June 2, 2026 · FlowGrid Team
Is There a Truly Free CRM? (And What 'Free' Usually Costs You)
Yes — several real free CRMs exist, and the best freemium plans are genuinely useful. The catch is rarely the price. Here's how to read what 'free' is structured to do, and where FlowGrid Free fits.
Is There a Truly Free CRM? (And What 'Free' Usually Costs You)

Short answer: yes. Several genuinely free CRMs exist, and a few of them are good. HubSpot, Zoho, and a long tail of smaller tools all have free plans you can run a small business on for a while. So the useful question isn't "is there a free CRM" — it's "what is this free plan structured to do to me later?"
Because free is never the product. Free is the on-ramp. The honest way to compare free CRMs is to figure out, before you import a single contact, where the on-ramp is trying to take you.
"Free" comes in four flavors
They look identical on a pricing page. They behave very differently six months in.
1. Freemium with a feature ladder. This is the HubSpot model. The free tier is real and permanent, but the features you'll eventually want — automation, reporting, removing the vendor's branding from your emails — live one, two, or three paid tiers up. The free plan works exactly as designed: it shows you what you're missing. There's nothing dishonest about it, but the upgrade trigger is capability. You leave free the moment you need to do something real.
2. A free tier with a usage cap. Same idea, different lever. You get the whole product, but capped — on records, contacts, emails sent, or seats. The upgrade trigger here is volume, not capability. You leave free when you grow, not when you need a feature you can already see.
3. A free trial wearing a "free" costume. Fourteen or thirty days, then a card gets charged. Perfectly legitimate, but it's not a free CRM — it's a paid CRM you haven't started paying for. If the word "free" is anywhere near the words "trial," "days," or "credit card required," read carefully.
4. Free because you're the product. The quietest flavor. The tool costs nothing because your usage — or your contacts' data — funds it some other way: ads, data resale, "enrichment," analytics sold onward. For a CRM, which holds the names, emails, and deal histories of real people who trusted you with them, this is the flavor that should make you read the privacy policy twice.
Most "best free CRM" Reddit threads are really arguing about which of these four someone got surprised by.
The questions that tell you what free actually costs
Before you commit your contacts to any free plan, get crisp answers to four things:
- What, exactly, is capped — and what happens at the cap? A record limit you can see coming is fine. A surprise wall that locks you out of your own data is not.
- Which features are gated above free? If the things you'll obviously need next month are three tiers up, you're not choosing a free CRM. You're choosing a paid one with a delayed invoice.
- Can you export everything, anytime, without paying? This is the real anti-lock-in test. A free CRM that holds your export hostage isn't free — it's a deposit.
- How does the vendor make money on free users? If the answer isn't "they hope you upgrade," find out what the actual answer is.
A good free plan has clean answers to all four. A bad one has a sales call.
Where FlowGrid Free fits
We'll be straight about which flavor we are: a free tier with a usage cap, and no feature ladder.
FlowGrid Free is permanent — free forever, up to 50 records (contacts, organizations, and deals combined). No credit card. No trial clock. No waitlist. And critically, every feature is on every plan. There's nothing held back to discover later, because the only thing that lifts you to a paid plan is volume — when 50 records stops being enough — not a feature you hit a wall on.
That includes the things freemium plans usually gate:
- The full AI canvas and Nexus, our AI assistant. Type "show me deals closing this month grouped by owner" and you get a widget, not a recipe.
- Field-level encryption with tenant-scoped keys, an audit log of every change, and a GDPR-ready DPA — on the free plan, not as a "security tier."
- CSV export of every record, every field, at any time. If you leave, you take everything.
And here's the honest part, because a comparison that only lists strengths isn't worth reading:
- It's 50 records, combined. For a solo operator or a brand-new pipeline that's plenty; for a 400-contact book, it isn't. The cap is real, and we'd rather you know now than after you've imported.
- FlowGrid is not self-hosted or open-source. If your search for "free CRM" is really a search for "a CRM I run on my own server with the source in front of me," that's a different product, and we're not it. We're a hosted, multi-tenant CRM with your data encrypted and stored in the EU (Zurich region). Honest fit matters more than a signup.
- Free accounts that go completely unused enter a dormancy lifecycle — email reminders, then archival, fully reversible for 90 days, with export available the whole time. Nothing disappears without warning, but a free plan isn't a forever filing cabinet for an account nobody opens.
When free stops being enough
The clean version of "outgrowing free" is: nothing breaks, nothing gets held back, you just hit 50 records and lift the cap when you're ready. Because there's no feature gate, the upgrade isn't a rescue from a wall — it's a volume dial. You can see exactly where the line is on the pricing page, with no surprise about what's "premium."
That's the whole pitch for a free CRM done honestly: let people run their real business on it, let them leave with their data if they want, and only ask for money when they've genuinely grown. If you're a small business sizing up free CRMs, that's the bar worth holding every one of them to — including us.
Start Free — 50 records, every feature, no credit card.