Gmail vs Exchange: what's the best email provider for your business?

email provider
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Choosing the best email provider is critical to the success of your business. Your business email service plays a huge role in determining whether messages will make it to your employees in a timely manner. Plus, it controls what email client you can use, whether your inbox will be filled with spam, and whether you can get help when something goes wrong.

For many businesses, the choice of top business email comes down to two tried and true platforms—Google Gmail and Microsoft Exchange. Both of these providers have a lot to offer, but which one is the best professional email for your company? In this guide, we’ll compare these two platforms head to head to help you decide.

Features

Gmail and Microsoft Exchange have a lot of key business features in common. Both services enable you to use a custom domain for your email accounts and access multiple email accounts with a single sign-in. Each platform comes with robust security features, including two-factor authentication to protect your account. Plus, both Gmail and Exchange come with integrated calendars and address books to help you and your employees stay on top of work.

One major area in which the two platforms diverge, though, is how they deal with spam. In Exchange, you can only choose to turn the spam filter on or off. In Gmail, you have a lot more flexibility to create custom spam filters and to blacklist or whitelist specific domains. Considering how much spam—some of it containing malware—comes through email every day, this is a victory for Google.

email provider

You can create custom spam filters in Gmail, but you cannot edit the default filter in Exchange (Image credit: Microsoft)

These two services also differ in how much storage you get. All Exchange users get 50 GB of inbox space, compared to just 30 GB for Gmail users with a basic account. On top of that, Exchange enables you to send emails up to 150 MB in size, whereas Gmail will force you to send Google Drive links to any files larger than 25 MB.

Performance

Exchange and Gmail both perform well when used on their own and store all incoming emails on your central mail server for archival purposes. But few people use their email platforms in a vacuum, so it’s worth looking at how these email services integrate with the rest of your productivity suite.

The most important thing to note here is that Exchange and the Outlook mail client integrate seamlessly, whereas using Gmail and Outlook together can be troublesome. If your company relies on Outlook, the difference in compatibility may be reason enough to go with Exchange. Outlook runs smoothly if you want to check and write emails offline with Exchange, but the client often fails to load emails offline when connected to Gmail.

email provider

Exchange integrates seamlessly with Outlook, whereas Gmail’s Outlook integration often performs poorly (Image credit: Microsoft)

One major concern that many businesses have about Gmail is privacy. Google is notorious for using data from Gmail, including from business email accounts, to serve ads to users. If your business works with sensitive data, Exchange is by far the more private hosted email option. Microsoft explicitly states that all data transferred through Exchange is not used for ad targeting, and this service is designed to be fully HIPAA-compliant.

Support

Google and Microsoft each offer 24/7 phone and email support for their hosted email services. That said, you’ll probably have better luck resolving issues with Microsoft. An Exchange subscription allows you to talk to IT technicians rather than just service representatives, like you get with Google. If your email ever does go offline for any reason, having support you can rely on is incredibly important.

email provider

The Google G Suite support center. Google provides 24/7 phone and email support for Gmail (Image credit: Google)

Pricing and plans

A big draw to Gmail for many businesses is that it’s significantly cheaper than Exchange.

Gmail is part of Google G Suite, which starts at just $6 per user per month. For that price, you get not just Gmail but also Google’s entire productivity suite. That includes Docs, Sheets, Hangouts, Drive, and much more. If you want to give users unlimited cloud storage for your inbox and everything else your business creates, you can upgrade your G Suite plan for $12 per user per month.

Microsoft offers Exchange as a standalone product or as part of the Office 365 productivity suite. On its own, Exchange costs $4 per user per month for 50 GB of storage per account or $8 per user per month for unlimited storage. Office 365 with Exchange costs $12.50 per user per month. Note that you get 1 TB of cloud storage per user, but only 50 GB of email storage with this plan.

email provider

Pricing options for Microsoft Exchange (Image credit: Microsoft)

Verdict

Google Gmail and Microsoft Exchange are both excellent hosted email services. Gmail is most attractive for businesses looking to cut costs while also transitioning to Google’s G Suite office software. If you don’t need a new office suite, though, Gmail’s pricing is somewhat less attractive.

Exchange is by far the better option for businesses that use Outlook as their email client. In addition, businesses working with sensitive data should prefer Exchange, since Google uses data that passes through Gmail to target ads. Microsoft guarantees the privacy of data in Exchange and the email service is fully HIPAA-compliant.

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Michael Graw

Michael Graw is a freelance journalist and photographer based in Bellingham, Washington. His interests span a wide range from business technology to finance to creative media, with a focus on new technology and emerging trends. Michael's work has been published in TechRadar, Tom's Guide, Business Insider, Fast Company, Salon, and Harvard Business Review.