DMARCPath or EasyDMARC: which should you pick?

Updated July 3, 2026

EasyDMARC is a polished, feature-rich platform with hosted SPF flattening and a broad tool suite, but its pricing scales with email volume: the free tier caps at roughly 10,000 emails a month and paid plans start around $36/mo. DMARCPath prices by domain with no volume limits, and its $39 Agency plan includes white-label PDF reports and client share links that cost noticeably more elsewhere. Pick EasyDMARC if you need hosted SPF flattening or a broader security toolkit; pick DMARCPath if you're an SMB or agency that wants plain-English guidance at a predictable, volume-independent price.

Side by side

DMARCPathEasyDMARC
Best forSMBs and agencies who want predictable per-domain pricingTeams that want a broad email security suite
Starting paid price$15/mo (2 domains)~$36/mo, scales with email volume
Free tier1 domain, 14-day history, no volume cap1 domain, ~10k emails/mo cap
Plain-English guidanceCore of the productGood: approachable UI with explanations
White-label client reportsYes ($39 Agency plan)Yes, on higher/MSP tiers
Policy rollout guidanceAutomated readiness checks with exact recordsManaged DMARC guidance on paid plans
Hosted SPF flatteningNo; we guide you to fix lookups manuallyYes, built in
Pricing modelPer domain, volume-unlimitedPer domain plus email volume tiers

Where EasyDMARC is genuinely strong

  • Polished, modern UI that's genuinely approachable for non-experts
  • Hosted SPF flattening: solves the 10-DNS-lookup problem without manual record surgery
  • Broad tool suite beyond DMARC: email investigation, phishing checks, managed BIMI and MTA-STS
  • More enterprise features: SSO, larger team management, longer track record

Where DMARCPath fits better

  • No email-volume limits on any plan: a busy sending domain costs the same as a quiet one
  • Cheaper for agencies: white-label PDF reports, client share links and bulk import at $39/mo for 10 domains
  • Free tier limited by domains (1), not volume, so it stays useful as your sending grows
  • Guided policy journey with statistical readiness checks and the exact record to paste at each step

The honest verdict

Pick EasyDMARC if you want hosted SPF flattening, SSO, or a wider email security toolkit and don't mind pricing that rises with your sending volume. Pick DMARCPath if you want the core job (understanding who sends as your domain and safely reaching p=reject) done in plain English at a flat per-domain price, especially if you're an agency managing client domains and want white-label reporting without an MSP-tier price tag.

Frequently asked questions

Can I migrate from EasyDMARC to DMARCPath?
Yes. Update the rua address in your DMARC record to your DMARCPath ingest address and reports start flowing within a day or two. You can run both in parallel during the switch, since rua accepts multiple comma-separated addresses. Your historical data stays in EasyDMARC, so export anything you need before cancelling.
What happens if I outgrow EasyDMARC's free tier volume cap?
EasyDMARC's free plan stops analyzing new data once you pass roughly 10,000 emails a month, which many small businesses hit sooner than expected. DMARCPath's free plan has no volume cap: the limit is one domain and 14 days of history.
Does DMARCPath offer SPF flattening like EasyDMARC?
Not as a hosted service. DMARCPath detects when you're near the 10-DNS-lookup limit and walks you through consolidating includes manually. If your SPF record is genuinely unfixable without flattening, EasyDMARC's hosted flattening is a real advantage.

Try the difference on your own domain

Run your domain through the free DMARC checker. The plain-English findings you get are exactly how the whole product works.

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