"Free business email" is a phrase that hides three different things: a free trial of a paid product, a personal email service repurposed for business, or a free tier of a paid service so limited it forces you to upgrade. None of them are actually free in the meaningful sense — and the cost shows up in places that are easy to miss the first month.
Let's break them down.
The "free Gmail" trick
You can use @gmail.com for free, and Gmail is a professional-grade product. So why isn't this enough for your business?
The address itself. john.smith.business2026@gmail.com doesn't read as a business. Customers, partners, and vendors take longer to trust messages from @gmail.com addresses, and many B2B contact forms automatically flag them as personal/lower-priority leads. Receivers' spam filters also tend to be more aggressive with bulk-domain senders.
The ad model. Free Gmail is monetized through Google's wider ecosystem — Search ads, YouTube ads, profile-based ad targeting. Your free Gmail account is part of the larger Google identity that drives ad targeting across all their products. Paid Google Workspace plans are different — their terms exclude Workspace data from ad targeting — but that's not the free product.
The migration cost. If your business ever grows past john.smith.business2026@gmail.com, you have to move every saved contact, every form integration, every CRM record. Starting on @yourcompany.com from day one avoids that migration entirely.
The "free trial that becomes a hostage" trick
Several email providers offer a 30-day trial of their paid plan for free. Some go further and let you import all your existing mail, set up your domain, configure your team — and only then, on day 30, the wall comes down. You either pay or lose access to everything you've imported.
There's nothing wrong with trials. EOD offers one. The trick is recognizing the difference between a trial (a sample) and a setup-tax (a way to make leaving expensive).
Before you commit to migrating to any trial, ask:
- If I don't pay at the end of the trial, do I retain a backup of what I imported?
- Can I export everything in standard formats (MBOX for mail, CSV for contacts)?
- Are there any features that lock down at the end?
Reputable providers let you walk away with your data. Less reputable ones use the trial as a one-way door.
The "free forever, but useless" trick
Some providers offer a "free forever" tier — one mailbox, low storage, no custom domain support, no IMAP, basic spam filtering. Technically free. Practically unusable for any real business.
Look at the fine print for these specific limitations:
- No custom domain. Back to
yourbusiness@providername.com— same problem as@gmail.com. - No IMAP or SMTP. Web-interface only — no Apple Mail, Outlook, or Gmail.
- Limited storage and attachment size. Some cap at 1-5 GB total.
- Basic spam filtering. Paid tiers get the advanced filter; free tiers leave you to triage spam manually.
What honestly priced business email looks like
A trustworthy provider lets you compare apples-to-apples before you pay:
- Clear price per plan, per year, with no minimum.
- Standard protocols included on all plans — IMAP, SMTP, POP3.
- Custom domain on every paid tier.
- Refund policy. A 14-day trial or 30-day money-back guarantee is the baseline.
- Data portability. MBOX for mail, CSV for contacts, from day one.
EOD plans start at $4/month billed annually. Every paid plan includes custom domain, IMAP/SMTP/POP3, custom DKIM, spam filtering, 14-day trial, and 30-day money-back guarantee. The full breakdown is on the pricing page — no fine print.
TL;DR
- "Free Gmail" trades dollars for attention and behavioral data.
- "Free trials" range from honest samples to setup-taxes designed to make leaving expensive.
- "Free forever" tiers exclude features that make email useful for business.
- The cheapest honest business email starts at around $4/month, billed annually.