Drip vs Userlist in 2026: eCommerce purchase automation vs SaaS behavioral lifecycle email
Both tools trigger email from real behavior instead of batch sends. Drip reads Shopify and WooCommerce orders; Userlist reads product usage and company-level SaaS accounts. The overlap ends at "behavioral automation."
Userlist supports many-to-many user-to-company relationships for B2B SaaS accounts; Drip has no concept of company-level automation at all, since it is built around individual eCommerce shoppers.
Drip syncs Shopify and WooCommerce order and cart data natively; Userlist has no eCommerce platform integration and is not designed for purchase-triggered retail sequences.
Userlist handles transactional email (password resets, billing notifications) in the same platform as lifecycle campaigns; Drip has no transactional email capability.
Drip includes revenue attribution on every plan from $39/month; Userlist's equivalent measurement layer, A/B testing and conversion goals, is locked to its $349/month Professional tier.
Userlist starts at $149/month for 10,000 users, nearly four times Drip's $39/month entry price for 2,500 contacts, reflecting its focus on growth-stage SaaS rather than early-stage stores.
Both tools bundle their core feature set broadly rather than heavily tiering it, though Userlist reserves A/B testing, conversion goals, and outbound webhooks for Professional and above.
Drip and Userlist are both behavior-triggered email platforms, but they were built around opposite data models. Drip syncs Shopify and WooCommerce order, cart, and browse events in real time and fires eCommerce sequences like abandoned cart recovery and post-purchase upsells, with revenue attribution tying each send to actual dollars. Userlist is built for SaaS: it understands users and companies as a many-to-many relationship, where one person can belong to multiple accounts and a company can have many users, and it covers marketing, lifecycle, and transactional email through the same workflow builder. A D2C brand and a B2B SaaS product need fundamentally different data models to run good automation, and that is exactly the line these two tools sit on either side of.
The tools at a glance
Drip
eCommerce email marketing automation with a visual workflow builder, revenue attribution, and deep Shopify and WooCommerce integrations.
Drip's entire design centers on eCommerce behavior. Shopify and WooCommerce order history, cart events, and product views sync in real time, and the visual workflow builder lets a merchant branch sequences on any of it without writing code. A shopper who abandoned a cart gets one flow, a repeat buyer gets an upsell sequence, a lapsed customer gets a win-back campaign, and all of it updates as new orders come in.
Every plan from $39 a month for 2,500 contacts to $154 for 10,000 includes the full feature set, no gating. Revenue attribution reports the actual dollars each campaign or automation generated, giving a merchant a direct line from email activity to order data rather than a proxy metric like open rate.
What Drip does not have is any concept of accounts or companies. It treats every contact as an individual shopper, which is correct for D2C retail but would be the wrong model entirely for a B2B SaaS product where a single company might have ten different users logging in. It also has no transactional email capability and no native SMS, and per-contact cost rises meaningfully past 10,000 contacts.
| Feature | Up to 2,500 $39/mo | Up to 5,000 $89/mo | Up to 10,000 $154/mo | Up to 20,000 Custom |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Email sends | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| Visual workflow builder | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Revenue attribution | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Shopify/WooCommerce sync | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Company-level accounts | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
| Transactional email | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
Userlist
Behavior-based email automation for SaaS with company-level workflows, in-app messages, and A/B testing.
Userlist is built around a data model most email platforms cannot represent: users belonging to multiple companies, and companies with multiple users, in a true many-to-many relationship. That matters for B2B SaaS, where the buying and usage unit is a team, not a person, and campaigns often need to trigger at the company level rather than the individual level.
The visual workflow builder covers three types of email in one canvas: marketing campaigns, lifecycle sequences triggered by product usage, and transactional email like password resets and billing notifications. Consolidating all three into a single system removes the need for a separate transactional email vendor, which is a real cost and complexity reduction for a growth-stage SaaS team.
The Professional tier at $349/month unlocks A/B split testing across up to five paths and conversion goal tracking, turning workflows into measurable experiments rather than fire-and-forget sequences. The entry cost is steep for early-stage products, though: Basic starts at $149/month for 10,000 users, and custom properties are capped at 20 on that tier. Userlist has no built-in landing page or form builder beyond basic signup forms, and it is squarely scoped to SaaS rather than retail.
| Feature | Basic $149/mo | Professional $349/mo | Enterprise Custom |
|---|---|---|---|
| Users included | 10,000 | 10,000 | Custom |
| Company-level accounts (many-to-many) | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Transactional email | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| A/B split testing | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Conversion goals | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Outbound webhooks | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Primary use case | eCommerce lifecycle and post-purchase automation | B2B SaaS lifecycle, marketing, and transactional email |
| eCommerce data sync (Shopify/WooCommerce) | Native, real-time | No |
| Company-level (many-to-many) accounts | No | Yes, native many-to-many model |
| Transactional email | No | Yes, all plans |
| A/B testing | Not a listed feature | Professional plan and above |
| Revenue attribution | Yes, per campaign and automation | No (not eCommerce-connected) |
| API access | Yes, all plans | Yes, HTTP API on all plans |
| Free trial | 14 days, no credit card | 14 days, no credit card |
| Custom properties | Not applicable (contact-based tags) | 20 (Basic), 50 (Professional), custom (Enterprise) |
| Starting price | $39/mo (2,500 contacts) | $149/mo (10,000 users) |
Which should you choose?
Both tools genuinely believe in behavior-triggered email over static newsletters, which is the closest thing to shared philosophy between them. But the data model each one is built around, individual shopper behavior for Drip, many-to-many company accounts for Userlist, makes them a poor substitute for each other. A SaaS product trying to run Drip would have no way to trigger a campaign when "the whole account" hits a usage threshold, and an eCommerce store trying to run Userlist would be paying $149/month for company-account logic it has no use for.
Bottom line
Choose Drip if you run a Shopify or WooCommerce store and need purchase-triggered automation with attribution proving its worth. Choose Userlist if you run a B2B SaaS product with team accounts and need lifecycle, marketing, and transactional email tied to real product usage in one tool. The two rarely compete for the same renewal decision, since the underlying business model, not the price, is what actually decides which one fits.
Frequently asked questions
Can Userlist handle Shopify abandoned cart automation like Drip?
No, Userlist has no eCommerce platform integration and no cart or order data sync. It is built entirely around SaaS product usage events and company-level relationships, which do not map onto retail purchase behavior the way Drip's native Shopify and WooCommerce sync does.
Does Drip support company-level accounts the way Userlist does?
No, Drip treats every contact as an individual shopper with no concept of a parent company or team account. If your product sells to teams where multiple users belong to one paying account, Userlist's many-to-many data model is built for that; Drip has no equivalent structure.
Is Userlist worth it for a small SaaS startup pre-revenue?
It depends on whether you have real user behavior to trigger on yet. Userlist's $149/month Basic plan is a meaningful cost for a pre-revenue startup, and the platform is most valuable once you have actual product usage data and team accounts to build automation around, which usually means post-product-market-fit rather than pre-launch.
Can Drip send transactional email like password resets?
No, Drip has no transactional email capability. Userlist explicitly supports this, running password resets, billing notifications, and account verification through the same platform as marketing and lifecycle campaigns, which removes the need for a separate transactional email vendor like Postmark.
How do Drip and Userlist compare on revenue measurement?
Drip has a real edge here for its use case: revenue attribution ties every campaign and automation directly to completed Shopify or WooCommerce purchases. Userlist's comparable feature, A/B testing with conversion goal tracking, measures whether a target action like a plan upgrade happens within a set window, but it requires the $349/month Professional plan and is not tied to purchase revenue in the same direct way.
Which tool is cheaper for a list around 10,000 contacts?
Drip is meaningfully cheaper at that volume: its "Up to 10,000" tier runs $154/month with every feature included. Userlist's Basic plan also covers 10,000 users but starts at $149/month with A/B testing, conversion goals, and outbound webhooks locked behind the $349/month Professional tier, so the real comparison depends on which of those Userlist-specific features you actually need.

