Head to head

Crowdfire vs FeedHive

vs

Crowdfire's social media app shut down in 2025, so this is here for the record rather than as a recommendation. In its day it leaned on content curation, surfacing articles and images to share, plus scheduling, light analytics, and the follower management it started life with as JustUnfollow.

From
$7.48 /mo
Free plan

FeedHive is an AI-first scheduler best known for predicting how a post will perform before you hit publish. Alongside that it does AI writing, content recycling, conditional posting, and a social inbox across ten networks. It started as an X tool and grew broader.

From
$13 /mo
Free plan

Bottom line

Crowdfire is the pick for most setups, and it's the only one of the two with a free plan. FeedHive fits creators and small teams who lean on AI for content better, and it reaches Google Business and Threads among others, which Crowdfire doesn't.

Crowdfire starts cheaper, $7.48 a month against $13 a month for FeedHive. FeedHive adds evergreen recycling that Crowdfire leaves out.

Key differences

Where the two actually diverge, before the full tables.

  • Crowdfire has a free plan; FeedHive doesn't, though it offers a 7-day trial.
  • Crowdfire starts at $7.48 a month, FeedHive at $13 a month.
  • Crowdfire posts to 8 networks, FeedHive to 10.
  • Only Crowdfire reaches WordPress.
  • Only FeedHive reaches Threads, Bluesky, and Google Business.
  • FeedHive auto-publishes Instagram; Crowdfire sends a reminder to post.
  • FeedHive auto-publishes TikTok; Crowdfire sends a reminder to post.
  • FeedHive has evergreen recycling; Crowdfire doesn't.
  • FeedHive has team roles; Crowdfire doesn't.

Features compared

FeatureCrowdfireFeedHive
AI captionsNot assessedYes
Basic analyticsYesYes
Advanced reportsYesNot assessed
Bulk uploadYesYes
Evergreen recyclingNoYes
Team rolesNoYes
ApprovalsNot assessedYes
Link in bioNoNot assessed

Platforms compared

NetworkCrowdfireFeedHive
InstagramReminderAuto
FacebookAutoAuto
X (Twitter)AutoAuto
LinkedInAutoAuto
TikTokReminderAuto
PinterestAutoAuto
YouTubeAutoAuto
ThreadsNoAuto
BlueskyNoAuto
Google BusinessNoAuto
WordPressAutoNo

Pricing

Headline prices are for a single unit. Here is the real monthly cost as each tool scales, costed on its own unit so the two stay honest.

Crowdfireflat pricing

Free plan available.

Cheapest paid plan
$7.48/mo

Whole-plan price; it doesn't scale per unit.

FeedHiveflat pricing

No free plan; 7-day trial.

Cheapest paid plan
$13/mo

Whole-plan price; it doesn't scale per unit.

Crowdfire

Free

Free
Seats
1
Accounts
3
Scheduled posts
10
  • 3 accounts, 10 scheduled posts per account
  • Article and image curation, basic analytics

Plus

$9.99 /mo

$7.48/mo billed annually

  • $9.99/mo, $7.48 on annual (25% off)
  • More accounts and scheduling, content curation

Premium

Popular
$49.99 /mo

$37.48/mo billed annually

  • $49.99/mo, $37.48 on annual
  • Bulk scheduling, deeper analytics, more accounts

VIP

$99.99 /mo

$74.98/mo billed annually

  • $99.99/mo, $74.98 on annual
  • Most accounts, full analytics and curation
  • Crowdfire's social media management product shut down in 2025 (widely reported as May 15, 2025). The figures here are its last-known plans, kept for reference; you can no longer subscribe.
  • The brand has pivoted to a media site covering social media, Web3, and AI, and no longer offers scheduling, curation, or analytics.
  • Flat, quota-bundled plans: Free plus Plus, Premium, and VIP, each with more accounts and scheduling than the last. Annual billing was 25% off.

FeedHive

Creator

$19 /mo

$13/mo billed annually

Seats
5
Accounts
4
Scheduled posts
30
  • $19/mo, about $13 on annual
  • 4 social accounts, 30 scheduled posts
  • AI writing, image generation, hashtags, 2,500 AI credits

Brand

Popular
$29 /mo

$20/mo billed annually

Seats
20
Accounts
10
Scheduled posts
500
  • $29/mo, about $20 on annual
  • 10 social accounts, 500 scheduled posts
  • More workspaces and AI credits, approval workflows

Business

$99 /mo

$69/mo billed annually

Seats
20
Accounts
100
Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $99/mo, about $69 on annual
  • 100 social accounts, unlimited posts
  • Priority support, more automation runs

Agency

$299 /mo

$209/mo billed annually

Seats
20
Accounts
500
Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $299/mo, about $209 on annual
  • 500 social accounts, 100 workspaces
  • White-label, 100,000 AI credits, priority support
  • Flat, quota-bundled plans by social accounts, with AI credits and automation runs metered per plan (2,500 to 100,000 AI credits).
  • There's no free plan, only a 7-day trial. Annual billing saves up to 30%; the annual figures here are derived from that.
  • White-label is included on the Agency plan.
  • Prices are USD; FeedHive also prices in EUR (the page geo-located to EUR when checked), so the USD figures were taken from FeedHive's USD listings.

Pros and cons

Crowdfire

  • Strong content curation, suggesting articles and images to share
  • Mobile-first and simple to use
  • Audience management roots from its JustUnfollow days
  • Discontinued in 2025; you can no longer sign up
  • No team collaboration or evergreen recycling
  • Leaned on reminder publishing for Instagram

FeedHive

  • AI performance prediction before you publish
  • Strong AI writing, images, and hashtags
  • Recycling plus conditional and follow-up posting
  • Ten networks, with a social inbox and white-label on Agency
  • AI credits and automation runs are metered
  • No free plan
  • Small company with a short track record
  • Analytics are decent, not enterprise-grade

Crowdfire vs FeedHive: FAQ

Is Crowdfire or FeedHive cheaper?
Crowdfire is cheaper to start, from $7.48 against $13 for FeedHive. The unit each one charges by differs, so the real bill depends on how many channels or seats you run.
Does Crowdfire or FeedHive have a free plan?
Crowdfire has a free plan; FeedHive does not, though it offers a 7-day trial.
Which is better, Crowdfire or FeedHive?
Crowdfire is the stronger pick for most people, while FeedHive is the better fit for creators and small teams who lean on AI for content. We don't score them; the right call comes down to how you post.

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