HubSpot is one of the most powerful CRM and marketing platforms today. Yet, some users are leaving.
But here’s the real question:
Are they leaving because HubSpot isn’t good enough, or because it’s not being used the right way?
Based on my conversation with Dan Moyle, this blog breaks down the real reasons behind HubSpot churn and what most companies misunderstand about it.
Most companies don’t leave HubSpot because it doesn’t work. They leave because they never fully made it work. And that usually comes down to one thing: Adoption.
HubSpot has evolved into a powerful, multi-layered platform. But with that power comes complexity and not every team is ready for it.
What started as a simple CRM is now a full ecosystem of hubs, tools, and features. While that’s great for scalability, it creates friction for many teams.
The result? Not frustration with the product, but gradual drop-off in usage.
One of the most interesting patterns? Many users leave HubSpot, but don’t find a better alternative.
Instead:
This tells us something important:
The problem isn’t always HubSpot, it’s how tools are chosen and used.
A lot of first-time users walk into HubSpot expecting magic.
They think:
But that’s not how it works.
HubSpot is not a plug-and-play tool.
You still need to:
Without this, even the best platform will fail.
Many companies blame HubSpot when things don’t work.
But internally:
And that’s where things fall apart.
If your team doesn’t use HubSpot consistently, the ROI disappears, no matter how powerful the platform is.
HubSpot is incredibly versatile, but it’s not perfect for everything.
For example:
The mistake? Trying to force HubSpot to do everything.
The smarter approach is:
Use HubSpot where it fits, and integrate where it doesn’t.
HubSpot pricing isn’t “good” or “bad,” it’s contextual.
This leads many companies to partially leave:
They don’t abandon HubSpot entirely, they just stop using certain hubs.
Once a company decides to leave HubSpot, it’s rarely reversible.
Not because the product can’t improve, but because:
This is why retention doesn’t happen at the end, it happens at the beginning.
It comes down to a few core reasons:
Not because HubSpot doesn’t work.
HubSpot is still one of the best platforms available.
But like any powerful tool, it only works if:
Because no tool, no matter how good, can fix a broken strategy.
Most companies leave due to poor adoption, complexity, pricing concerns, or a mismatch with their business needs, not because the platform itself is ineffective.
Many users struggle to find better alternatives after leaving and sometimes return, though not always immediately.
HubSpot works for basic e-commerce needs, but platforms like Shopify or WooCommerce are better suited for advanced functionality.
Focus on proper onboarding, team training, realistic expectations, and consistent platform usage to maximize ROI.