Head to head

Missinglettr vs Publer

vs

Missinglettr does one unusual thing: point it at a blog post and it generates a year-long drip campaign of social posts, complete with pulled quotes, hashtags, and images, then publishes them on a schedule. It's a content-repurposing tool for bloggers more than a general scheduler.

From
$9 /mo
Free plan

The value pick: Publer posts to thirteen networks, Telegram and WordPress included, and bundles bulk upload, recycling, and RSS automation for less than most rivals charge. It's priced per connected account, the interface is busy, and X needs a paid plan.

From
$4 per account / mo
Free plan

Bottom line

Missinglettr and Publer both cover the basics; the right one comes down to how you post. Missinglettr is the stronger pick for Bloggers and content marketers repurposing articles into social posts; choose Publer for Power users posting to many networks at once.

Features compared

FeatureMissinglettrPubler
AI captionsYesYes
Basic analyticsYesYes
Advanced reportsYesYes
Bulk uploadNot assessedYes
Evergreen recyclingYesYes
Team rolesYesYes
ApprovalsNot assessedYes
Link in bioNot assessedYes

Platforms compared

NetworkMissinglettrPubler
InstagramAutoAuto
FacebookAutoAuto
X (Twitter)AutoAuto
LinkedInAutoAuto
TikTokNoAuto
PinterestAutoAuto
YouTubeNoAuto
ThreadsNoAuto
BlueskyNoAuto
Google BusinessAutoAuto
MastodonNoAuto
TelegramNoAuto
WordPressNoAuto

Pricing

Missinglettr

Free

Free
Seats
1
Accounts
1
Scheduled posts
50
  • 1 workspace, 1 social profile
  • 50 scheduled posts a month
  • Blog-to-social drip campaigns, basic analytics

Solo

$15 /mo

$9/mo billed annually

Seats
1
Accounts
3
Scheduled posts
500
  • $15/mo, $9 on annual ($108/yr)
  • 1 workspace, 3 social profiles, 500 posts a month
  • Content curation and AI writing assistance

Pro

Popular
$59 /mo

$39/mo billed annually

Accounts
9
Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $59/mo, $39 on annual ($468/yr)
  • 3 workspaces, 9 social profiles, unlimited posts
  • Team collaboration, advanced analytics, priority support
  • Flat, quota-bundled plans by workspaces and social profiles. There's a genuine free plan (1 profile, 50 posts a month).
  • Annual billing saves about 40%: Solo works out to $9 a month and Pro to $39.
  • Missinglettr is built for repurposing blog content, not full social management, so the plans are sized around campaigns and profiles rather than deep team or agency features.
  • Prices are USD from current listings; the Missinglettr site was unreachable when checked, so figures were taken from third-party 2026 listings.

Publer

Free

Free
Seats
1
Accounts
3
Scheduled posts
10
  • 1 user, 1 workspace, 3 social accounts (no X)
  • 10 scheduled posts per account, 24-hour post history, 25 drafts
  • Branded link-in-bio for Instagram

Professional

Popular
$5 per account / mo

$4/mo billed annually

Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $5 per account/mo, $4 on annual
  • Unlimited scheduling and drafts, eternal post history
  • First comments and threads, unlimited RSS automations, unlimited workspaces
  • Unbranded link-in-bio, X/Twitter integration

Business

$10 per account / mo

$8/mo billed annually

Scheduled posts
Unlimited
  • $10 per account/mo, $8 on annual
  • Everything in Professional, plus unlimited AI prompts
  • Analytics and reports, best times to post, competitor analysis
  • Hashtag suggestions, Spintax post recycling, Publer API

Enterprise

Custom
  • Quote-only for large organisations
  • Higher volume discounts, 1:1 onboarding, priority support
  • Priced per connected social account: the headline $5 / $10 is for one account and multiplies by how many you connect. Every 10th account (and every 10th extra member) is free, so the effective rate dips about 10% at higher counts.
  • Team members are a second, separate cost: $2 a month each on Professional, $3 on Business, with the plan owner already included.
  • X (Twitter) needs a paid plan because of X's API pricing; it can't be connected on the Free plan at all.
  • There's a permanent Free plan (3 accounts, no X) plus a 7-day trial of Professional and a 14-day trial of Business, no card required.
  • Annual billing is roughly 20% cheaper per account ($5 to $4 on Professional, $10 to $8 on Business). Listed prices exclude VAT, and there's a 14-day money-back guarantee.
  • Prices are USD. The live pricing page renders client-side and geo-located to Australia here, showing AUD, but it also prints an explicit US-dollar figure per plan; the USD numbers were read directly and confirmed by toggling monthly and yearly, and they match current third-party 2026 listings.

Pros and cons

Missinglettr

  • Turns each blog post into a year-long drip campaign automatically
  • Pre-fills posts with quotes, hashtags, and images for approval
  • Content curation community for fresh material
  • Free plan and a cheap Solo tier
  • Narrow: a repurposing tool, not a full scheduler
  • Only six networks; no TikTok, YouTube, Threads, or Bluesky
  • No comment inbox or social listening
  • Lighter team and agency features

Publer

  • Excellent value on per-account pricing, with every 10th account free
  • Widest network list here, including Telegram, Mastodon, and WordPress
  • Bulk CSV upload, auto-scheduling queue, Spintax recycling, and RSS automation
  • Genuinely useful free plan
  • Per-account pricing and separate member fees still add up at scale
  • No unified inbox for comments or DMs
  • X/Twitter is paid-only and analytics sit on the Business tier
  • Dense interface, and listed prices exclude VAT

Missinglettr vs Publer: FAQ

Is Missinglettr or Publer cheaper?
Publer is cheaper to start, from $4 against $9 for Missinglettr. The unit each one charges by differs, so the real bill depends on how many channels or seats you run.
Does Missinglettr or Publer have a free plan?
Both have a free plan, so you can try either one before paying.
Which is better, Missinglettr or Publer?
Missinglettr is the stronger pick for bloggers and content marketers repurposing articles into social posts, while Publer is the better fit for power users posting to many networks at once. We don't score them; the right call comes down to how you post.