Head to head
Feedly vs NapoleonCat
Last updated 4 June 2026
Feedly isn't a social media scheduler at all. It's a content-discovery and monitoring tool, an RSS reader with AI on top, that social media managers use to find and track content. To actually schedule, you pair it with a real scheduler.
- From
- $6 /mo
- Free plan
NapoleonCat is built around moderation: a unified inbox that pulls in comments, DMs, ad comments, and app-store reviews, with automation that can hide, delete, and auto-reply on its own. Publishing and reporting are solid too, and pricing starts at $79 a month for two users and five profiles, scaling as you add more.
- From
- $79 /mo
- Free plan
Bottom line
Feedly and NapoleonCat both cover the basics; the right one comes down to how you post. Feedly is the stronger pick for Social media managers who need a steady stream of content ideas; choose NapoleonCat for Brands fielding heavy comment, DM, and ad-comment volume.
Features compared
| Feature | Feedly | NapoleonCat |
|---|---|---|
| AI captions | No | Yes |
| Basic analytics | Not assessed | Yes |
| Advanced reports | Not assessed | Yes |
| Bulk upload | Not assessed | Not assessed |
| Evergreen recycling | Not assessed | No |
| Team roles | Not assessed | Yes |
| Approvals | Not assessed | Not assessed |
| Link in bio | Not assessed | No |
Platforms compared
| Network | Feedly | NapoleonCat |
|---|---|---|
| No | Auto | |
| Analytics | Auto | |
| X (Twitter) | Analytics | Auto |
| Analytics | Auto | |
| TikTok | No | Auto |
| YouTube | No | Auto |
| Google Business | No | Auto |
Pricing
Feedly
Free
- Seats
- 1
- Up to 100 sources, organised into feeds
- No Feedly AI
- Read and organise content
Pro
$6/mo billed annually
- Seats
- 1
- $6.99/mo, $6 on annual ($72/yr)
- Up to 1,000 sources, search, notes, and highlights
- Share to X, Facebook, LinkedIn, Buffer, and Hootsuite
Pro+
Popular$8.25/mo billed annually
- Seats
- 1
- $12.99/mo, $8.25 on annual ($99/yr)
- Adds Feedly AI (Leo): AI feeds, deduplication, prioritisation
- Up to 2,500 sources, 75 newsletter slots, RSS Builder
Enterprise
- Seats
- Unlimited
- From about $1,600/mo, for team market and threat intelligence
- Shared boards, team AI feeds, integrations
- Feedly is a content reader and discovery tool, not a social scheduler. It does not schedule or auto-publish social posts; it surfaces content you can then share manually or push into a scheduler like Buffer or Hootsuite (often via Zapier), which means paying for two tools.
- Plans: a free tier (100 sources), Pro at $6 a month on annual billing, Pro+ at $8.25 (adds Feedly AI / Leo), and an Enterprise market-intelligence plan from around $1,600 a month.
- Prices are USD from current listings.
- It's included here because social media managers use it to find and monitor content, not because it publishes.
NapoleonCat
Standard
- Seats
- 2
- Accounts
- 5
- Scheduled posts
- Unlimited
- $79/mo base, 2 users, 5 profile slots
- Unlimited post scheduling, analytics for own profiles
- Competitor tracking and benchmarking, automated reporting, team collaboration
Pro
Popular- Seats
- 2
- Accounts
- 5
- Scheduled posts
- Unlimited
- $89/mo base, 2 users, 5 profile slots, 10K inbox capacity
- Adds the all-in-one Social Inbox and saved responses
- Team performance reports and the mobile app
Expert
- Seats
- 2
- Accounts
- 5
- Scheduled posts
- Unlimited
- $119/mo base, 2 users, 5 profile slots, 10K inbox capacity
- Adds automatic moderation of common questions and auto-hide/delete
- Automatic sentiment analysis and advanced search
Enterprise
- Scheduled posts
- Unlimited
- From $465/mo, for more than 60 profiles
- AI Reply (beta), API access, custom reporting
- Custom compliance, SLA, and custom agreement
- Flat base plans priced for 2 users and 5 profile slots, then you scale: add more profiles and users with a slider and pay only for what you use, so the monthly cost grows as you add them. Enterprise starts at $465 for larger setups (60+ profiles).
- There's no free plan, only a 14-day trial, no card required.
- Annual billing is up to about 18% cheaper; the page headlines the monthly rates and the per-month annual figure wasn't shown cleanly when checked.
- Listed prices exclude VAT.
- The plan tiers mostly differ by moderation and automation depth: Pro adds the Social Inbox, Expert adds auto-moderation and sentiment analysis, and Enterprise adds AI Reply and API access.
- Prices are USD, read off the live pricing page (which has a USD/EUR/GBP switch, set to USD), and cross-checked against current third-party listings.
Pros and cons
Feedly
- Best-in-class content discovery and RSS aggregation
- Feedly AI filters, deduplicates, and prioritises sources
- Strong monitoring and market intelligence on higher tiers
- Cheap Pro and Pro+ plans, plus a free tier
- Not a scheduler: no publishing, calendar, or auto-posting
- Needs a separate tool (and often Zapier) to actually post
- Enterprise market intelligence is expensive
- Social 'sharing' is manual, one article at a time
NapoleonCat
- Excellent unified inbox covering comments, DMs, ad comments, and app reviews
- Auto-moderation: auto-hide, auto-delete, auto-reply, and sentiment analysis
- Strong analytics with competitor benchmarking and automated reporting
- Flexible scaling, paying only for the profiles and users you use
- No evergreen recycling, visual feed planner, or link-in-bio
- No Pinterest, Threads, or Bluesky
- Prices exclude VAT and scale up as you add profiles and users
- Creation tooling is thinner than the moderation side
Feedly vs NapoleonCat: FAQ
- Is Feedly or NapoleonCat cheaper?
- Feedly is cheaper to start, from $6 against $79 for NapoleonCat. The unit each one charges by differs, so the real bill depends on how many channels or seats you run.
- Does Feedly or NapoleonCat have a free plan?
- Feedly has a free plan; NapoleonCat does not, though it offers a 14-day trial.
- Which is better, Feedly or NapoleonCat?
- Feedly is the stronger pick for social media managers who need a steady stream of content ideas, while NapoleonCat is the better fit for brands fielding heavy comment, DM, and ad-comment volume. We don't score them; the right call comes down to how you post.