/email-for-ai-agents providers ↗
head to head

Postmark vs Mailgun

Transactional deliverability specialist versus flexible developer email infrastructure.

Side by side

Feature Postmark Mailgun
Tagline Transactional-only, fast and well-delivered. Developer-leaning email infra, owned by Sinch.
Free tier 100/mo developer plan 100/day on Foundation trial
Starts at $15/mo for 10,000 emails $15/mo for 10,000 emails (Basic)
Pricing model tiered tiered
API Yes Yes
SMTP Yes Yes
SDKs node, python, go, ruby, php, java, elixir, rust, dotnet node, python, go, ruby, php, java
Templates rich rich
React Email No No
Webhooks Yes Yes
Inbound Yes Yes
Multi-tenant Yes Yes
Idempotency No No
Dedicated IP Yes Yes
Deliverability Strong transactional reputation with separate streams for transactional and broadcast traffic, which helps protect sender reputation. Generally good, with deliverability monitoring tools available on higher tiers. Inbound routes and suppressions are battle-tested.
DX score 9/10 7/10
Best for Teams where password resets, receipts, and magic links absolutely cannot miss the inbox. Technical teams that want SMTP relay plus advanced routing.

Postmark

pros
  • Transactional-only routing and strong operational history
  • Streams cleanly separate transactional and broadcast
  • Free DMARC monitoring product (dmarc.postmarkapp.com)
  • Retains full message content and metadata for 45 days for debugging
cons
  • No idempotency keys
  • Pricing per email is higher than SES, Mailgun, or SMTP2GO
  • No drag-and-drop template builder
  • Marketing automation is intentionally absent

Mailgun

pros
  • Strong SMTP relay support, useful when migrating off self-hosted Postfix
  • Inbound routes with regex matching
  • Validation and parsing tools available
  • Sub-accounts for agency use cases
cons
  • Overage pricing and plan differences need close review at scale
  • Documentation is comprehensive but occasionally out of date
  • No idempotency keys
  • Sinch ownership has moved focus toward enterprise