Tag: Metricool Vs

  • Metricool Alternatives 2026: What to Use Instead and Why

    Metricool is the right tool for most multi-brand agency operations, but it’s not the only option. The right alternative depends on what specifically Metricool isn’t doing for your operation — whether that’s deeper analytics, stronger team collaboration, a cleaner interface, or lower price for a simpler use case.

    The main Metricool alternatives in 2026. Hootsuite (enterprise collaboration and analytics), Buffer (simplicity for small operations), Later (Instagram-first brands), Sprout Social (enterprise reporting and CRM integration), Publer (API access at lower price), SocialBee (content recycling and categories), and direct platform scheduling (free, but manual). Each has a specific use case where it outperforms Metricool.

    Hootsuite: When You Need Enterprise Collaboration

    Hootsuite is the right alternative when your operation requires formal approval workflows, content libraries, and analytics depth that Metricool doesn’t provide. Hootsuite’s team collaboration architecture — multiple approvers, client-facing approval portals, content libraries with brand asset management — is more mature than Metricool’s. The cost is significantly higher for equivalent brand counts. Choose Hootsuite when the team collaboration features are genuinely required, not when you’re just looking for something more enterprise-feeling.

    Buffer: When You Need Simplicity

    Buffer’s interface is the cleanest of the major schedulers. For a small team or solo operator managing a handful of accounts who wants straightforward scheduling without the feature complexity of tools designed for agencies, Buffer is the right choice. It doesn’t have API access at the same capability level as Metricool, doesn’t have native GBP scheduling, and costs more per connected channel at scale. For simple single-brand or small-portfolio use, those limitations may not matter.

    Later: When Instagram Is Primary

    Later’s visual feed preview, link-in-bio tool, and Instagram-specific analytics are more developed than Metricool’s for Instagram-first brands. If your operation is built around Instagram as the primary channel and visual grid planning is an active part of your content strategy, Later deserves serious consideration. It doesn’t support GBP scheduling, and the multi-brand economics don’t favor Later for large agency portfolios.

    Sprout Social: When Analytics Are a Client Deliverable

    Sprout Social’s analytics depth — competitive benchmarking, audience demographics, sophisticated custom reports — is the strongest of any social media management tool. If analytics reporting is a formal client deliverable, Sprout Social justifies its premium cost. For operations where analytics are a supporting operational tool rather than a primary deliverable, the premium isn’t warranted.

    Publer: API Access at Lower Cost

    Publer is a lesser-known scheduler that includes API access at a lower price point than Metricool’s Advanced plan. For operations where API access is the primary requirement and GBP scheduling is less important, Publer is worth evaluating. The platform is less mature than Metricool and the API is less comprehensive, but the cost-to-API-access ratio is competitive.

    Direct Platform Scheduling: When You Just Need Basic

    LinkedIn, Facebook, and Meta Business Suite all offer native scheduling at no cost. For an operation with very low volume — a few posts per week, one or two brands — native platform scheduling is free and functional. The limitations: no cross-platform scheduling from one interface, no analytics across platforms, no GBP integration, no API. As soon as you’re managing more than one or two brands or need cross-platform visibility, native scheduling creates more friction than it saves in cost.

    When to Stick With Metricool

    You’re managing ten or more brands, you need GBP scheduling, you want API access at a reasonable price, and you don’t need enterprise team collaboration or deep competitive analytics. That description fits most small to mid-size agencies. For those operations, Metricool is the best value combination of features available.

    Want your social scheduling set up properly?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social operations — the pipeline, the API integration, and the scheduling system that runs on autopilot.

    Tygart Media manages 24 brands in Metricool across LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Google Business Profile. We know this tool at a level most tutorials don’t reach.

    See the social media setup service →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    What is the cheapest social media scheduler with API access?

    Among established tools, Metricool Advanced and Publer are typically the most affordable options that include API access for programmatic scheduling. The exact pricing changes as tools adjust their plans, so comparing current pricing directly is advisable. Direct API access to platform native APIs (LinkedIn API, Facebook Graph API) is technically free but requires developer setup and doesn’t provide the multi-platform abstraction that tools like Metricool offer.

    Is there a social media scheduler that supports every platform Metricool does?

    Metricool’s platform coverage — LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, X/Twitter, GBP, TikTok, YouTube, Pinterest, Threads, Bluesky — is competitive with the broadest alternatives. Hootsuite and Sprout Social have comparable platform coverage. Buffer and Later have narrower platform support, particularly for GBP and newer platforms like Bluesky and Threads.

    What’s the best Metricool alternative for a solo creator?

    Buffer is typically the best fit for solo creators managing one to three accounts with simple scheduling needs and no API requirements. Later is the best fit for solo creators focused primarily on Instagram. Metricool’s free plan is worth considering if GBP scheduling matters or if you anticipate scaling to multiple accounts in the future — the free plan lets you evaluate the interface before committing.

  • How to Use Metricool: Getting Started with Scheduling, Analytics, and Multi-Brand Management

    Metricool has a short learning curve but a few non-obvious setup steps that make a significant difference in how well it works. Most people get the basics running in an hour. Getting the full value — multi-brand setup, analytics configured, API connected if needed — takes a few hours of deliberate setup. This guide covers both.

    What does Metricool do? Metricool is a social media management platform that lets you schedule posts across multiple platforms, analyze performance data, monitor competitors, and manage multiple brand accounts from a single dashboard. It supports Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, TikTok, Pinterest, YouTube, Google Business Profile, and Twitch, with scheduling, analytics, and basic team management across all platforms.

    Step 1: Connect Your Social Accounts

    After creating an account, the first task is connecting your social platforms. Go to Settings → Social Networks and authorize each platform you use. Metricool will prompt you through the OAuth flow for each platform — you’ll need admin access to the accounts you’re connecting.

    A few platform-specific notes: Facebook and Instagram are connected through Meta’s Business Manager, so you’ll need your Facebook Business account credentials rather than your personal Facebook login. LinkedIn requires connecting either a personal profile or a Company Page — connect both if you post to both. Google Business Profile requires connecting your Google account with GBP admin access.

    Step 2: Set Up Brands (If Managing Multiple)

    If you’re managing more than one brand — multiple clients, multiple business lines, or a personal brand alongside business accounts — set up separate brands in Metricool before connecting accounts. Go to the brand switcher in the top left, create a new brand for each client or business, and then connect that brand’s social accounts under its workspace.

    The common mistake: connecting all accounts under one brand and using it like a single aggregated feed. This works for small single-brand operations but creates a messy, unsearchable account structure for multi-brand management. The brand-per-client structure is worth the extra setup time.

    Step 3: Learn the Planner

    The Planner is Metricool’s scheduling interface — the place you’ll spend most of your time. Access it from the left navigation. The default view is a weekly calendar showing scheduled posts across all connected platforms for the current brand.

    To create a new post: click a time slot on the calendar or use the “New Post” button. Write the caption, upload media, select which platforms to post to, and set the date and time. Metricool shows a preview of how the post will render on each selected platform, which is useful for catching formatting issues before the post goes live.

    Best time recommendations: Metricool calculates optimal posting times based on historical engagement data for your accounts. These appear as highlighted time slots on the planner calendar. They’re worth following for at least the first few months until you have enough data to develop your own posting time intuition for each brand.

    Step 4: Understand the Analytics Dashboard

    Metricool’s analytics are organized by platform — switch between Instagram, LinkedIn, Facebook, and other platforms using the tabs at the top of the Analytics section. Each platform view shows follower growth, engagement rate, reach, impressions, and post performance for a selected date range.

    The most useful view for recurring reporting: set a fixed date range (last 30 days, last quarter), review the top-performing posts by engagement rate, and check the follower growth trend. These three data points cover most of what you need for a regular social media performance review.

    Competitor analysis is available on higher plan tiers — add competitor accounts to track their follower counts and posting frequency alongside your own metrics. For agencies pitching clients or benchmarking performance, this feature justifies the plan upgrade on its own.

    Step 5: The Canva Integration

    Metricool integrates directly with Canva, which is how we handle visual content for most brands. In the post creation interface, click the Canva button to open a Canva design directly in Metricool’s window. Design the asset, publish it from Canva, and it imports automatically into your Metricool post. This workflow eliminates the download-upload step that adds friction to visual post creation at scale.

    Step 6: API Setup (Advanced)

    If you need programmatic access to Metricool for automated scheduling or analytics retrieval, the API token is in Settings → API. Generate a token, store it securely, and use it with the Metricool REST API. The base URL and endpoint documentation are available in Metricool’s API documentation. We use the API for creating draft posts programmatically from our content pipeline, which then get reviewed and published from the Metricool planner.

    Want this set up for your business?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social media operations — the pipeline, the scheduling system, and the analytics workflow.

    Tygart Media manages social scheduling across multiple brands using Metricool daily. We know what the tool actually does and what it doesn’t.

    See the social media setup service →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    How long does it take to learn Metricool?

    Basic scheduling — connecting accounts, creating posts, reading analytics — takes one to two hours to get comfortable with. The full feature set, including multi-brand management, competitor analysis, and API access, takes a few days of regular use to master. The learning curve is shorter than Hootsuite and comparable to Buffer for basic features.

    Can multiple people use the same Metricool account?

    Yes — Metricool supports team members on paid plans, with different permission levels for each member. You can add team members in Settings → Team and assign them access to specific brands or all brands. The number of team member seats available depends on your plan tier.

    Does Metricool post automatically or do you have to confirm each post?

    Most platform integrations post fully automatically at the scheduled time. Instagram is the exception — some content types may require a push notification on your mobile device to complete the publish, due to Meta API restrictions. Standard Instagram feed posts direct-publish automatically on supported plans; Reels and Stories have variable automation support.

    Can you schedule the same post to multiple platforms at once?

    Yes — when creating a post in Metricool, you can select multiple platforms and the same content will be scheduled to all selected platforms simultaneously. You can also customize the caption or media for each platform within the same post creation flow if the content needs to be adapted by platform.

  • Metricool vs Later: Which Social Scheduler Is Right for Your Business?

    Metricool and Later are both excellent social scheduling tools making different bets. Later is optimized for visual platforms — Instagram above all, with strong Pinterest and TikTok support. Metricool is optimized for multi-platform, multi-brand operations where analytics depth and API access matter as much as the scheduling interface.

    If Instagram is the center of your social strategy, Later deserves serious consideration. If you’re managing multiple platforms across multiple brands with any need for programmatic scheduling or deep analytics, Metricool is probably the better fit.

    Metricool vs Later at a glance. Later is purpose-built for visual platforms with an exceptional Instagram experience, a strong media library, and a Link in Bio tool. Metricool covers more platforms, provides deeper analytics, includes API access, and handles multi-brand management more cleanly. Later wins on Instagram-specific features; Metricool wins on breadth and analytics.

    Where Later Wins

    Instagram experience. Later was built for Instagram first. The visual planning grid, the media library, the Instagram-specific analytics, and the Link in Bio tool are all more polished than Metricool’s Instagram features. If a significant portion of your social strategy is Instagram-centric, Later’s native Instagram experience is meaningfully better.

    Media library. Later has a proper media library for storing and reusing visual assets. You can upload a batch of images, tag them, and pull them into posts from the library rather than uploading per-post. For visual-heavy operations posting similar content types repeatedly, this is a real workflow improvement that Metricool doesn’t match.

    Link in Bio. Later’s Link in Bio tool — a landing page that makes Instagram posts clickable — is a core feature of its platform. For creators and brands driving traffic from Instagram, this is a meaningful native integration.

    Where Metricool Wins

    Platform breadth. Metricool supports more platforms than Later with more complete feature sets per platform. LinkedIn scheduling, Google Business Profile, YouTube, and Twitter/X are all more fully supported in Metricool. For multi-platform operations, this breadth matters.

    Analytics depth. Metricool’s analytics are more comprehensive than Later’s across all platforms, not just Instagram. Competitor benchmarking, hashtag performance, engagement rate trends, and best posting time recommendations are all more developed in Metricool.

    API access. Metricool’s API enables programmatic scheduling and analytics retrieval. Later has limited API access. For agencies or operators with any automated publishing component, Metricool’s API is the decisive advantage.

    Multi-brand management. Metricool’s workspace structure for managing multiple brands is cleaner and more functional than Later’s equivalent. For agencies managing five or more client brands, Metricool’s multi-brand architecture is better designed.

    Google Business Profile. Metricool supports GBP scheduling natively. Later does not. For local businesses or agencies managing local SEO, this is a meaningful gap.

    The Honest Recommendation

    If Instagram is your primary platform and you care most about the visual scheduling experience, a strong media library, and Link in Bio: use Later. If you’re managing multiple platforms, multiple brands, need analytics depth beyond Instagram, or have any programmatic scheduling requirement: use Metricool. The two tools aren’t really competing — they’re optimized for different operations.

    We use Metricool because our operation spans multiple platforms across multiple brands with API-driven publishing. For a creator or brand with an Instagram-first strategy, we’d point them toward Later without hesitation.

    Want this set up for your business?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social media operations — the pipeline, the scheduling system, and the analytics workflow.

    Tygart Media manages social scheduling across multiple brands using Metricool daily. We know what the tool actually does and what it doesn’t.

    See the social media setup service →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Can you use both Metricool and Later together?

    You could, but the overlap makes maintaining two systems more overhead than it’s worth for most operations. The exception: if you have a client portfolio where some clients are Instagram-first (managed in Later) and others are multi-platform (managed in Metricool). In that case the division by client type is cleaner than trying to force all clients into one tool.

    Which tool is cheaper, Metricool or Later?

    Comparable plans are similarly priced. Later’s pricing scales by post volume and users; Metricool’s scales by brands and features. For agencies managing multiple brands, Metricool’s per-brand structure is often more cost-effective than Later’s per-user structure. Run the comparison against your specific brand count and team size.

    Does Later support LinkedIn scheduling?

    Later supports LinkedIn scheduling, but the integration is more limited than Metricool’s. For operations where LinkedIn is a significant channel — B2B agencies, professional services, thought leadership accounts — Metricool’s LinkedIn support is more complete.

  • Metricool vs Hootsuite vs Buffer: The Honest Comparison for Small Agencies

    Hootsuite, Buffer, and Metricool are solving the same problem but making different tradeoffs. All three schedule social content across multiple platforms. All three provide analytics. All three have free tiers and paid plans. The differences are in where each tool excels, what each costs at real agency scale, and which one fits the way a small agency actually works.

    We’ve used all three. Here’s the comparison without the affiliate link bias.

    Quick verdict. Hootsuite is the most feature-complete but the most expensive and the most complex. Buffer is the simplest and cleanest but the lightest on analytics. Metricool hits the middle — more capable than Buffer, less expensive than Hootsuite, with an API that neither competitor matches at its price point. For most small agencies, Metricool is the right call in 2026.

    Hootsuite: Most Complete, Most Expensive

    Hootsuite is the established enterprise player in social media management. Its feature set is the deepest of the three — social listening, sophisticated team workflows, approval chains, deep integrations with enterprise tools, and the most comprehensive platform support. For a large agency with complex team structures and enterprise clients, Hootsuite’s feature depth justifies the cost.

    For a small agency, it mostly doesn’t. Hootsuite’s pricing for small teams is significantly higher than Metricool for comparable scheduling and analytics functionality. The interface is more complex than you need if you’re not using the enterprise features. And the features that make Hootsuite worth the premium — social listening, advanced team management, enterprise integrations — are features most small agencies don’t need.

    Hootsuite is the right choice when: you’re managing a large team with approval workflows, you need social listening and monitoring alongside scheduling, or your clients require enterprise-grade reporting and compliance features.

    Buffer: Simplest Interface, Lightest Analytics

    Buffer is the clean, simple option. Its publishing interface is the most intuitive of the three — easy to learn, fast to use, minimal friction for basic scheduling. For a solo creator or a very small operation scheduling content for a handful of accounts, Buffer’s simplicity is a genuine advantage.

    The limitation is analytics. Buffer’s analytics are the lightest of the three — adequate for basic performance tracking but thin compared to Metricool’s analytics depth. For agencies billing clients on social media performance, Buffer’s reporting is often insufficient. You end up pulling native platform analytics separately anyway, which defeats part of the purpose of a scheduling tool.

    Buffer is the right choice when: you have simple scheduling needs and prioritize interface speed over analytics depth, you’re a solo creator rather than an agency, or you’re managing a small number of accounts with low posting volume.

    Metricool: Best Balance for Small Agencies

    Metricool sits between Buffer’s simplicity and Hootsuite’s complexity in a way that’s well-calibrated for small agencies. The scheduling interface is nearly as clean as Buffer’s after a short learning curve. The analytics are substantially deeper than Buffer’s and comparable to Hootsuite’s at lower plan tiers. The multi-brand management is purpose-built for agency use. And the API — which neither Buffer nor Hootsuite matches at Metricool’s price point — enables automated publishing workflows that most agency operations eventually need.

    The Google Business Profile scheduling support is also a meaningful differentiator. For agencies managing local businesses, scheduling GBP posts alongside social content from one tool is a real operational convenience that Buffer doesn’t offer and Hootsuite charges more for.

    The Price Comparison at Agency Scale

    At five brands and two team members — a reasonable small agency configuration — Metricool’s Advanced plan is meaningfully less expensive than Hootsuite’s equivalent and roughly comparable to Buffer’s equivalent, while providing substantially more analytics capability than Buffer and comparable scheduling features to both. The API access included in Metricool’s Advanced plan has no equivalent at the same price point from either competitor.

    As brand count scales, Metricool maintains its cost advantage over Hootsuite. Buffer’s pricing can become competitive at certain configurations, but the analytics gap remains.

    Want this set up for your business?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social media operations — the pipeline, the scheduling system, and the analytics workflow.

    Tygart Media manages social scheduling across multiple brands using Metricool daily. We know what the tool actually does and what it doesn’t.

    See the social media setup service →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Which social media scheduler is best for Instagram?

    All three have similar Instagram limitations because they’re all constrained by Meta’s API. For Instagram-focused operations, Later is often a better choice than any of the three — it’s purpose-built for visual platforms and has deeper Instagram-specific features. Among the three general schedulers, the Instagram experience is comparable enough that other factors should drive the decision.

    Does Buffer have an API?

    Buffer has an API, but it’s more limited than Metricool’s and the documentation is less comprehensive. For operations needing programmatic scheduling and analytics retrieval, Metricool’s API is more capable and better documented than Buffer’s.

    Is Hootsuite worth it for a small agency?

    For most small agencies, no. Hootsuite’s premium pricing is justified by enterprise features that small agencies don’t use. The scheduling and analytics capabilities that matter for a small agency are available at lower cost in Metricool with comparable quality. Unless you specifically need Hootsuite’s social listening, approval workflows, or enterprise integrations, the cost premium isn’t warranted.

  • Metricool Pricing Explained: What Each Plan Actually Gets You

    Metricool’s pricing is reasonable but not simple. The plan tiers scale by number of brands, team members, and feature access in ways that make the right plan non-obvious at first glance. Here’s a plain-language breakdown of what each tier actually means for a small agency or solo operator.

    Metricool pricing overview 2026. Metricool offers a free plan for one brand and paid plans that scale by brand count and feature set. The Starter plan covers basic scheduling for a handful of brands. The Advanced plan unlocks API access, more brands, and deeper analytics. The Agency plan is designed for larger operations managing many client accounts. Prices vary by billing cycle — annual billing provides meaningful savings over monthly.

    The Free Plan

    Metricool’s free plan covers one brand, with scheduling for the major platforms, basic analytics, and access to the visual planner. The post volume limit per month is low enough that it’s genuinely a single-brand personal use tier rather than a business tool. It’s useful for evaluating the interface before committing to a paid plan, and for solo creators managing one account with modest posting volume.

    What’s missing on free: multi-brand management, API access, advanced analytics, competitor analysis, and the posting volume needed for a real business social operation. For any agency or business managing more than one brand, the free plan is a trial, not a working solution.

    The Starter Plan

    The first paid tier covers a small number of brands — typically three to five depending on current pricing — with increased post volume, basic team member access, and the full scheduling interface. This is the right tier for a solo operator managing a personal brand alongside one or two client accounts, or a small local business running multiple location accounts.

    What you still don’t get at Starter: API access, advanced competitor analysis, and the brand count needed for a real agency operation. If you need the API or manage more than a handful of brands, Starter is likely a waypoint rather than a destination.

    The Advanced Plan

    Advanced is where Metricool becomes genuinely useful for a small agency. The brand count increases significantly, the analytics layer gets substantially deeper — including competitor benchmarking and hashtag performance — and API access is included. For an operation running automated or high-volume publishing, the API is the feature that justifies the Advanced plan upgrade on its own.

    Advanced also includes more team member seats and stronger reporting features — the ability to export analytics reports in formats suitable for client delivery. For agencies billing clients on social media management, the reporting upgrade has real operational value.

    The Agency Plan

    The Agency tier is designed for larger operations managing many client brands. Brand count expands significantly, white-label reporting options become available, and team management features are more robust. The price point is higher but still substantially below enterprise social management platforms like Sprout Social or HubSpot’s social tools.

    Agency makes sense when: you’re managing ten or more brands, you need to deliver white-label analytics reports to clients, or your team size requires more seat access than Advanced provides.

    Annual vs Monthly Billing

    Metricool offers meaningful discounts for annual billing — typically around twenty percent off the monthly rate. For any operation committed to Metricool as a long-term tool, annual billing is the right choice. The only reason to stay monthly is if you’re still evaluating whether Metricool is the right fit, or if you have genuine uncertainty about the brand count you’ll need six months from now.

    The Plan We Use

    We’re on a plan that includes API access and supports multiple brands — the Advanced tier or equivalent. The API is the non-negotiable feature for our operation because we publish to Metricool programmatically from our content pipeline. The analytics depth at this tier is also meaningfully better than what’s available at lower tiers. For an agency doing real volume social management, the cost is justified by the API access alone.

    Want this set up for your business?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social media operations — the pipeline, the scheduling system, and the analytics workflow.

    Tygart Media manages social scheduling across multiple brands using Metricool daily. We know what the tool actually does and what it doesn’t.

    See the social media setup service →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Metricool charge per social account or per brand?

    Per brand — a brand in Metricool can include multiple connected social accounts (Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, etc.) for the same business. So one client with accounts on three platforms counts as one brand, not three. This makes Metricool’s pricing more favorable for agencies than tools that charge per connected account.

    Is the Metricool API included in all paid plans?

    No — API access is a feature of higher-tier plans, typically Advanced and above. If programmatic access to Metricool’s scheduling functionality is important for your operation, verify that the plan you’re considering includes API access before committing. It’s the most common feature oversight when choosing a plan tier.

    Can you downgrade a Metricool plan?

    Yes, plan changes are available through the Metricool account settings. Downgrading mid-billing-cycle typically takes effect at the next renewal date. If you’re on annual billing and need to downgrade, contact Metricool support — the process and any credit handling will depend on how far into the billing cycle you are.

    Is Metricool cheaper than Hootsuite or Buffer?

    For comparable feature access, generally yes. Metricool’s advanced plan provides scheduling, analytics, multi-brand management, and API access at a price point below Hootsuite’s equivalent tiers. Buffer is closer in price to Metricool but lighter on analytics depth. The cost comparison depends on which features you actually need — run the comparison against the specific features your operation requires rather than headline plan prices.

  • Metricool Review 2026: The Social Media Scheduler Most People Haven’t Heard Of

    Metricool is the best social media scheduling tool most businesses haven’t tried. It’s not as well-known as Hootsuite or Buffer, it doesn’t have a massive marketing budget, and it’s not the default recommendation in every “best social media tools” roundup. What it does have is a genuinely well-built feature set, fair pricing, and an API that actually works — which is why we use it for multi-brand social scheduling across every client operation we run.

    This review is written from daily use, not a trial account. We manage multiple brands in Metricool, use the API for automated publishing, and run the Canva-to-Metricool pipeline for visual content. Here’s the honest assessment.

    What is Metricool? Metricool is a social media management platform that combines scheduling, analytics, and competitor analysis in one tool. It supports major platforms including Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, Twitter/X, TikTok, Pinterest, Google Business Profile, YouTube, and Twitch. Unlike tools focused on one platform or one use case, Metricool is designed for operators managing multiple brands or accounts who need scheduling, analytics, and performance data in a single dashboard.

    What Metricool Does Well

    Multi-brand management. Metricool’s workspace structure is built for managing multiple brands from one account. Each brand gets its own connected accounts, content calendar, and analytics. Switching between brands is seamless. For agencies or operators running content across multiple clients or business lines, this is the feature that matters most — and Metricool handles it more cleanly than most competitors at its price point.

    The content planner. Metricool’s visual planner is the best scheduling interface we’ve used. Drag-and-drop across platforms, a week or month view, time-slot recommendations based on historical performance, and a clean preview of how posts will render on each platform. It’s fast to use once you’re familiar with it, and the learning curve is shorter than Hootsuite or Sprout Social.

    Analytics depth. The analytics layer is genuinely useful — not just vanity metrics but engagement rate trends, best posting times, follower growth, reach and impressions, and competitor benchmarking. For a tool at this price point, the analytics are unusually comprehensive.

    Google Business Profile scheduling. Most social scheduling tools ignore GBP or treat it as an afterthought. Metricool supports GBP post scheduling natively, which matters for local businesses and agencies managing local SEO alongside social content.

    The API. Metricool has a documented REST API that supports creating draft posts, managing scheduled content, and pulling analytics data programmatically. We use it for automated content scheduling from our publishing pipeline. The API works reliably and the documentation is adequate. This is not a feature most competitors offer at Metricool’s price tier.

    Where Metricool Falls Short

    Instagram limitations. Like most third-party schedulers, Metricool’s Instagram integration is constrained by Meta’s API. Carousel posts, Reels, and Stories have varying levels of automation support — some require a mobile notification to complete the publish rather than posting fully automatically. This is an Instagram API limitation, not a Metricool problem, but it’s worth knowing before you assume all Instagram content schedules completely hands-off.

    Team collaboration features. For solo operators and small teams, Metricool’s collaboration tools are adequate. For larger agencies needing approval workflows, content review stages, and granular team permissions, the collaboration layer is thinner than purpose-built agency tools. This is improving with each version but is still a weak point relative to enterprise social management platforms.

    Content library. Metricool doesn’t have a robust media library for storing and reusing assets. You upload content per-post rather than pulling from a stored asset library. For high-volume operations posting similar content types repeatedly, this creates friction that a better asset management layer would eliminate.

    Pricing Honesty

    Metricool’s free plan is genuinely useful for a single brand — not the crippled trial version some tools offer. The paid plans scale reasonably by the number of brands and team members. For an agency managing five or more brands, the monthly cost is competitive with Hootsuite and Buffer while offering comparable or better features in most categories.

    The pricing page is occasionally confusing because features are split across plan tiers in ways that aren’t always intuitive. The API access, in particular, requires a higher plan tier than you might expect. Read the feature matrix carefully before committing to a plan.

    Who Should Use Metricool

    Metricool is the right choice for: content agencies managing multiple client social accounts, solo operators running personal brand and business accounts simultaneously, local businesses that need GBP scheduling alongside social, and anyone who wants API access for automated publishing without paying enterprise prices.

    It’s probably not the right choice for: large enterprise teams needing sophisticated approval workflows, operations focused almost entirely on Instagram where native tools or Later may be better optimized, or businesses that need deep social listening and monitoring features.

    Want this set up for your business?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social media operations — the pipeline, the scheduling system, and the analytics workflow.

    Tygart Media manages social scheduling across multiple brands using Metricool daily. We know what the tool actually does and what it doesn’t.

    See the social media setup service →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Metricool good for agencies?

    Yes, particularly for small to mid-size agencies managing multiple client brands. The multi-brand workspace structure, combined with per-brand analytics and a capable scheduling interface, makes it well-suited for agency social management. The API is a meaningful advantage for agencies running automated or high-volume publishing workflows.

    How does Metricool compare to Hootsuite?

    Metricool is generally less expensive than Hootsuite for comparable feature sets, with a cleaner interface and better API documentation. Hootsuite has stronger enterprise features — more sophisticated team management, deeper integrations, and more robust social listening. For most small agencies and solo operators, Metricool provides comparable scheduling and analytics capability at a lower price point.

    Does Metricool post automatically or does it require manual confirmation?

    Most platform integrations support fully automatic posting — the post publishes at the scheduled time without any action required. Instagram is the exception: some content types (particularly Reels and Stories) may require a mobile push notification to complete the publish, due to Meta API limitations. Direct publishing for standard Instagram feed posts works automatically on supported plan tiers.

    Is Metricool’s free plan worth using?

    For a single brand with modest scheduling needs, yes — Metricool’s free plan is one of the more capable free tiers in social scheduling. It includes scheduling for multiple platforms, basic analytics, and the visual planner. The limitations kick in around brand count, post volume per month, and access to advanced analytics and API features.

  • Metricool vs Later 2026: Which Social Scheduler Wins for Your Operation?

    Metricool and Later compete for similar audiences but solve different primary problems. Later built its reputation on Instagram scheduling and visual content planning. Metricool built its reputation on multi-platform breadth and multi-brand management. If Instagram is your primary platform, the comparison is close. If you’re managing across LinkedIn, Facebook, GBP, and Instagram simultaneously, it isn’t.

    Metricool vs Later in brief. Later is stronger for Instagram-first operations — the visual feed preview, link-in-bio tool, and Instagram-specific analytics are more developed than Metricool’s. Metricool is stronger for multi-platform operations — Google Business Profile scheduling, API access, and multi-brand management at scale are capabilities Later doesn’t match. For agencies managing clients across multiple platforms including GBP, Metricool wins. For content creators or brands focused primarily on Instagram and TikTok, Later is worth serious consideration.

    Where Later Wins

    Instagram experience. Later was built for Instagram first. The visual feed preview — seeing how your grid will look before posts go live — is genuinely useful for brands where Instagram aesthetic coherence matters. Later’s link-in-bio tool, Instagram story scheduling, and Instagram-specific analytics are more developed than what Metricool offers for the same platform.

    Visual content planning. Later’s content calendar has a stronger visual emphasis — dragging images into slots and seeing the visual composition of upcoming content is cleaner in Later than in Metricool. For teams where the visual design of content is as important as the scheduling logistics, Later’s interface is more purpose-built for that workflow.

    Creator-focused features. Later has leaned into features for individual creators and influencer marketing — UGC management, shoppable posts, creator analytics. If those use cases are relevant, Later has more depth.

    Where Metricool Wins

    Google Business Profile. Later does not support GBP scheduling. Metricool does, natively and reliably. For any agency managing local businesses where GBP posts are part of the social strategy, this is a decisive difference.

    Multi-brand economics. Later’s pricing scales in ways that make managing large numbers of brands expensive. Metricool’s plan-based pricing makes a 24-brand operation economically viable. For agencies managing ten or more client accounts, the cost difference is significant.

    API access. Metricool’s API allows programmatic scheduling across all supported platforms. Later’s API is more limited and less suited to the kind of multi-brand automated workflows that Metricool handles cleanly.

    LinkedIn support. Metricool’s LinkedIn scheduling and analytics are stronger than Later’s. For B2B-focused clients where LinkedIn is a primary channel, Metricool is the better fit.

    The Deciding Question

    One question determines which tool is right: is your operation Instagram-first, or platform-agnostic across multiple networks including GBP and LinkedIn?

    If Instagram is the primary or only platform, and visual grid planning and Instagram-specific features matter, Later is worth serious consideration. If you’re managing across LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and GBP simultaneously — especially for local or B2B clients — Metricool is the more complete tool for that workload.

    Want your social scheduling set up properly?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social operations — the pipeline, the API integration, and the scheduling system that runs on autopilot.

    Tygart Media manages 24 brands in Metricool across LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Google Business Profile. We know this tool at a level most tutorials don’t reach.

    Email Will directly →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Does Later support Google Business Profile?

    As of 2026, Later does not support Google Business Profile scheduling. Metricool does, natively. For agencies managing local businesses where GBP posts are part of the content strategy, this is a significant difference in capability.

    Is Later or Metricool better for Instagram?

    Later is better for Instagram-specific features — visual feed preview, link-in-bio tool, Instagram-first analytics, and story scheduling. Metricool supports Instagram scheduling reliably but without the same depth of Instagram-specific tooling. If Instagram is your primary platform, Later’s additional features are worth the consideration. If Instagram is one of several platforms you manage, Metricool’s broader multi-platform capability may be more valuable overall.

    Which is cheaper, Metricool or Later?

    For single-brand or small operations, the pricing is comparable. For multi-brand agencies, Metricool’s plan-based pricing is typically cheaper than Later’s per-account scaling. The comparison depends heavily on how many accounts you’re managing and which plan tiers you’re comparing.

  • Metricool vs Hootsuite vs Buffer 2026: Which One for Your Agency?

    Metricool, Hootsuite, and Buffer solve similar problems for different operations. All three schedule social media posts. All three have analytics. All three support multiple accounts. The differences that actually matter in daily use are in pricing model, API capability, platform support, and what breaks when you’re managing volume.

    We use Metricool for 24 brands. Here’s the honest comparison for an agency or multi-brand operator deciding between them.

    The short version. Metricool wins on price and Google Business Profile support. Hootsuite wins on enterprise team collaboration and integrations. Buffer wins on simplicity and clean UX for smaller operations. For multi-brand agencies running content at volume with API integration needs, Metricool is the strongest choice. For large teams with complex approval workflows, Hootsuite. For small teams wanting the simplest possible interface, Buffer.

    Pricing: Where the Gap Is Largest

    Metricool’s plan-based pricing — pay for the tier, connect the brands the tier allows — is meaningfully cheaper than Hootsuite or Buffer for multi-brand operations. Hootsuite charges per managed account in ways that compound quickly at scale. Buffer’s per-channel pricing follows the same logic. An agency managing twenty brands pays significantly more on Hootsuite or Buffer than on Metricool Advanced or Agency for equivalent functionality.

    The pricing gap closes for smaller operations. Managing three brands, the difference is less dramatic. Managing twenty, Metricool’s economics are substantially better.

    Google Business Profile: Metricool’s Distinctive Edge

    Both Hootsuite and Buffer have historically treated GBP scheduling as an afterthought or an add-on. Metricool includes it natively and makes it genuinely functional. For any agency managing local businesses where GBP visibility matters — contractors, restaurants, service businesses — GBP scheduling in Metricool is a real operational advantage that the other two don’t match cleanly.

    API Access: Metricool vs the Others

    All three expose APIs. Metricool’s API is available on Advanced and higher, uses straightforward token authentication, and works reliably for programmatic scheduling across all supported platforms. Hootsuite’s API is more powerful for enterprise use cases — webhooks, approval workflows, more complex integrations — but requires higher plan tiers and more setup. Buffer’s API is clean and well-documented for basic scheduling but less capable for complex multi-brand programmatic workflows.

    For AI-native operations where Claude or another tool schedules posts via API, Metricool’s API is the most practical starting point. The authentication model is simple, the endpoints are consistent, and the multi-brand architecture (one token, multiple blogIds) maps cleanly to programmatic workflows.

    Analytics: Depth vs Accessibility

    Hootsuite has the deepest analytics of the three — better competitive benchmarking, more sophisticated reporting, better audience demographic data. It’s the right choice if analytics reporting is a primary client deliverable. Metricool’s analytics are genuinely useful for content performance monitoring but don’t match Hootsuite’s depth for enterprise reporting. Buffer’s analytics are the most accessible but the least comprehensive.

    For most small to mid-size agencies, Metricool’s analytics — post performance, best times to post, engagement trends — cover the operational intelligence needed. The step up to Hootsuite’s analytics depth is worth it only if clients specifically require that reporting level.

    Team Collaboration

    Hootsuite’s team collaboration features — approval workflows, content libraries, team member roles, client approval portals — are more mature than Metricool’s. If your agency has a team where multiple people need to touch content before it publishes, and where client approval is a formal step, Hootsuite’s collaboration architecture is better suited. Metricool’s team features work for small teams but don’t match the enterprise collaboration workflow.

    Buffer’s collaboration is simple and functional for small teams. Not as comprehensive as Hootsuite, but not as complex either.

    What We’d Recommend for Different Operations

    Multi-brand agency managing ten or more clients, needs API access, cares about GBP scheduling, doesn’t need enterprise approval workflows: Metricool. Large team with complex approval workflows, enterprise reporting requirements, deep third-party integrations: Hootsuite. Small team or solo operator managing a handful of accounts who wants the simplest possible interface without overwhelming features: Buffer.

    Want your social scheduling set up properly?

    We set up and run Metricool for multi-brand social operations — the pipeline, the API integration, and the scheduling system that runs on autopilot.

    Tygart Media manages 24 brands in Metricool across LinkedIn, Facebook, Instagram, and Google Business Profile. We know this tool at a level most tutorials don’t reach.

    Email Will directly →

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Is Metricool better than Hootsuite for agencies?

    For most small to mid-size agencies managing multiple client brands without complex team approval workflows, yes — Metricool is better value and includes Google Business Profile scheduling that Hootsuite charges extra for or handles less cleanly. For large agencies with enterprise clients requiring sophisticated approval workflows, content libraries, and deep analytics reporting, Hootsuite’s additional capability may justify the higher cost.

    Does Buffer support Google Business Profile?

    Buffer’s GBP support has been inconsistent — it’s been available, removed, and re-added as platform policies changed. Metricool’s GBP scheduling is more reliably maintained. For any operation where GBP scheduling is an ongoing requirement, Metricool is the safer choice.

    Which tool has the best analytics — Metricool, Hootsuite, or Buffer?

    Hootsuite has the deepest analytics of the three, with competitive benchmarking, audience demographics, and sophisticated custom reporting. Metricool’s analytics are strong for content performance monitoring — post-level data, best times to post, engagement trends — but don’t match Hootsuite’s reporting depth. Buffer has the most accessible analytics but the least comprehensive. The right choice depends on whether analytics reporting is a primary deliverable or a supporting operational tool.