Breaking

Sep 13, 2020 3 mins, 8 secs
Once you have used it with multiple services, moving from it is like moving your physical address.

Like Calendar apps, there are many email apps for iPhone.

I have my favorite, but it may not line up with the way you manage email or an app might have features you rely on that I don’t need.

I’m going to show you my top email apps, and I’ll give you my pick at the end.

I’d dare to say that the Apple Mail email app is one of the most used email apps in the world today.

It comes built into every iPhone, and it supports just about any account type you’d like.

Apple Mail works great, but a lot of apps are rethinking email where Apple is settling for the standard-quo.

I know it’s difficult to innovate when a lot of users want the basic experience, but it’s long past time for Apple to add power-user features to Apple Mail on iOS (and macOS).

It takes a cue from an app like iMessage or Facebook Messenger, and it brings that same look to email.

With Spike’s notes functions, you get a regular notes app, but it’s inside your email app where you can manage it with your email.

You get all the features you’d want: rich text, links, comments, sharing/collaboration, and file sync (similar to how you can store files inside Apple Notes).

Airmail supports all the major email accounts like iCloud, Exchange, Outlook, Google, Yahoo, IMAP, etc.

Like Outlook, Airmail supports snoozing an email to another date/time.

It supports all the usual accounts like iCloud, Google, Yahoo, Exchange, Outlook, and IMAP.

Feature-wise, Spark includes a smart inbox to help organize your email into buckets like newsletters, pinned, new, seen, etc.

Over the years, we’ve seen many email apps released to be discontinued shortly after, so I am always curious about the business model of the various apps.

Edison Mail is a great email app for the iPhone.

It has your basic power-user features like snoozing and customizable swipe options.

It supports all the usual accounts like iCloud, Google, Yahoo, Exchange, Outlook, and IMAP.

OnMail has a lot of nice options if you are looking for a new email address.

Twobird is a relatively new email app from the team behind Notability that brings a lot of unique features not seen in a lot of other email apps.

Like Spike, it removes as much as it can from email (introductions, signatures, etc) so you can focus on quickly reading and replying.

Hey brings a lot of excellent features to its service, but the problem for a lot of people is that it’s tied to an email service.

If you are looking for a new email address, and Hey’s features interest you, it might be worth checking out.

For $99/year, you get some excellent features like read receipt blocking, email screening, reply later reminders, and a focus “imbox” that contains only essential items as it filters out other items into things to review later.

I have multiple other G Suite accounts that I need to access, and I am not able to forward these into a @hey.com email address like I can with my iCloud.

At the end of all my trials, I’ve come up with these recommendations: If you like the experience of Apple Mail, but want some additional features, Check out Outlook or Spark.

I’ve been using Spike as my email app of choice since earlier this year, and I really like how it works

I was equally impressed by Twobird, but until it adds support for my iCloud email, I can’t use it as my only email app

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