Adal is still at the beginning. There are no big user numbers to share yet, and that is okay. This milestone is not about growth metrics. It is about readiness.
Over the last weeks, the product has grown from a working webhook receiver into a more complete service: account registration, email confirmation, password recovery, endpoint management, request inspection, replay, destinations, CLI-based local delivery, legal pages, and now billing.
For a product that handles webhook traffic, these pieces matter. Webhook delivery is not only about accepting HTTP requests. It is also about storing data safely, making requests visible, allowing retries, keeping behavior predictable, and giving developers enough control when something goes wrong.
The free plan remains available. Paid plans are now here for projects that need higher limits and want to use Adal beyond the initial evaluation stage.
This step also makes the product more sustainable. Infrastructure, storage, delivery, monitoring, and continued development all have real costs. Paid plans help keep Adal practical, reliable, and actively maintained.
The goal stays the same: Adal should be a clear, predictable, and useful tool for working with webhooks.