Free email works. Let’s start there. Gmail, Yahoo, Outlook.com — they’re reliable, they have decent spam filters, and they cost nothing. For personal use, they’re perfect. For business? It depends on what you’re willing to risk.
What free email gives you
- An inbox that works
- 15GB storage (Gmail)
- Basic spam filtering
- Mobile access
- Zero cost
For a solo freelancer doing occasional projects, this might genuinely be enough. No shame in that.
What free email doesn’t give you
- Your own domain — You’re always @gmail.com, never @yourbusiness.rw
- Data ownership — Google owns the servers. If your account gets suspended, your entire business communication history is gone
- Team management — You can’t create team@, support@, accounts@ under a free account
- Professional credibility — 75% of consumers trust domain-based email more
- Admin controls — No ability to enforce security policies, manage team access, or audit logs
- Guaranteed uptime SLA — Free accounts get best-effort support. Paid accounts get contractual guarantees
The account suspension risk
This one doesn’t get talked about enough. Google can suspend a free Gmail account for any Terms of Service violation — real or algorithmic false positive. When that happens, you lose access to every email you’ve ever sent or received. Every client conversation. Every invoice. Every contract.
With a paid business email, you own the domain. If you don’t like your email provider, you switch to another one and take your domain with you. Your email address stays the same. Your history can be migrated. You’re never locked in.
When to upgrade
You should move to business email when any of these are true:
- You’re sending invoices or proposals to clients
- You have more than one person who needs an email address
- You’re applying for tenders or contracts
- You want to appear on Google (you’ll need a domain anyway)
- You’re handling sensitive client information
The cost starts at around RWF 1,500/month with Zoho Mail or RWF 5,000/month bundled with a website package from providers like Kisimenti. For most businesses, that’s the price of a coffee run.
The honest answer
Free email is fine until it isn’t. It’s fine until you lose a client because your email didn’t look professional. It’s fine until Google suspends your account and you can’t access your invoices. It’s fine until you need a team inbox and realise you can’t create one.
The upgrade is small. The risk of not upgrading is not.