Mail-in-a-Box vs SimpleLogin

TaglineTurn any Ubuntu VPS into a complete, self-hosted mail server in one commandSelf-hostable email alias service to protect your real address from spam and tracking
CategoryEmail & NewslettersEmail & Newsletters
ReplacesGmail / Google Workspace, Mailchimp, SendGridGmail / Google Workspace, Mailchimp, ConvertKit (Kit)
GitHub stars15k6.7k
LanguageShellDocker
LicenseCC0-1.0MIT
Self-host difficulty
2/5
Easy
3/5
Moderate
Deploy options
Manual
Docker
Docker Compose
Manual
Managed hosting
Last updated25 days agotoday
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.

Mail-in-a-Box
  • Requires a dedicated Ubuntu VPS with a clean IP reputation; shared hosting is not supported
  • No built-in bulk mailing or newsletter campaign tools
  • Limited horizontal scalability; single-server architecture only
  • Webmail (Roundcube) is functional but far less polished than Gmail's UI
SimpleLogin
  • Self-hosted instance requires managing its own MX record and email reputation
  • No bulk sending or newsletter features; purely an alias/forwarding tool
  • Mobile apps connect to SimpleLogin's cloud by default; redirecting to self-hosted requires manual app configuration
  • Spam filtering is inherited from the destination mailbox, not provided independently

Bottom line

Choose Mail-in-a-Box if you want the lower-effort setup; choose Mail-in-a-Box for the larger community and ecosystem. SimpleLogin has seen more recent development. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.

Mail-in-a-Box

Turn any Ubuntu VPS into a complete, self-hosted mail server in one command

SimpleLogin

Self-hostable email alias service to protect your real address from spam and tracking