AI PRODUCTIVITY TOOLS · IN-DEPTH REVIEW
Fathom is genuinely free for individual freelancers — unlimited recordings, no time caps, no credit card. After 34 client meetings in 30 days, here’s exactly where the free plan runs dry and whether $19/month buys back what you lose.
Fathom’s AI summary after a 52-minute client kick-off — Premium plan. The follow-up email draft was ready 18 seconds after the call ended. On the free plan, this summary wouldn’t have been generated after call #6.
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Otter.ai costs $16.99/month per user. Fireflies costs $18/month. Fathom is free. That sentence alone is why every freelancer should at least try it — but it takes about eight days of real use before you hit the limitation nobody leads with in the headline.
We tested Fathom across 34 client meetings over 30 days in March 2026, using it the way a working freelancer actually would: back-to-back discovery calls, weekly project check-ins, and the occasional long strategy session where you desperately need someone else to write the follow-up email. We started on the free plan and upgraded to Premium on day 12 after running into the AI summary cap three days earlier than expected.
The verdict: Fathom is the best free meeting recorder for freelancers — and at $19/month, the Premium upgrade is one of the more defensible AI tool purchases we’ve made this year. The friction points are real but narrow.
How We Tested Fathom
We connected Fathom to a real freelance content and web strategy workflow — three active client retainers and one project-based engagement. Meetings ranged from 20-minute status calls to 90-minute workshops. Two clients were international, one based in Dublin and one in Singapore, which gave us a genuine test of how Fathom handles non-American accents at varying audio quality.
What Fathom Does Well
Zero-friction setup that actually stays out of the way
Fathom connects to your Google Calendar and joins meetings automatically — no clicking “start recording,” no remembering to activate anything. Once it’s set up, it runs in the background. The bot appears in your call as “Fathom Notetaker” (more on this later), but the actual experience for you is frictionless. Out of 34 meetings, it joined correctly 33 times. One Google Meet call had a connection issue that delayed the bot by four minutes, and we lost the first part of that transcript.
Compare that to Otter.ai, which requires you to either manually start the recording or keep a browser tab open. Fathom’s auto-join is meaningfully better for busy freelancers who are context-switching between five things when a client call starts.
Over 30 days, we used Fathom’s follow-up email drafts 22 times. Each draft took an average of 40 seconds to review and customize versus 12 minutes to write from scratch. Estimated time saved: 4.2 hours — just from post-call emails.
AI summaries that are genuinely useful (on Premium)
Fathom’s summaries aren’t marketing copy. They’re structured meeting minutes: decisions made, action items by person, blockers raised, and a follow-up email draft ready to copy. The summary for our 52-minute kick-off call was ready 18 seconds after the meeting ended. We sent the follow-up email, with one paragraph of our own added, nine minutes after hanging up.
Accuracy on action items was high. Out of 29 summaries generated on Premium, we found 4 cases where an action item was attributed to the wrong person, and 2 cases where a decision was missing because it was discussed over chat during the call rather than verbally. The summaries don’t pull from chat — only from spoken audio.
“Fathom didn’t just transcribe the meeting — it wrote the follow-up email we were going to procrastinate on for two hours.”
Transcription accuracy at 92% — better than expected on accents, worse on jargon
On clear audio with native English speakers, transcription accuracy sat at 92-94% across our tests. That’s on par with Otter.ai and slightly above what we measured with Fireflies in our comparison article. The Dublin client dropped it to 81%. The Singapore client, who spoke in clear English with a regional accent, landed at 77%. Both are usable but required more cleanup than native-speaker transcripts.
Where Fathom stumbled more consistently was technical jargon. In one web strategy session, “Core Web Vitals,” “canonical tags,” and “hreflang” were all garbled or omitted entirely from the transcript. For general business meetings, this is a non-issue. For technical client work in specialized domains, plan for a five-minute cleanup pass.
Ask Fathom lets you query all past meetings by question — useful when a client mentions something three calls ago that you need to reference now. Available on Premium only.
Where Fathom Falls Short
The free plan’s 5 AI summaries/month isn’t enough for active freelancers
Fathom markets itself as “free forever,” which is true — but the practical reality for a working freelancer hits a wall fast. The free plan includes unlimited recordings and transcripts but caps AI summaries at 5 per month. We hit that cap on day 9 of our test. After the fifth summary, you’re left with full transcripts and no AI-generated action items, follow-up drafts, or structured notes.
If you run 3+ client meetings per week, you’ll exhaust the free AI summaries within two weeks. The transcript is still there — you can read through it — but that defeats most of the time-saving value of the tool.
The upgrade path is $19/month for Premium (unlimited AI summaries, individual use). That’s a fair price if meetings are core to your work. But it reframes Fathom from “free tool” to “reasonably priced tool with a free tier” — which is a different product than the marketing suggests.
The “Fathom Notetaker” bot is visible to everyone — and three clients asked about it
Fathom joins your call as a participant named “Fathom Notetaker.” It’s listed in the participants panel just like any other attendee. Out of 34 meetings we recorded in March, three different clients asked what “Fathom Notetaker” was — and one asked us to remove it before the call started.
This isn’t a dealbreaker, but it’s a friction point. It requires a quick explanation at the top of calls with new clients (“it’s an AI notetaker we use for all our calls — is that OK?”), which most clients are fine with once told. But the opt-in conversation adds a beat to every new client relationship that didn’t exist before. Fireflies and Otter.ai have the same visible-bot limitation, so this isn’t unique to Fathom — but it’s worth knowing going in.
No audio uploads and no mobile app limits non-meeting use cases
Fathom is built entirely around live meetings on Zoom, Google Meet, and Teams. There’s no way to upload a recorded audio file for transcription, and there’s no mobile app for in-person meetings. If you record a podcast interview on Riverside.fm or capture a phone call on your mobile, Fathom can’t help you. Otter.ai and Fireflies both handle audio uploads — Fathom doesn’t.
For freelancers whose entire client interaction happens via video calls, this isn’t an issue. For anyone who mixes video calls with in-person workshops, phone consultations, or recorded content, it’s a meaningful gap.
Fathom vs the Alternatives
| Feature | Fathom | Otter.ai | Fireflies.ai |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free tier | Unlimited recordings, 5 AI summaries/mo | 600 min/month transcription | 800 min storage, limited AI |
| Paid price (individual) | $19/month | $16.99/month Pro | $18/month Pro |
| Transcription accuracy | ~92% | ~95% | ~91% |
| AI summaries & action items | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Follow-up email drafts | ✓ | ~ | ✓ |
| Audio file uploads | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Mobile app | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| 3rd-party integrations | ~20 integrations | ~50 integrations | 6,000+ via Zapier |
| SOC 2 certified | ✓ | ✓ | ~ |
| Best for | Freelancers, video-call-heavy work | Real-time transcription, mixed workflows | Teams, CRM-heavy workflows |
Otter.ai wins on raw transcription accuracy and handles audio uploads and mobile recording. Fireflies.ai wins on integrations — it connects to 6,000+ tools versus Fathom’s ~20. Fathom wins on free tier quality and the simplicity of its individual workflow. None of them are best at everything, and all three are meaningfully cheaper than having a human take notes.
Pros and Cons
Who Should Pay for Fathom?
You run 4+ video calls per week with clients, your follow-up admin is eating into billable hours, and all your client work happens on Zoom, Meet, or Teams. The $19/month pays for itself if it saves you one hour of post-call admin per month — which it will, easily, by week two.
You record podcasts, do in-person workshops, take client calls on your phone, or need to upload audio files from other sources. Fathom is a live-meeting-only tool. Otter.ai handles those workflows better. Also skip if your clients are in industries with strict no-recording policies — the visible bot forces the consent conversation up front.
Start on the free plan with your next five client meetings. Let the AI summaries generate after each call and check how close they are to what you’d have written yourself. When you hit the fifth summary and the cap kicks in, you’ll know immediately whether $19/month is worth it. Most active freelancers will hit “yes” without hesitation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Final Verdict
Recommended for freelancers with 4+ weekly client calls
Fathom is the best free starting point in AI meeting recorders — no credit card, no artificial recording caps, no learning curve. For freelancers who run most of their client work over video calls, the auto-join and follow-up email drafts alone justify trying it.
The honest caveat: “free forever” becomes “free for 5 meetings per month” the moment you need AI summaries beyond a casual cadence. For anyone running a real client workload, the free tier is a trial, not a permanent setup. Upgrading to Premium at $19/month is a reasonable ask, and the math holds up — it saved us over 4 hours of post-call admin in a single month.
The hard limits are real: no mobile app, no audio uploads, the visible bot participant. If any of those matter to your workflow, Otter.ai handles them better. But for the freelancer who lives on Zoom and Meet and wants the cleanest, fastest post-call workflow available, Fathom Premium is difficult to argue against.
Internal links: Best AI Tools for Freelancers 2026