Beehiiv is the newsletter platform we picked for 500k.io after 18 months of daily-driving it on three different products. It is, in early 2026, the best option under $50/mo for a solo creator who wants the email and the monetization built into the same place. Substack still has the network effect; Kit still has the deliverability ceiling; Beehiiv hits the largest middle of the curve.

This review explains why, where it falls short, and exactly which tier you should pick.

Quick verdict

MetricBeehiiv 2026
VerdictBuy. Best in class under $50/mo for solo creators.
Best forDaily/weekly newsletters from $0 to ~50K subs.
Best alternativeKit (formerly ConvertKit) for advanced segmentation; Substack for niche network effect.
PricingFree → $49/mo Scale → $99/mo Max → $999/mo Enterprise.
DeliverabilityA+ (own infra, dedicated IPs at Scale, DKIM/SPF clean).
MonetizationNative sponsorships marketplace + paid subscriptions + Boosts.
Migration riskLow — CSV export, Markdown posts, custom domains transfer.

Who Beehiiv is for

  • Solo creators / founders scaling a newsletter as a primary product or as a top-of-funnel for a SaaS / agency / course.
  • Small teams (1-3 people) who don’t need enterprise features.
  • Newsletters expected to monetize via sponsorships, recommendations, or paid tiers in the next 12 months.

Who Beehiiv is NOT for

  • Heavy segmentation users. If you’re sending 8 different versions of an email to 8 segments based on quiz answers, click history, and lifecycle, you’ll outgrow Beehiiv at the boundary between Scale and Max. Look at Kit or Customer.io.
  • Multi-product email senders. If you’re running transactional + marketing + newsletters off the same account at scale, separate the workloads (Resend / Postmark for transactional, Beehiiv for newsletters).
  • Free-only forever. Beehiiv’s free tier is generous, but if your strategy is “never pay anyone,” self-hosted Listmonk + your own SMTP is cheaper at scale.

What we tested

Three workloads, 18 months:

  1. A daily-cadence newsletter (~5K subs at peak, average 28% open rate, 4.5% CTR).
  2. A weekly digest with paid tier (~12K subs, 8% paid conversion, average $7/mo paid).
  3. A founder-focused newsletter with 8-email welcome series and sponsorship rotation (~20K subs).

We didn’t simulate. These are real workloads on real Beehiiv accounts.

Pros

  1. Editor. Block-based, fast, predictable. Posts feel like writing in Notion. The “Idea generator” AI feature is mid; ignore it. The editor itself is excellent.
  2. Deliverability. Across 18 months and 200K+ sends, our average inbox placement was 96%. Beehiiv runs its own infra, dedicated IPs at Scale, with DKIM/SPF cleanly handled. We’ve never been blocklisted.
  3. Monetization built in. The Sponsorships marketplace pre-fills you with 50-200 deals/month at >2K subs. Boost program (paid recommendations) earns $1-3 per click for the right niches. Paid subscription tier kicks in at any plan.
  4. Referral program. The native referral feature is clean. We’ve seen 8-12% of subscriber growth come from referrals once it’s promoted in the welcome series.
  5. No rev share. You keep 100% of paid subscriptions (Beehiiv charges Stripe fees + flat plan fee). Substack takes 10%. Over a year on a $5K/mo paid newsletter that’s $6,000 you keep.
  6. API + webhooks. Documented, stable, and the place we wire to our content factory. Adding a new subscriber from a custom landing page takes ~10 lines of code.
  7. Custom domains. Cleanly transferred. CNAME setup is well-documented. SSL is automatic.
  8. Migration in/out. CSV export, Markdown posts. Painless if you ever need to leave.

Cons

  1. Free tier blocks automations. This is the single biggest gotcha. If you’re on free, you can broadcast but you can’t run a welcome series. Workaround: run welcomes through Resend (free 3K/mo) and only push to Beehiiv after the welcome flow finishes. Annoying but workable.
  2. Scale jump is sharp. Free → $49/mo is a real cliff. There’s a $19 “Launch” tier announced but it lacks automations too. If your value-per-sub is low (very early newsletter), the math is uncomfortable for a few months.
  3. Editor occasionally rebases the layout. Once or twice a year, an update changes how a block renders in old posts. We had a one-day cleanup pass after a March 2026 release.
  4. Idea generator is fluff. The AI feature for headlines / outlines is generic. Skip it; use Claude Code or ChatGPT instead.
  5. Sponsorships marketplace can be feast-or-famine. Some niches get plenty of inbound; others (very technical or very niche) get few offers. Boost is more reliable.

Pricing breakdown

PlanPriceSubsHighlights
Free$0≤2,500Broadcast, custom domain, basic stats. No automations.
Launch$19/mo≤2,500Adds removed branding + premium support. Still no automations.
Scale$49/mo≤10,000Automations, API access, custom polls, pro analytics. The default for $500K-bound creators.
Max$99/mo≤25,000Boost program, custom HTML emails, multiple newsletters.
Enterprise$999+/moCustomSSO, audit log, custom contracts.

The right tier for most $500K founders is Scale, and the right time to upgrade is the moment you cross 1,500 subs and want to send a welcome flow. Before either of those, free is fine.

Alternatives

AlternativePick if…
Kit (ConvertKit)You need advanced segmentation, automations, sales funnels. ~$29/mo at 1K subs.
SubstackYour niche has heavy Substack network effect (politics, finance, culture). Cost: 10% revenue.
ButtondownYou want minimalist Markdown-first sending. ~$9/mo.
GhostYou want full ownership including the website. Self-host or $9-50/mo.
Customer.ioYou’re past the $500K mark and need true marketing-automation power. From $100/mo.

Migration paths

To Beehiiv: CSV import is one-click. Confirmed subscribers stay confirmed. Custom fields transfer.

Off Beehiiv: CSV export is one-click. Posts download as Markdown. Custom domain points to whatever you migrate to.

Risk: low. Beehiiv’s lock-in is product quality, not technical lock-in.

Bottom line

If you’re a solo creator pushing toward $500K via newsletter, start free, upgrade to Scale ($49/mo) the day you need a welcome flow, and don’t think about platform changes again until you cross 25K subs. Beehiiv has earned the position it has by being the boring, reliable, well-priced default. The areas where it’s weakest (segmentation, multi-newsletter handling) only matter for a small fraction of solo creators.

Try Beehiiv at beehiiv.com (affiliate link — supports the site, doesn’t change your price).

FAQ

Is Beehiiv worth $49/mo for the Scale tier?

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Yes if you've crossed 2,500 subs and you're activating welcome flows or sponsorship marketplace. No if you're under 2,500 subs and only sending broadcasts — stay on free.

How does Beehiiv compare to Substack in 2026?

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Beehiiv wins on monetization options (you keep 100% vs Substack's 10%), email deliverability, and SEO. Substack still wins on built-in audience network for some niches.

Does Beehiiv handle EU/GDPR subscribers?

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Yes. Double opt-in is supported. EU senders should turn it on (mandatory in Germany, recommended elsewhere).

Can I migrate off Beehiiv if I need to?

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Yes — subscriber list exports as CSV in one click. Posts export as Markdown. Custom domains transfer cleanly.

What's the single biggest gotcha?

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Welcome flows / automations are gated behind paid tiers. If you're on free Beehiiv and need a welcome series, run it through Resend instead. We built our $500K AI Stack lead magnet flow exactly this way.