Constant Contact is one of the most widely used email marketing platforms among nonprofits and small organizations — and many synagogues, Jewish community centers, and charitable organizations use it. If you’re evaluating whether to continue using it or switch to a platform built specifically for Jewish organizations, this honest review covers what you need to know.
Constant Contact’s Genuine Strengths
Constant Contact earned its reputation for a reason. It offers:
- An intuitive drag-and-drop email editor with a large template library
- Solid deliverability infrastructure for mainstream audiences
- Event management tools — RSVPs, ticketing, and event promotion
- Nonprofit pricing discounts (typically 20-30% off standard rates)
- Strong phone-based customer support
- Good integration with donation platforms and CRMs
- Constant Contact Pricing for Synagogues: What You’ll Really Pay
For a JCC, a Federation chapter, or a Modern Orthodox community with a mainstream internet-connected audience, Constant Contact can serve adequately.
The Critical Limitations for Charedi and Orthodox Organizations
No File Attachment Support
Like most major email platforms, Constant Contact does not allow file attachments. You cannot send a PDF, document, or spreadsheet as an attachment. Files must be hosted elsewhere and linked.
This is a fundamental limitation for many frum organizations. Consider what your organization actually needs to send:
- A shul that distributes a weekly Hebrew parsha sheet as a PDF to its members
- A yeshiva sending home report cards, calendars, or permission slips
- A gemach or community organization sending forms for families to complete
- A mosad sending a designed invitation to an event with Hebrew text
- A rabbi sending teshuvos, shiur notes, or learning materials
In every one of these cases, the standard industry practice of “link to a hosted file” creates real problems for the Charedi community specifically, where recipients using internet filters may not be able to access files hosted on Constant Contact’s servers or other commercial file hosts that aren’t on the kosher filter approved list.
KosherEmail allows direct attachment of PDFs and documents. Your members receive the file in their inbox, no download links required — which means it reaches filtered inboxes too.
Kosher Filter Incompatibility
Constant Contact’s infrastructure — including its email image hosting (hosted on amazonaws.com and other CDNs), its click-tracking domains, and its unsubscribe page hosting — was not designed with kosher internet filters in mind.
For recipients using NetFree (widely used in Israeli Charedi communities and among Israeli-origin communities in the US), Rimon, or TAG filtering services, Constant Contact emails may arrive with missing images, broken links, or incomplete functionality. In heavily filtered communities — Lakewood NJ, Boro Park, Flatbush, Bnei Brak — this affects a large portion of your list.
No Jewish Calendar Integration
Constant Contact’s scheduling and automation tools have no awareness of the Jewish calendar. There is no built-in protection against sending emails on Shabbos or Yom Tov. Running an automated drip campaign for High Holiday donations or registration? You need to manually check every scheduled send date against the Jewish calendar, or risk sending emails on Rosh Hashana, Yom Kippur, or Sukkos.
This isn’t a hypothetical concern — multiple Jewish organizations have had the embarrassment of automated emails landing in members’ inboxes on Shabbos because they set up a sequence and didn’t catch every Yom Tov date manually.
Hebrew and RTL Text Handling
Constant Contact’s email editor has limited native support for right-to-left Hebrew text. Emails with mixed Hebrew and English content — a common format for frum organizations — often require manual HTML editing to render correctly. The visual editor will not reliably produce clean bilingual layouts.
Constant Contact vs. KosherEmail: Side-by-Side
| Feature | Constant Contact | KosherEmail |
|---|---|---|
| PDF/document attachments | ❌ Not supported | ✅ Supported |
| Kosher filter compatibility | ❌ Not designed for this | ✅ Core feature |
| Shabbos/Yom Tov scheduling protection | ❌ Manual only | ✅ Built-in |
| Hebrew/RTL text support | ⚠️ Limited | ✅ Native support |
| Nonprofit pricing | ✅ 20-30% discount | ✅ Special pricing for mosdos |
| Community-specific support | ❌ General support only | ✅ Understands frum community needs |
Our Recommendation
If your organization primarily serves a Charedi or Orthodox community — especially one with significant filter adoption — and if you regularly need to send file attachments (PDFs, schedules, forms), then Constant Contact’s limitations are substantive enough to warrant considering a purpose-built alternative.
If your needs are primarily English-language, your audience doesn’t use filters, and you don’t need file attachments, Constant Contact is a competent platform.
Related Articles
- Mailchimp for Jewish Organizations: What You Need to Know
- Brevo (Sendinblue) for Jewish Organizations
- Why Jewish Organizations Need PDF Email Attachment Support
Disclaimer: Constant Contact is a registered trademark of Endurance International Group. This article is an independent, factual comparison of email platform options for Jewish organizations and is not affiliated with or endorsed by Constant Contact.