Nashra vs Carrd.
Landing pages connected to a real subscriber spine.
Carrd builds beautiful one-pagers. Nashra builds landing pages that are wired to your list, your tags, and your automations from the moment they go live.
One post, two surfaces. Visual automations. Magic Links. AI that reads your data, not your voice.
One-pager builder. No CRM, no email, no spine.
Which one fits you,
in two sentences.
you want every form on every page to feed one CRM, with auto-tagging, lead-magnet delivery, and automations on day zero.
Start freeyou need a cheap one-page site with a contact form, you already have an ESP you love, and stitching the two yourself is fine.
That's a real call. We'll respect it.Four things that don't translate
across to Carrd.
Every form is wired to a real CRM
On Carrd a form is a row in a Google Sheet or a webhook to your ESP. On Nashra every form lives on the same subscriber spine: tagged by page, ready for automations, visible next to every other signup.
Lead magnets without the wiring
Carrd is bring-your-own-ESP, bring-your-own-delivery, bring-your-own-tagging. Nashra gives you one URL: hosted page, auto-tag on signup, file delivered to the inbox. One place to update; one place to break.
A welcome flow before your first send
On Carrd a signup is the end of the page's job. On Nashra it is the start of an automation: tagged at source, dropped into a welcome flow, given a follow-up three days later. The page is a beginning, not a destination.
Reads your data. Never your voice.
Carrd has no email, no list, no signal to read. Nashra's Strategist needs three sends, then tells you which subjects are landing, which sections people read to the end, where to push and where to cut.
Every line item.
No fine print.
The honest counter.
What they do better.
Comparison pages that pretend the other tool has no strengths waste your time. Here's where Carrd wins.
Carrd does one thing very well: a beautiful one-pager in an afternoon. If that is the entire job, the simplicity is a feature.
Pro plans start at ~$9/year. If a single one-page site is all you need and you already have an ESP, nothing else competes on price.
Years of community templates and a tight visual editor. If you want to pick a starting point and tweak it, Carrd has the bigger gallery.
On Pro Plus you can drop in your own code. Nashra is token-driven; if hand-written CSS is part of the brief, Carrd has the lower ceiling on day one but more raw control.
Pay for the list,
not the platform.
We move it for you. Free.
Export your list and your archive from Carrd. We set up the domain, port the posts, redirect old URLs, and check the first send before it goes out. Free white-glove on Publisher.
Switching from Carrd.
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.
Can I move my Carrd pages to Nashra?
Yes, but the model is different. Nashra pages are part of one publishing OS with email, blog, and a CRM. You rebuild the page on Nashra; signups land on your subscriber spine instead of a webhook.
Is Nashra more expensive than Carrd?
Per page, yes. Carrd is a flat $19/year for a one-pager. Nashra prices by subscribers and includes email, blog, CRM, automations, and Magic Links. Different products.
Do I still need an ESP with Nashra?
No. Nashra sends email, hosts the blog, runs automations, and stores subscribers. Forms feed straight into the same list every other page on Nashra feeds.
What if I want hand-written HTML and CSS?
Today, Nashra is token-driven; you do not write raw CSS. If full code control is the brief, Carrd Pro Plus is the better fit on day one.
Try it for a week.Decide for yourself.
Free up to 500 subscribers, forever. Credit card required only for sending emails. Bring your list, your domain, your archive. Take them with you whenever you want.