Head to head

Tweet Hunter vs X Pro

vs

Tweet Hunter is an X-only growth tool built around a giant library of viral tweets, AI writing, scheduling, and engagement automation. It's the X counterpart to Taplio (both owned by lempire) and is aimed at people serious about growing on X.

From
$23 /mo
Free plan

X Pro is the rebuilt TweetDeck: a multi-column dashboard for power users on X, with post and thread scheduling, real-time search columns, and multi-account monitoring. As of 2026 it's locked behind X's $40-a-month Premium+ tier, which is the catch.

From
$33 /mo
Free plan

Bottom line

Tweet Hunter and X Pro both cover the basics; the right one comes down to how you post. Tweet Hunter is the stronger pick for Creators and founders growing an X audience; choose X Pro for Heavy X users and community managers who live in the timeline.

Features compared

FeatureTweet HunterX Pro
AI captionsYesNot assessed
Basic analyticsYesPartial
Advanced reportsNot assessedNot assessed
Bulk uploadNot assessedNo
Evergreen recyclingYesNo
Team rolesNot assessedNot assessed
ApprovalsNot assessedNot assessed
Link in bioNot assessedNot assessed

Platforms compared

NetworkTweet HunterX Pro
X (Twitter)AutoAuto

Pricing

Tweet Hunter

Discover

$29 /mo

$23/mo billed annually

Accounts
1
  • $29/mo, ~$23 on annual
  • 1 X account
  • 12M+ viral tweet library, scheduling, auto-plug and auto-retweet

Grow

Popular
$49 /mo

$39/mo billed annually

Accounts
5
  • $49/mo, ~$39 on annual
  • 5 X accounts
  • Adds AI writing, full X analytics, CRM, and engagement tools

Enterprise

$199 /mo

$159/mo billed annually

Accounts
Unlimited
  • $199/mo, ~$159 on annual
  • Unlimited X accounts
  • Best AI, highest automation and DM limits
  • Flat plans by number of X accounts. Tweet Hunter only works with X (Twitter); it has no other networks.
  • There's no free plan, only a 7-day trial. Annual billing is roughly 20% off, and Tweet Hunter runs frequent 50%-off promotions.
  • It's owned by lempire (which acquired it alongside Taplio, the LinkedIn equivalent), so the two are sister products.
  • Prices are USD, read off the live pricing page.

X Pro

X Premium+

$40 /mo

$33/mo billed annually

Seats
1
Accounts
Unlimited
  • X Pro is bundled with X Premium+ (about $40/mo, $395/yr)
  • Column-based decks, multi-account monitoring, post and thread scheduling
  • Access to multiple X accounts you control
  • X Pro isn't sold on its own. It used to come with the cheaper X Premium plan (around $8/mo), but in March 2026 X moved it behind the top X Premium+ tier, roughly $40 a month (about $395 a year), so the real cost of using X Pro is a Premium+ subscription.
  • It only manages X, so the value is entirely about how much you live on that one network.
  • X has signalled a replacement product may follow, so the access terms here may change.

Pros and cons

Tweet Hunter

  • Massive viral-tweet library for inspiration and templates
  • Strong AI writing tuned to X
  • Scheduling plus auto-plug, auto-retweet, and recycling
  • Solid X analytics with popularity prediction
  • X only; no other networks
  • No real engagement inbox or listening
  • No free plan
  • Narrow by design, despite the broad 'scheduler' label

X Pro

  • Best-in-class real-time column monitoring for X
  • Schedules posts and threads
  • Manages multiple X accounts at once
  • Fast, dense, power-user layout
  • Now requires the $40-a-month X Premium+ tier
  • X only
  • No calendar, bulk scheduling, recycling, or mobile app
  • Access terms have changed once and may change again

Tweet Hunter vs X Pro: FAQ

Is Tweet Hunter or X Pro cheaper?
Tweet Hunter is cheaper to start, from $23 against $33 for X Pro. The unit each one charges by differs, so the real bill depends on how many channels or seats you run.
Does Tweet Hunter or X Pro have a free plan?
Neither has a free plan. You get a free trial to test things, then you pay.
Which is better, Tweet Hunter or X Pro?
Tweet Hunter is the stronger pick for creators and founders growing an X audience, while X Pro is the better fit for heavy X users and community managers who live in the timeline. We don't score them; the right call comes down to how you post.