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Buttondown's blog

Email could have been X.400 times better The physicists who convinced Fermilab to send Brazil's emails Better in-app previews Analytics 3.0 Subscriber ID variables Comments! Send latest premium action Automation filtering Free API subscribers Surveys in automations Reply to replies Labels for RSS feeds How Jeremy Singer-Vine curates curious datasets for readers 2023 (and what's next) Email vs web content Sort by engagement Better gift subscriptions How Andy Dehnart built a career reviewing television New email template Email-based automations Opt-in reply tracking Automatic alt text More social network integrations Sort by metadata Overlarge image warnings Automation tag actions Pause emails mid-flight Search tags and automations Gift via automations Subscriber-driving emails Programmatic webhooks Email page views Tag statistics Discord webhook formatting Automatic subscriber cleanup RSS subscriber count Weekly subscriber reports More list columns Customizable list views How Max Voltar turned a side gig into a trusted keyboard resource How Nick Disabato runs two newsletters from one design consultancy Made-for-you share images Automation improvements End-of-email surveys Filter by date Survey-triggered automations More automation functionality New webhooks How France Insider built a news service with paid subscribers Email as primary key How John Willshire unites two businesses in one newsletter Confirmation reminders Email churned subscribers Email-to-draft Subscriber metadata columns ChatGPT integration Faster web archives Referral program Better search results TikTok embeds Subscriber timeline Spotify embeds Improved RSS-to-email Subscribe page OG image New analytics page Google Tag Manager Even more subscriber types Integrating Duda with Buttondown Linktree integration guide Advanced and enterprise plans Framer integration guide API requests page Team collaboration In-email surveys Better CSS settings Better RSS automation fetching! Editor toolbar improvements Smart filters Faster emails page RSS automations Faster email analytics Zapier error codes Image accessibility checks Tags vs newsletters OG image picker Image editor improvements API bulk actions Improved OpenAPI spec Mastodon support Better subscriber filtering Better subscriber validation Hotkey support! Programmatic access to analytics Stronger bulk actions Faster archive page Custom canonical URLs Email slug and metadata Improved writing interface Generating a Typescript router in Django Filter emails by source
2025 pricing update
Justin Duke · 2025-01-12 · via Buttondown's blog

NOTHING IS GETTING MORE EXPENSIVE.

Sorry for the all-caps, but... just wanted to get that out of the way. We know that blog posts with the phrase "pricing update" rarely presage good news.

We're in fact doing the opposite: two of our core features are getting cheaper:

  1. Automations are now available to everyone paying at least $29/month (down from $79/month);
  2. API access is now available to everyone (down from $9/month).

Why the changes? To answer that, let's take a very solipsistic step back and talk about why and how we price things. (You may also enjoy a similar essay from two years ago.)

Buttondown's pricing is grounded in a few core principles:

  • We want to, whenever possible, make sure we make more money than we spend on every single user. (This might sound weird, but it's a good way to make sure that our incentives are aligned with everyone using Buttondown, and we don't run into odd situations where certain cohort of users are loss leaders for others.)
  • We want our users to never feel like they got a bad deal, which is why we avoid things like Black Friday sales or other artificial discounts.
  • As much as we can, we want to align our pricing with the financial value we provide to folks using Buttondown. It makes sense to gate features that are useful for businesses but not for individuals behind more expensive plans.
  • The single biggest unit cost Buttondown has is "sending the emails"; the biggest fixed cost Buttondown has is "paying the engineers who build the app."

Beyond that, we like to keep things simple, and avoid situations where people have to suddenly start paying substantially more just to get one or two features. (We won't exactly pretend that this is selfless — the more features you use, the more subscribers you'll get, which is great for you but also great for us!)

So, with that in mind — why make API and automations cheaper? Two big reasons:

  1. It's clear that both of these features, while largely envisioned for businesses and more advanced use cases, have been tremendously useful for smaller and newer users, too. (We've had an informal policy of "if someone writes in asking for free access to the API, we'll grant it" — this just makes it more formal.)
  2. We've invested a lot in both of these features. The API is (if you don't mind a bit of boasting) the best email/newsletter API on the market, and our automations are strong enough to be a core area of investment for 2025. We want as many folks as possible to be able to use them!

We're excited to see what folks build with these features, and we're looking forward to seeing what you all build in 2025.