Boomerang vs Mailtrack
A solo professional comparing Boomerang and Mailtrack is usually choosing between 'send-later automation' and 'open tracking only.'
Boomerang is built around scheduled sends, send-later workflows, and inbox reminders. Tracking is a side feature. Mailtrack is the opposite: tracking is the only feature.
If the top job is sending emails at planned times and reminders, Boomerang. If the top job is knowing who opened what, Mailtrack.
Where Boomerang and Mailtrack differ
Both are productivity-style tools for solo or small-team users. Both have generous free tiers. Both track opens. Neither has confidence scoring or AI signals.
Verdict by buyer profile
Boomerang is scheduling-first; this is its job.
Mailtrack does tracking better than Boomerang.
Outsolvi covers scheduling-via-Calendly and tracking depth in one tool.
Outsolvi at $7/user/mo yearly covers both Outlook + Gmail with confidence-scored tracking and AI signals. Teams that want scheduling can pair Outsolvi with Boomerang or use the built-in Calendly integration.
Frequently asked questions
Can I use Boomerang and Mailtrack together?+
Yes; they don't conflict. Boomerang handles scheduling, Mailtrack handles tracking.
Does Boomerang work on Outlook?+
Yes. Boomerang for Outlook is a separate add-in with similar features. Mailtrack has no Outlook offering.
Want the third-option breakdown?
Outsolvi covers Outlook + Gmail natively, exposes Tier 1 to 5 confidence scoring on opens, and includes AI reply sentiment at the $7/user/mo yearly base tier. 14-day free trial, no credit card.
Start 14-Day Free TrialDeeper resources for each tool
Compare each tool against Outsolvi directly, see ranked alternatives, or read the migration guide.
Nate built Outsolvi after watching every email-tracking tool he had ever used lie to him about opens. Outsolvi runs Tier 1 to 5 confidence scoring on every open, native in Outlook and Gmail, so the number on the dashboard is one a rep can actually act on.
We update these pages when the underlying mechanics change. new mailbox-provider rules, new tracker behavior, new measurement gaps. The dates above are real revisions, not auto-touches.