Every time a new ecommerce client shows me their email setup, there’s a good chance it’s running on Mailchimp. And every time, I ask the same question: are your abandoned cart emails recovering anything? Usually the answer is “not really.” That’s not Mailchimp’s fault — it’s just not what it was built for. Drip, on the other hand, was born in the ecommerce trenches. Both tools send email, but one of them lives and breathes store data.
When Drip wins
Drip’s superpower is how it handles customer data from your store. Connect Shopify or WooCommerce and Drip automatically syncs every product purchase, cart abandonment, and browsing session. You can build segments around specific behaviors — people who bought a certain product but not the upsell, customers who haven’t ordered in 60 days, VIPs with lifetime value over $500. The pre-built automation templates for welcome series, abandoned cart, post-purchase follow-up, and replenishment reminders are purpose-built for ecommerce. Mailchimp has some of these too, but Drip’s are deeper and more customizable without needing a developer.
When Mailchimp wins
Mailchimp wins on brand recognition and ecosystem. If you need a tool that does email, landing pages, social media ads, postcards, and basic CRM all in one place, Mailchimp gives you that. The template library is huge, and the design tools are better than Drip’s. For small businesses that aren’t purely ecommerce — say a local bakery that sends a monthly newsletter and runs Facebook ads — Mailchimp’s all-in-one approach makes more sense than Drip’s laser focus. Mailchimp is also easier to get started with if you have zero email marketing experience. Most people already know the interface.
The real deciding factor
If you run an online store and email is a meaningful revenue channel, Drip’s purchase-data automation will outperform Mailchimp every time. I’ve seen stores using Drip recover 3-5% more cart revenue just from smarter abandoned cart flows. If your email needs are more general — newsletters, event announcements, basic bulk sends — Mailchimp is cheaper and more well-rounded. The mistake I see most often is ecommerce stores using Mailchimp because “it’s what we know” and missing out on revenue from better segmentation.
| Feature | Drip | Mailchimp |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Ecommerce brands and online stores | General small business marketing |
| Ecommerce integration | Native and deep (Shopify, WooCommerce) | Good (Standard/Plus plans) |
| Automation | Purchase-based flows and lifecycle emails | Basic sequences on all plans |
| Segmentation | Purchase history, product affinity, LTV | Contact tags and interests |
| Pricing range | $0–$100+/mo (contacts + sends) | $13–$299+/mo (contacts based) |
| Ease of use | Moderate | Easy to very easy |
My honest take? If you’re purely ecommerce and serious about email revenue, move to Drip. The switch is annoying but you’ll see the difference in your abandoned cart recovery within a month. If you’re a general small business running occasional campaigns, Mailchimp’s broader feature set and lower price point make it the smarter choice.
Visit our Drip pricing page and Mailchimp pricing breakdown. See more comparisons or explore our email marketing resources.
Final verdict
Use the pricing notes, comparison paths, and alternatives to narrow the shortlist. The right email tool is the one that fits list size, workflow depth, ecommerce need, budget, and switching cost.