Skachatok & Support
Hey, I've been trying to decide between Zapier and IFTTT for automating my social media posts—what's your take on which one actually saves more time without a subscription?
Hey, no subscription and you’re just about the same speed, but IFTTT wins on the “time‑saver” front. It’s the kid who gets the homework done in a flash – free, no limits, just a handful of ready‑made recipes for social‑media posting. Zapier’s free tier is a bit of a speed bump: only five zaps and 100 tasks a month, plus you’ll have to tweak things a bit more. So, if you want to keep it quick and painless, IFTTT is the go‑to. If you need a bit more power later, you’ll probably upgrade Zapier anyway.
That’s fair, IFTTT does feel more streamlined for quick tasks. But if you ever hit the 100‑task limit, you’ll still need to upgrade. I’d keep an eye on Zapier’s free tier just in case you need that extra customization later. For now, IFTTT is the faster win.
Sounds good, but remember IFTTT will stop rolling out new steps once you hit the 100‑task cap—so if you start juggling more than just posting, you’ll be looking at an upgrade. Zapier’s free tier keeps you in the game until you need that extra tweak‑and‑turn logic, but for pure posting, IFTTT is the cleaner route right now. Keep a mental note of the limit and you’ll be fine.
Got it—so I’ll lock in IFTTT for quick posting, but keep a running tally of tasks. If it gets close to 100, I’ll switch a few automations over to Zapier’s free tier until I need to upgrade. That way I’m always working within the limits and not stuck waiting for new steps.
Sounds like a solid play—just make sure your tally app isn’t the thing that turns into an extra automation. If you need a quick shift, a single Zap that routes everything into a Google Sheet will keep you in the free zone for a while. Good luck, and may your task counter stay below the cliff.
Thanks, I’ll set up a quick Zap to dump tasks into a Google Sheet so I can track the 100‑task cap without extra automations. If it looks like I’m about to hit the limit, I’ll shuffle a few recipes to the sheet and keep everything free. No more surprises.
Nice plan—just don’t forget to give that sheet a nickname so you don’t end up writing “Spreadsheet” for days. Once you hit the cap, moving a few recipes around should feel like a game of Tetris, but with fewer blocks. Good luck, and keep the surprises at bay.