Buffer Essentials costs $36/month for six channels. Hootsuite Professional costs $99/month for ten. After 30 days and 184 posts on Buffer, and 24 days and 91 posts on Hootsuite, here’s exactly what that $63/month gap buys — and who should pay it.
Last tested: April 2026 · ~2,900 words · 12 min read
Buffer’s queue view (left, Essentials) and Hootsuite’s Publisher (right, Professional) during our testing periods. Buffer’s compose-to-schedule flow averaged 18 seconds; Hootsuite’s Composer workflow averaged 41 seconds on the same task.
Quick verdict
Buffer costs $36/month. Hootsuite costs $99/month. Both let you schedule social posts. That’s the entire debate for most freelancers — and most of the time, the answer is Buffer. But “most of the time” isn’t always, and the remaining cases are specific enough to name.
We spent 30 days scheduling 184 posts across four client accounts on Buffer Essentials, then ran a parallel 24-day test on Hootsuite Professional covering 91 posts and three client social inboxes. Both tests used the same client mix: a B2B SaaS founder, a freelance designer, an indie author, and a small e-commerce shop. Same channels (LinkedIn, X, Instagram, Facebook, Threads), same content types, different tools.
The conclusion isn’t that one tool is better. It’s that they’re built for different scale points, and paying for the wrong one is a common mistake in both directions.
How we tested both tools
The Buffer test ran a full 30-day cycle across four clients, tracking every post, every AI prompt, and the end-to-end time to schedule a single post from a blank composer. The Hootsuite test ran 24 days with the same client mix, focusing specifically on the features Buffer doesn’t have — analytics, social inbox management, TikTok auto-posting, and team approval workflows — to understand what the $63/month gap actually funds.
Key Findings
- Buffer’s compose-to-schedule time: 18 seconds average. Hootsuite’s same workflow: 41 seconds — 128% slower due to the multi-step Composer UI.
- Buffer reliability: 182/184 posts on time (99%). Hootsuite: 88/91 on time (97%) — 3 posts failed during a platform API outage on March 7.
- AI content: Buffer’s Assistant produced usable output in 81% of prompts. Hootsuite’s OwlyWriter: 77% — both are capable, neither is exceptional.
- Hootsuite’s analytics: We generated 8 cross-channel performance reports in 24 days with real follower-growth attribution — impossible on Buffer Essentials without a third-party tool.
- At $36/mo (Buffer) vs $99/mo (Hootsuite), a solo freelancer saves $756/year choosing Buffer for a 6-channel stack.
Where Buffer wins
The price difference is not marketing — it’s real money
$63/month doesn’t sound dramatic. But $63/month is $756/year — enough to cover most freelancers’ Canva Pro subscription, a month of Grammarly Business, or half a year of Notion. For a one-person operation managing 2-6 social channels for clients, Buffer Essentials is simply the cheapest defensible option in the tier-1 scheduler market.
Buffer’s per-channel model also maps to how freelancers actually work. If you pick up a new client with two Instagram accounts, you add two channels at $6 each — $12/month more, no plan upgrade negotiation. Hootsuite’s $99/month flat rate looks like a deal at 10 channels but is actively wasteful for freelancers who rarely fill all ten. Three months into the year, when you’ve lost one client and cut back to five channels, you’re still paying $99 on Hootsuite. On Buffer you’re paying $30.
The simplest scheduling workflow in the category
Buffer’s queue view is a vertical list of scheduled posts per channel. You click “Add post,” type or paste content, pick a time, and it’s done. We timed the end-to-end workflow 20 times across the testing period — from clicking “new post” to seeing the confirmation screen. The average was 18 seconds.
The same workflow on Hootsuite took 41 seconds average — a 128% increase. This isn’t a trivial complaint. Hootsuite’s Composer is a legacy interface that hasn’t been redesigned in years; it requires you to select the network first, then compose, then navigate through a “Preview” step before scheduling. For a freelancer scheduling 20-30 posts a week, those extra 23 seconds per post add up to roughly 10 extra minutes of weekly friction, every week, forever.
“Buffer’s UI is the scheduling equivalent of a sharp knife. It does one thing, immediately, without ceremony. Hootsuite is a Swiss Army knife — impressively featured, occasionally clunky, always heavier than you need it to be.”
Reliability that holds up under real client conditions
Over 184 posts in 30 days, Buffer published 182 on time. The two failures were both Instagram posts that hit Meta’s rate limiter during a period of unusually high platform traffic on March 28 — neither was a Buffer-side failure. The tool itself never dropped a post.
Hootsuite’s 97% rate (88/91) is also good — better than most schedulers we’ve used. The three missed posts were during a documented Hootsuite API outage on March 7, which affected publishing across all plans. Over a full year of typical use, both tools will deliver near-identical reliability. Buffer’s slight edge here is not a reason to choose it over Hootsuite; it’s a reason not to worry about it when choosing Buffer for price reasons.
Where Hootsuite wins
TikTok auto-posting: the clearest gap
Buffer still can’t auto-post TikTok videos in 2026. When you schedule a TikTok on Buffer, you receive a push notification on your phone at the scheduled time, open the TikTok app, and manually confirm the post. For one TikTok a week, this is mildly annoying. For daily TikTok posting across multiple clients — which is a standard client deliverable in 2026 — it’s a deal-breaker.
Hootsuite auto-posts TikToks via the official API, including Reels-style short-form video. We scheduled and auto-published nine TikTok videos during our 24-day test, none of which required manual intervention. Later, SocialBee, and Loomly all offer the same auto-posting. Buffer’s official position cites TikTok API restrictions, but that explanation doesn’t hold when every major competitor has solved the same problem.
Analytics you can actually send to clients
Buffer Essentials shows you follower counts, likes, comments, and shares. That’s it. No growth attribution by post, no best-time recommendations, no comparative benchmarks, no exportable reports. For freelancers who bill clients on vanity metrics or just want to confirm posts went out, that’s fine.
Hootsuite Professional includes full analytics across all connected channels. We generated eight client performance reports during the 24-day test — cross-channel engagement summaries, follower growth curves, and best-performing post breakdowns. The reports are exportable as PDFs and clean enough to drop directly into a client deliverable without reformatting. If your client retainer includes monthly performance reporting, this alone is worth assessing against the cost difference.
Social inbox management that Buffer doesn’t have
Hootsuite’s Streams view pulls DMs, comments, and mentions from all connected channels into a single inbox. We managed three client social inboxes — responding to comments, flagging DMs, and tracking brand mentions — without leaving Hootsuite’s dashboard. It’s not perfect (Facebook’s DM threading is still messy in Hootsuite), but it’s functional enough to replace most of what a freelancer would otherwise open individual platform apps to do.
Buffer has no inbox feature at all. If a client asks you to monitor and respond to comments as part of their social package, you’re opening every platform natively. That’s not a limitation Buffer hides — it’s positioned as a scheduler, not a community management tool — but it’s worth understanding before you commit to a six-month retainer that includes engagement work.
Pricing side by side
Full feature comparison
| Feature | Buffer | Hootsuite |
|---|---|---|
| Entry price | $6/channel/mo | $99/month flat |
| True cost (6 channels) | $36/month | $99/month |
| Auto-post TikTok video | Manual push only | Yes, via API |
| AI content assistant | Built-in (81% usable) | OwlyWriter (77% usable) |
| Scheduling UI speed | 18 sec avg (tested) | 41 sec avg (tested) |
| Best-time-to-post | Team plan only ($12/ch) | Included |
| Analytics depth | Surface-level only | Full + exportable reports |
| Social inbox (DMs/comments) | Not available | Yes (Streams view) |
| Content recycling | No | Limited |
| Team approval workflows | Team plan ($12/ch) | Included in Professional |
| Free plan | 3 channels, 10 posts, no time limit | Trial only |
| Publishing reliability | 99% (182/184 in 30 days) | 97% (88/91 in 24 days) |
| Best for | Solo freelancers, 2-6 channels, simple scheduling | Agencies, TikTok clients, analytics reporting |
Who should choose which
The math that changes the answer: At seven channels, Buffer Essentials costs $42/month. At eight, it’s $48. At nine channels, you’re at $54 — $45/month less than Hootsuite, but the gap is narrowing fast. If you’re managing 10 or more channels consistently, Hootsuite’s flat-rate $99 becomes more efficient than Buffer’s per-channel billing. That’s the ceiling where Buffer’s pricing advantage inverts.
Pros and cons for each
✅ Buffer — what we liked
- Cheapest tier-1 scheduler on the market in 2026
- 99% posting reliability across 184 posts in 30 days
- Fastest scheduling UI we’ve tested — 18 seconds per post
- Per-channel pricing scales naturally with client mix
- Genuine free plan with no time limit
- AI Assistant produces usable output for repurposing (81%)
❌ Buffer — what frustrated us
- TikTok still requires manual push — only major scheduler with this gap
- Analytics on Essentials are basic; reporting requires an upgrade or third tool
- No social inbox: DMs and comments require opening each platform
- Best-time-to-post hidden behind Team plan at $12/channel
- Per-channel cost becomes uncompetitive past 8-9 channels
✅ Hootsuite — what we liked
- TikTok auto-posting works reliably — 9/9 auto-published during our test
- Exportable analytics reports clean enough for direct client delivery
- Streams inbox handles DMs and comments across all channels in one view
- Best-time-to-post recommendations on base plan
- 10 channels included at flat rate — good value for larger accounts
❌ Hootsuite — what frustrated us
- $99/month is 2.75x Buffer’s cost for the same 6-channel setup
- Composer UI is slow — 41 seconds avg per post vs 18 on Buffer
- Flat-rate pricing punishes freelancers with under 6 channels
- OwlyWriter AI slightly weaker than Buffer’s Assistant (77% vs 81% usable)
- No free plan — you have to pay to evaluate it with real client content
FAQ
Final verdict
Buffer and Hootsuite solve the same core problem — getting posts out reliably across multiple social channels — but they’re built for different operators at different scale points. The $63/month gap between them isn’t arbitrary; it reflects real feature differences that matter to specific freelancer workflows and are meaningless to others.
Buffer is the right choice for the majority of solo freelancers: anyone managing 2-8 channels for 1-4 clients who doesn’t need daily TikTok auto-posting or exportable client analytics. At $36/month for six channels, it’s the cheapest tool in the tier-1 category, it’s faster to use than anything we’ve tested, and its 99% reliability in our 30-day test is simply not a concern. For this profile, paying $99/month for Hootsuite is paying $756/year for features you won’t use.
Hootsuite earns its premium for one type of freelancer: anyone whose client retainers include TikTok video publishing, monthly analytics reports, or social DM management. If one or more of those applies to your actual deliverables, the analytics alone can save enough in third-party tool costs to close most of the price gap. For these use cases, Hootsuite isn’t overpriced — it’s the right tool at the right tier.
Sources
Buffer pricing verified from buffer.com/pricing on April 24, 2026. Hootsuite pricing verified from hootsuite.com/plans on April 24, 2026. Buffer testing conducted March 25–April 24, 2026 on a paid Essentials account. Hootsuite testing conducted February 26–March 21, 2026 on a paid Professional account. All post counts, timing measurements, and reliability figures are from our own tracking.

Alex has been reviewing productivity and AI software since 2021. Over 5 years of testing, Alex has evaluated 80+ tools across writing, SEO, video, scheduling, and automation categories — always on paid plans, always on real projects. Read our full review methodology →
📋 This comparison is part of our Best AI Tools for Freelancers 2026 roundup — see all tested tools.