Comparison

GravityWrite vs Hypertxt in 2026: content breadth vs GEO-first drafting

One tool bundles blog writing, images, video, and social scheduling under a credit pool. The other narrows in on one job: producing articles built to rank on Google and get cited in AI answers, sourced from your own Search Console data.

Updated July 4, 2026
GravityWrite
Hypertxt
Key takeaways
  • GravityWrite starts at $8/month for 500 credits (about 15 blogs) and also covers image generation, video, and social scheduling; Hypertxt starts at $19/month for 10 articles and does not touch images or social at all.
  • Hypertxt connects directly to Google Search Console to base content ideas on your own query and CTR data, something GravityWrite has no equivalent for.
  • Hypertxt explicitly structures drafts for citation in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews as well as traditional rankings; GravityWrite's SEO angle stops at keyword-tuned headlines and meta descriptions.
  • GravityWrite includes a built-in social media scheduler (5 accounts on Plus, 30 on Pro) and an AI website builder on every paid plan; Hypertxt has neither.
  • Hypertxt offers a one-time $89 BYOK plan for unlimited article generation using your own OpenAI, Anthropic, Exa, and DataForSEO keys; GravityWrite has no equivalent, only its shared monthly credit pool.
  • Both tools publish directly to WordPress; Hypertxt adds Ghost and custom webhooks, while GravityWrite's CMS publishing is limited to its social scheduler, with blog content needing manual copy-paste to WordPress.
  • Neither tool tracks whether the content it produces actually gets cited by AI engines after publishing; both require a separate AI visibility tool to close that loop.

GravityWrite and Hypertxt both write blog content, but they were not built to solve the same problem. GravityWrite is a credit-based bundle covering blogs, images, video, social scheduling, and a website builder, aimed at solo creators who want one subscription instead of five. Hypertxt does one thing: it pulls your real Google Search Console data, ingests your brand context, and produces multi-stage drafts engineered to earn both a Google ranking and a citation in ChatGPT or Perplexity. GravityWrite wins on breadth and starting price. Hypertxt wins on how seriously it treats the actual research and structure behind a single article.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
GravityWrite$8/mo (billed $97/yr)Solo bloggers and small teams who want one subscription covering blog writing, images, video, and social scheduling, and who are comfortable managing a shared credit pool rather than a per-article price.
Hypertxt$19/monthSolo content operators, in-house SEO teams, and agencies who publish consistently for search and want AI citation structure built into every draft from the start, without paying for image or social features they will not use.

GravityWrite

All-in-one AI platform for blogs, social media, images, and video so you stop juggling five separate tools.

Full review →
GravityWrite screenshot

GravityWrite's whole pitch is consolidation. Instead of paying separately for an AI writer, an image generator, a scheduler, and a landing page tool, you pay one subscription and draw from a shared credit pool across all of it. The blog writer generates SEO-friendly outlines from a topic, a keyword, or a URL, and pairs that with over 250 templates for everything from YouTube thumbnails to email sequences.

The catch is the credit system itself. Every feature draws from the same pool, so a month spent generating product images for a launch leaves fewer credits for blog output, and vice versa. The Plus plan at $8/month gives 500 credits, which GravityWrite itself estimates at roughly 15 blog posts or 83 standard images, not both at once. Heavier users need the Pro plan at $49/month for 2,500 credits and access to Elite AI models.

Where GravityWrite actually pulls ahead of a narrow writing tool is the social scheduler and AI website builder bundled into every paid tier. If your workflow already involves publishing a blog post, generating a matching header image, and pushing a version to Instagram and LinkedIn, GravityWrite handles all three steps without leaving the dashboard. It just does not go deep on any single one of them.

Pricing
Feature
Plus
$8/mo (billed $97/yr)
Pro
$49/mo (billed $599/yr)
AI Credits per month5002,500
Approx. blog posts/mo~15~70
Social accounts530
AI Website BuilderYesYes
Content templates100+200+
Best for: Solo bloggers and small teams who want one subscription covering blog writing, images, video, and social scheduling, and who are comfortable managing a shared credit pool rather than a per-article price.

Hypertxt

SEO and GEO citation content generator that turns Search Console signals and brand knowledge into publish-ready drafts

Full review →
Hypertxt screenshot

Hypertxt starts from a different premise than most AI writers: instead of guessing at keywords, it connects to your actual Google Search Console account and surfaces content opportunities from your own impression, CTR, and position data. That first-party signal feeds a multi-stage workflow: brand knowledge ingestion, opportunity identification, a research brief, an outline, then a draft, each of which you can review before it moves forward.

The GEO layer is not an afterthought bolted onto an SEO tool. Every draft is deliberately structured with citation-ready passages, comparison formats, and sourceable claims aimed at showing up in ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews as well as ranking on Google and Bing. When keyword data from DataForSEO or Keywords Everywhere is not available, Hypertxt leaves the metric blank instead of inventing a plausible number, which says something about how the team treats accuracy.

The BYOK plan is the standout pricing decision here: pay $89 once, plug in your own OpenAI, Anthropic, Exa, and DataForSEO keys, and generate unlimited articles going forward with no monthly platform fee. For a team publishing at real volume, that changes the unit economics entirely. The tradeoff is scope: Hypertxt writes and publishes articles, full stop. There is no image generation, no social scheduler, and no way to check afterward whether the citations you were writing for actually happened.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
$19/month
Growth
$99/month
Agency
$149/month
BYOK
$89 one-time
Articles per month1030300Unlimited
GSC integrationYesYesYesYes
CMS publishingYesYesYesYes
Custom provider keysNoNoNoYes
Research briefsYesYesYesYes
Best for: Solo content operators, in-house SEO teams, and agencies who publish consistently for search and want AI citation structure built into every draft from the start, without paying for image or social features they will not use.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
GravityWrite
Hypertxt
Blog article generationYes, credit-basedYes, article-count based
Google Search Console integrationNoYes
Explicit GEO / AI citation structuringNo, headline and meta tuning onlyYes, citation-ready structure for ChatGPT, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews
Image generationYesNo
Video generationYesNo
Social media schedulingYes, 5 to 30 accountsNo
AI website builderYesNo
Direct CMS publishing (blog)No, social only; blog requires manual copy-pasteYes, WordPress, Ghost, custom webhooks
BYOK / bring-your-own-key pricingNoYes, $89 one-time
Starting price$8/month$19/month

Neither tool tells you if the content actually got cited

AI Peekaboo dashboard

Hypertxt is the more GEO-literate of these two by a wide margin, and it says so plainly in its own FAQ: it is "a content generation tool, not an AI visibility tracker," and structures drafts to be citation-ready without ever checking whether ChatGPT, Perplexity, or Google AI Overviews actually picked them up. GravityWrite does not attempt this at all. AI Peekaboo fills that specific gap: it monitors brand mentions and citations across ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Google AI, with a read and write API and white-label delivery on plans starting at $50/month. If you publish through either tool, pairing it with a dedicated visibility tracker is the only way to know whether the GEO structuring actually worked.

Read the AI Peekaboo review →

Which should you choose?

Solo bloggers who also need images, video, and a social queue in one placeGravityWrite
Teams that want content grounded in their own Search Console data rather than guessesHypertxt
Agencies publishing content across multiple clients at real volumeHypertxt
Founders doing their own marketing who need visuals and scheduling more than deep SEO structureGravityWrite
Anyone who wants a single article optimized for both Google rankings and AI citations from the first draftHypertxt
Budget-conscious creators who want the lowest possible entry priceGravityWrite

It is tempting to call this an apples-to-oranges comparison and leave it there, but the two tools do overlap on the one job that matters most for most buyers: writing a blog post. On that job, Hypertxt is simply more rigorous. It starts from real Search Console data instead of a keyword guess, runs the draft through distinct research and outline stages before writing, and builds in the specific structural choices that get content cited by AI engines. GravityWrite's blog writer is a solid generalist tool riding alongside three other product lines, and none of the four gets the same depth of attention.

Bottom line

If your business already needs an image generator, a social scheduler, and a landing page tool, and blog writing is just one job among several, GravityWrite's bundle at $8 a month is hard to argue with on price alone. But if content that actually shows up in Google and gets cited by ChatGPT is the priority, pay the extra eleven dollars a month for Hypertxt, or the one-time $89 BYOK fee if you publish at volume. It is doing one job instead of four, and it shows.

Frequently asked questions

Is GravityWrite or Hypertxt better for SEO specifically?

Hypertxt is the stronger choice for SEO because it connects directly to your Google Search Console account and bases content ideas on your actual query and ranking data rather than generic keyword guesses. GravityWrite's SEO features stop at generating tuned headlines and meta descriptions inside its broader credit-based content system.

Can GravityWrite track AI citations the way Hypertxt claims to structure for them?

No, neither tool tracks AI citations after publishing. Hypertxt structures drafts to be citation-ready for ChatGPT, Perplexity, and Google AI Overviews, but its own FAQ states plainly that it does not monitor whether those citations actually happen, and GravityWrite has no GEO-specific features at all.

Which tool is cheaper for a solo creator publishing 15 blog posts a month?

GravityWrite is cheaper at $8/month for roughly 15 blog posts, but that estimate assumes you spend none of your 500 monthly credits on images, video, or social posts. Hypertxt's Starter plan is $19/month for exactly 10 articles with no shared credit competition from other content types.

Does GravityWrite publish directly to WordPress like Hypertxt does?

No, GravityWrite's direct publishing is limited to its social media scheduler; blog content generated in GravityWrite has to be copied into WordPress manually. Hypertxt publishes blog articles directly to WordPress and Ghost, and supports custom webhooks for any other CMS.

Is the Hypertxt BYOK plan worth it for a small agency?

The BYOK plan is worth it once your publishing volume is high enough that provider API costs would be lower than a recurring platform fee, since it charges $89 once and then gives unlimited articles using your own OpenAI, Anthropic, Exa, and DataForSEO keys. For an agency publishing 300 or more articles a month across clients, that math usually favors BYOK over the $149/month Agency plan.

Why doesn't GravityWrite have a Google Search Console integration?

GravityWrite was not built around search performance data at all; its content engine generates outlines from a topic, keyword, or URL rather than from first-party ranking signals. That is one of the clearest structural differences between the two tools: Hypertxt treats your own GSC data as the starting point for every content idea, while GravityWrite treats content generation as one module in a broader multi-format bundle.

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