Launching today

FormFeed
Add working forms to any static site in minutes
11 followers
Add working forms to any static site in minutes
11 followers
Give any static site a real form backend: paste in one endpoint and submissions arrive in your inbox in seconds. Built-in spam filtering, a clean dashboard, and CSV export. 14-day free trial, no credit card. Made for people who ship.








Hey Product Hunt 👋
I'm Jon. I run Internection, where I build websites and software for a living.
My favorite way to ship an informational site is object storage behind a CDN. It loads instantly anywhere in the world, the cost scales with your traffic, malicious hackers hate it, and search engines love it. The one catch: there's no backend.
It's the same problem on Netlify, Vercel, and GitHub Pages. Every static host hits the same wall the second someone needs a contact form. You're either standing up a server you didn't want, or bolting on a service heavier than the whole site.
FormFeed fills exactly that gap. Paste one endpoint into your HTML and submissions land in your inbox in seconds. No backend, no JavaScript required. Plain HTML, React, Astro, Hugo, anything that can POST a form.
A few things I cared about:
Spam gets filtered, your visitors don't get punished: honeypot, rate limiting, and per-form quotas, not a CAPTCHA wall on every form.
No dark patterns: 14-day trial, no credit card, cancel anytime. If your trial ends, your forms pause instead of silently dropping data.
It's just me. I read every reply to every email FormFeed sends. Support comes straight to my inbox.
It's live today, free trial, plans start at $9/mo. I'd love your honest feedback: what's confusing, what's missing, what would get you to sign up. Ask me anything.
Jon
Custom email rules per form would be a great add, like routing the "contact" submissions to one inbox and the "newsletter" ones to another, or auto-replying with a tailored confirmation. Saved me juggling filters every time.
@ensar90917 Good news on the first half - each form has its own notification address, so the contact form and the newsletter signup can already go to different inboxes today. Tailored auto-replies are interesting. I'll add it to the wish list.
Built something similar for a client last year and the one thing they kept asking for was webhook support so submissions could flow into their CRM without a Zapier middleman. Would love to see that as an option, even if it's a paid tier add-on.
@denizferhawbvv Thank you for taking a look! CRM integration is definitely on the roadmap - initially as a generic webhook option, and possibly CRM-specific integrations down the line. Which CRM was your client on? Helps me prioritize.
Pasted the endpoint into a tiny astro site and had a real submission land in my inbox before I even closed the tab. The dashboard is genuinely pleasant to use, not the usual backend ugliness.
@remziunutu44051 Happy to hear it landed fast. And thanks for noticing the dashboard, I put real care into that. Appreciate you trying it out.
Love how the onboarding skips every bit of friction - literally paste an endpoint and you're done. The "no credit card for the trial" callout is a small thing but it makes a huge difference for indie devs just kicking the tires.
@takbug32958 I designed every corner of FormFeed for how I'd want the experience to be if I was the customer. I'd want to try it out before handing over payment. Thank you for the kind words!
Love how it skips the account setup entirely, just paste the endpoint and submissions show up. That respect for developer time is exactly what a form backend should feel like.
@derinalmargwoo One quick note so nobody's surprised: there is an account, because your submissions need a dashboard and an inbox to land in. But it's the two-minute, no-card kind, and from signup to a real submission in your inbox is only a couple of minutes. That speed was the design goal, so I'm glad it comes through.