The ConvertKit alternative for bloggers who want email and blog in one tool.
Kit delivers email to the inbox. It doesn't ship a blog. Nashra is the publishing OS for bloggers: one draft goes to your subscribers and your blog at your domain at the same moment, from $23/month.
Publishing OS for creators & solopreneurs. Email, blog, landing pages, and Magic Links on one subscriber spine.
Compared on the points that move the work, not the marketing.
Why bloggers outgrow Kit's publishing layer.
Kit's product bet is automation and commerce. The blog at your domain has always been someone else's job. Most Kit users maintain their blog on WordPress or another CMS, then adapt each post for a broadcast. The list-and-automation side of Kit is strong: visual flow builder, conditional branches, tags, and sequences. The gap is the publishing surface. Kit's website feature is a set of landing pages, not a reader site with category pages and SEO-indexed post URLs under your domain. Bloggers who write for both inbox and web manage two tools where one publishing OS would cover the job.
Every line item.
No fine print.
Blog and email from one draft.
Write a post in Nashra's Notion-style editor and publish once: it goes to your subscriber inbox and your blog at your domain in the same action. The blog is a real reader site with a public URL, category pages, and metadata indexed by Google. Spin up a Magic Link: one hosted URL delivers a lead magnet and auto-tags the subscriber on signup, without a form-and-landing-page chain. Visual automations with three triggers, conditional branches, and waits handle welcome sequences for creators & solopreneurs. Free up to 500 subscribers; Newsletter plan from $23/month at 3,000 subscribers, 30-day money-back guarantee.
Common questions.
The honest answers. If something here doesn't address it, write to us. A real person on the team will reply, usually the same day.
Does Kit (ConvertKit) have a blog for bloggers?
Kit does not ship a built-in blog in the traditional sense. It offers landing pages and a subscriber page, but there is no public reader site where posts live at category-organized URLs indexed by Google under your domain. If you run a blog alongside your newsletter, you need a separate CMS. Nashra's blog is a first-class surface: category pages, post pages, and SEO metadata ship from the same draft you send to your list.
Can I import my Kit list and posts to Nashra?
Yes. Export your Kit subscriber list as a CSV and import it into Nashra with tags intact. Blog posts can be brought over as drafts and republished to your new domain. On the Publisher plan, white-glove migration is free and covers both the list transfer and domain setup. Most migrations complete in under 48 hours.
How does Nashra's pricing compare to Kit for bloggers?
Kit's free plan covers roughly 10,000 subscribers with limited features: no visual automations, no sequences beyond the basics. Kit's Creator plan starts at about $25/month at 1,000 subscribers and unlocks automations and sequences. Nashra's Newsletter plan starts at $23/month at 3,000 subscribers and includes visual automations, Magic Links, and a real blog. At 3,000 subscribers you pay less for more publishing surface. Verify current Kit pricing on kit.com.
When should I stay on Kit instead of switching to Nashra?
Kit is the stronger fit if you sell digital products, courses, or tip jars natively through the platform. Its commerce layer is a first-class primitive; Nashra integrates with checkout tools but does not sell products natively. Kit also has a deeper automation trigger library, including purchase events and link clicks. Creators & solopreneurs who write long-form content for both inbox and a real blog at their domain will find Nashra the fuller publishing stack.
Try it for a week.Decide for yourself.
A subscriber converts roughly 10× better than a follower. Free up to 500 subscribers, forever. Bring your list, your domain, your archive. Take them with you whenever you want.