actually making your life easier. On platforms with better AI integration, the AI is embedded naturally into the editor. You can have it generate content when you want, but you’re not forced into a separate wizard before you can start working.

A/B testing is available for broadcast campaigns, allowing you to test subject lines and email content against each other. The platform sends each variation to a portion of your list and then sends the winning version to the remainder. However, you cannot A/B test within automated workflows—only in broadcast campaigns.

One notable weakness is in the broadcast analytics. GetResponse doesn’t offer the ability to filter out bot clicks or Apple Mail Privacy Protection opens from your reports. This means your open and click metrics may be inflated, giving you a misleading picture of actual subscriber engagement. Additionally, there’s no breakdown by email client or device type, so you can’t see how your campaigns perform in Gmail versus Outlook.

Autoresponder/Automation Feature

The automation builder is one of GetResponse’s stronger areas, though it comes with caveats. The visual workflow builder isn’t fancy-looking, it actually feels a bit dated, like a Windows 95 flowchart application, but it’s snappy and responsive to work with. You can drag and drop actions, conditions, and filters to create multi-step workflows.

One quirk that becomes apparent quickly is how GetResponse handles modules (they call them “elements”). At first glance, there appear to be a huge number of options to drag onto your canvas. But on closer inspection, you realize they haven’t actually provided more functionality than other ESPs—they’ve just made every single option its own separate module. Where another platform would have a “filter” module with various filtering options inside it, GetResponse has each filter type as a separate draggable element. It creates an illusion of feature richness while actually just fragmenting the same capabilities.

That said, the automation builder has genuinely good integration with web-based interactions. There are dedicated modules for web events like push permission status, URL visits, engagement events, product views, and category browsing. You can trigger automations based on these web behaviors and send push notifications as actions. For marketers who want to connect email campaigns tightly with website activity, this integration is more seamless than what you’d find on many competitors.

The pre-built workflow templates (50+) cover common sequences from welcome series to abandoned cart recovery. When you have access to the full automation toolkit, it’s capable of handling sophisticated marketing scenarios.

However, there’s a significant catch. The Starter plan ($19/month for 1,000 contacts) limits you to just a single automation workflow. One. For any kind of practical email marketing automation, you need at minimum a welcome sequence, an abandoned cart flow, and a re-engagement campaign. That’s already three workflows, which means you’re immediately forced to upgrade to the Marketer plan, $59/month for that same 1,000 contacts, or $114/month once you grow to a decent-sized list of 10,000 contacts.

Furthermore, contact tagging and lead scoring, features that are essential for meaningful automation—are also locked behind the Marketer tier. This creates a situation where the automation builder looks impressive on paper, but you can’t actually use it effectively without paying significantly more. On platforms that don’t use features as a pricing weapon, you’d have access to tags, scoring, and multiple automations on even entry-level plans—often at price points that include far more contacts.

GetResponse also offers an “AI Campaigns” feature that promises to fast-track your campaign setup by generating a landing page, welcome email, and newsletter all at once. You answer a few questions about your business, choose a tone and design palette, and then… wait. And wait. The generation process takes a surprisingly long time, with a message telling you to “feel free to leave this page and focus on other tasks” because the AI needs extra time. When results finally appear, they’re underwhelming, certainly not worth the multi-step wizard and extended wait time. It would genuinely be faster to just open the landing page builder and email editor separately and pick templates you like.

Templates

GetResponse offers around 246 email templates across various categories and industries. While this isn’t the largest library in the space, the templates are generally modern, responsive, and well-designed. They cover common use cases including newsletters, promotions, announcements, and e-commerce campaigns.

In addition to email templates, GetResponse provides templates for landing pages, webinar registration pages, and website pages—reflecting their all-in-one approach. While having these options is convenient, it’s worth noting that in today’s landscape, the number of built-in templates matters less than it used to. Services like Stripo allow you to import custom templates into virtually any ESP, reducing the competitive advantage of a large native template library.

GetResponse also offers AI-powered email generation where you can describe what you want and the platform will generate a template with content. However, as discussed in the broadcast section, this AI implementation is frustrating to use. You’re forced through a rigid wizard selecting tone, layout, and color palette before seeing any output—and the results rarely justify the effort. The AI seems more focused on demonstrating GetResponse has AI capabilities than on actually being useful.

Email Template Editor

HTML WYSIWYG Editor

GetResponse provides an HTML editor for users who prefer to work directly with code. It includes basic editing capabilities and a preview mode. The editor is functional but not particularly standout—it does what you’d expect without any notable innovations. For users who are comfortable with HTML, it provides the necessary control over email design.

Drag and Drop Editor

The drag-and-drop editor is modern and generally intuitive. You can work with various content blocks including text, images, buttons, video thumbnails, social media links, and e-commerce product blocks. The editor supports mobile preview so you can check how your email will render on smaller screens.

However, there are some notable frustrations. The editor lacks autosave functionality, which means you need to manually save your work. If your browser crashes or your internet drops, you lose unsaved changes. This is a surprising omission for a platform of this maturity.

You also cannot set global styles across templates: things like default fonts, colors, and button styles need to be configured individually for each email. This creates unnecessary repetitive work when you’re trying to maintain brand consistency across campaigns.

Personalization options are available including merge tags for subscriber data and dynamic content blocks that can show different content based on subscriber attributes. These features work well when you can access them, though dynamic content is gated to the Marketer plan and above.

List Management

GetResponse’s list management operates on a contact-based model where subscribers can exist on multiple lists. The segmentation capabilities are actually quite strong: you can create segments using up to 8 conditions and 8 condition groups with AND/OR logic, filtering by subscription data, engagement scores, e-commerce behavior, webinar participation, and custom fields.

When you have access to the full segmentation toolkit, it’s genuinely granular and flexible. The problem, once again, is access. Dynamic segment filtering within automated workflows requires the Marketer plan. Contact tagging—one of the most fundamental tools for organizing and targeting your subscribers—also requires the Marketer plan.

This is one of the areas where GetResponse’s feature-gating is most frustrating. Tags and segments are not advanced features. They are foundational tools that any email marketer needs from day one. Locking them behind a higher tier means that users on the Starter plan are severely limited in how they can organize and target their contacts, which in turn limits the effectiveness of everything else they do on the platform.

There’s another quirk worth flagging: GetResponse counts the same email address on multiple lists as multiple contacts. This means if someone is on your newsletter list and your customer list, they count as two contacts toward your plan limit. Combined with the fact that unsubscribed and bounced contacts still count, you can end up paying for a significantly inflated contact count.

The platform does support incoming data through integrations and API, and provides contact profiles with engagement history. These are useful but expected features at this level.

Analytics

GetResponse provides a reporting dashboard with the standard metrics you’d expect: opens, clicks, bounces, unsubscribes, and conversion tracking. The interface is clean and the data is presented in a straightforward way with visual charts and graphs.

However, the analytics feature has some notable gaps that will matter to serious email marketers. As mentioned in the broadcast section, there’s no filtering for bot clicks or Apple Mail Privacy Protection opens. This means your engagement metrics are potentially inflated, and you’re making decisions based on data that doesn’t accurately reflect real human behavior.

There’s also no breakdown by email client or device type. You can’t see whether your Gmail subscribers are opening at a different rate than your Outlook subscribers, or whether mobile opens are converting differently than desktop. This kind of data is crucial for optimizing your email strategy, and its absence is felt.

The platform does offer Google Analytics integration for tracking website behavior after click-through, which is useful. E-commerce revenue tracking is available for those on the Marketer plan and above who have connected their store.

For a platform with “Response” in its name, the analytics could be more robust. If clear, actionable reporting is something you value—the kind where you can glance at your metrics and immediately understand what’s working and what isn’t—you may find GetResponse’s analytics adequate but not exceptional.

Support

GetResponse’s support structure reveals another layer of their tiered philosophy. Live chat is available during business hours (7 AM to 11 PM GMT+1 on weekdays, with reduced hours on weekends), but outside those hours, you’re left with an AI chatbot. This is not 24/7 human support, despite what some promotional materials might suggest.

Phone support is reserved exclusively for MAX plan users, which means you need to be spending $1,099 or more per month before you can pick up the phone and talk to someone at GetResponse. For everyone else, it’s chat during business hours or email.

When you do reach a human agent, the experience is generally positive. Support staff tend to be knowledgeable, and some users praise a unique touch where agents create custom screen-recording videos to walk through solutions. Response times for chat during operating hours are typically fast.

However, the support experience falls apart in two specific areas. First, email support can be inconsistent, with some users reporting multi-day wait times. Second, billing and account issues generate the most negative feedback. Users report difficulty canceling accounts, continued charges after attempted cancellations, and strict enforcement of no-refund policies. The compliance team that handles account suspensions is only reachable via email, with reviews taking 24-48 hours during Polish business hours.

The contrast with platforms that offer in-house human support across all tiers is stark. If you value being able to reach a real person who knows the product inside and out—not a chatbot, not a script-reader, not a customer service team in a different timezone—then GetResponse’s support model may leave you wanting.

Pricing

GetResponse’s pricing requires careful examination because the headline numbers don’t tell the full story, and the real story is eye-opening.

The plans start at $19/month for the Starter tier. That sounds competitive until you realize two things: first, it only covers 1,000 contacts (a tiny list), and second, the Starter plan is so limited in automation, tagging, and segmentation that most serious email marketers will need the Marketer plan.

The Marketer plan—the first tier with practical email marketing capabilities—costs $59/month. But that’s only for 1,000 contacts. Here’s how pricing scales as your list grows:

Contacts Marketer Price
1,000 $59/month
2,500 $69/month
5,000 $95/month
10,000 $114/month
25,000 $215/month
50,000 $359/month

These prices are for monthly billing. Annual billing saves about 18%.

To put this in perspective: by the time you have a decent-sized list of just 10,000 contacts, you’re already paying $114/month, and that’s just to access basic features like tagging and lead scoring that email-first platforms include on every plan. On platforms focused on email marketing ROI rather than feature-gating, that same budget could get you several times the contacts with all features included and human support to boot.

The MAX enterprise tier starts at approximately $1,099/month and includes dedicated IP addresses, transactional emails, phone support, dedicated account management, and custom onboarding. This is the only tier that includes phone support and dedicated IP—both of which more email-focused platforms offer at much lower price points.

Several pricing practices compound the cost concern:

  • Peak billing: You’re charged based on your highest contact count during any billing period
  • Multi-list duplicate counting: The same email on multiple lists counts multiple times toward your limit
  • Inactive contacts still count: Unsubscribed and bounced contacts count toward your limit
  • No self-service downgrades: You have to contact support to move to a lower tier
  • Strict no-refund policy: Enforced without exception

When you add up the feature-gating (forcing you into the Marketer tier for basics), the low contact limits at each price point, and these billing practices, GetResponse becomes one of the more expensive options for serious email marketers—despite appearing affordable at first glance.

Pros

Genuinely Powerful Automation Builder

When you have access to the full automation toolkit (Marketer plan and above), the workflow builder is one of the better ones on the market. The visual interface is intuitive, the condition options are comprehensive, and the pre-built templates cover common use cases well.

Unique Webinar Integration

GetResponse is the only major ESP that includes built-in webinar hosting. For businesses that actively use webinars as part of their marketing strategy, having email and webinar tools in a single platform provides genuine convenience and workflow benefits.

Solid Segmentation Capabilities

The segmentation engine allows up to 8 conditions with AND/OR logic across multiple data dimensions. When accessible, it provides the granularity that sophisticated email marketers need to target their audiences effectively.

Cons

Worst-in-Class AI Implementation

GetResponse’s AI features feel designed to demonstrate that they have AI rather than to actually help users. The forced multi-step wizards for AI email generation—requiring you to choose topics, tones, and designs before seeing any output—create mental burden instead of reducing it. The generation process is slow, the results are underwhelming, and the whole experience feels like work rather than assistance. Platforms with thoughtful AI integration weave it naturally into the editing workflow as an optional enhancement. GetResponse makes it a separate, cumbersome process that’s harder than just doing it yourself.

Aggressive Feature-Gating of Basic Capabilities

Contact tagging, lead scoring, dynamic content, and practical automation all require the Marketer tier—which starts at $59/month but only covers 1,000 contacts. Scale to a decent-sized list of 10,000 contacts and you’re already at $114/month just to access features that should be foundational. These are basic email marketing capabilities that should be available on entry-level plans, not used as leverage to push users into higher-priced tiers with tiny contact allowances. Platforms that believe features should be accessible to all users, regardless of plan level, offer a more honest value proposition—often with dramatically more contacts included at lower price points.

Interface Overwhelm From All-in-One Approach

The platform tries to serve too many use cases at once, resulting in a cluttered interface that makes simple tasks feel more complicated than they need to be. If you just need email marketing, you’ll spend time navigating past webinar tools, website builders, and course creation features you didn’t ask for. Email-first platforms that prioritize core functionality and progressive feature disclosure provide a significantly better user experience.

Support Gaps and Billing Friction

No phone support below $1,099/month, chatbot-first interactions outside business hours, and a notoriously strict cancellation and refund process create friction that undermines user trust. Platforms with in-house human support teams that work alongside the product’s core team—rather than relying on chatbots and tiered access—deliver a fundamentally better support experience.

Inflated Contact Counts and Rigid Billing

Counting the same email across multiple lists as separate contacts, including unsubscribed and bounced contacts in your count, using peak billing, and preventing self-service downgrades—these practices all push costs higher than they need to be. Transparent pricing models that charge you for what you actually use, rather than employing these kinds of billing mechanics, better serve the customer’s interests.

Trial Experience Designed to Create Upgrade Pressure

During the free trial, GetResponse gives you access to features from all tiers without clearly labeling which features belong to which plan. You can build workflows using capabilities that will disappear the moment you subscribe to a tier below Creator. This isn’t accidental. GetResponse openly advertises this as their strategy, with a persistent, non-dismissable banner reminding you of your “premium features” countdown. It feels more like a conversion tactic than genuine user assistance.

Final words

GetResponse is a platform that genuinely excels in a few specific areas—its automation builder is powerful, its webinar integration is unique in the ESP space, and its segmentation engine is impressively granular. For businesses that will actively use webinars, course creation, and a website builder alongside their email marketing, the all-in-one package can represent real convenience.

However, the platform’s attempt to be everything to everyone creates notable trade-offs. The interface feels cluttered for users focused on email. Basic email marketing features are locked behind higher tiers. Support relies heavily on chatbots with human access gated by plan level. And billing practices like peak contact counting, multi-list duplicate counting, and strict no-refund policies work against the user’s interests.

For email marketers who value a focused, streamlined experience—one where core features are available across all plans, where human support is accessible without paying enterprise prices, and where the interface guides you toward what actually drives results rather than overwhelming you with options—GetResponse’s all-in-one ambitions may create more friction than value.

The platform seems best suited for businesses that will genuinely use its breadth of features, particularly webinars and landing pages alongside email. For those who primarily need excellent email marketing with fair pricing, strong deliverability, and knowledgeable human support, more focused alternatives may serve you better.