Comparison

Linkeddit vs Reddinbox in 2026: unlimited Reddit lead pipelines vs capped multi-platform research

Linkeddit runs unlimited lead generation and a full Reddit CMS behind a $249 lifetime deal. Reddinbox answers natural-language research questions across Reddit, X, Bluesky, Hacker News, and Facebook, capped at 100 to 266 conversations a month.

Updated July 3, 2026
Linkeddit
Reddinbox
Key takeaways
  • Linkeddit runs unlimited, continuous lead generation pipelines on every paid tier. Reddinbox caps usage at roughly 100 conversations a month on Starter and 266 on Pro, since it is billed as a research agent rather than an ongoing monitor.
  • Reddinbox covers five platforms in a single query: Reddit, X, Bluesky, Hacker News, and Facebook. Linkeddit is scoped to Reddit only.
  • Reddinbox runs a spam and AI-generated-post filtering pass on every result set and shows how many posts were removed. Linkeddit has no equivalent noise-filtering feature; its AI scoring ranks relevance, not authenticity.
  • Linkeddit includes API access and MCP integration on every tier, including the $249 lifetime deal. Reddinbox has no listed API or CRM integration on either plan.
  • Linkeddit has a built-in Reddit CMS with campaigns, kanban tracking, and a content calendar for managing outreach. Reddinbox has no publishing or content-management feature; its output is Market Briefs, capped at 3 to 5 per month.

Linkeddit and Reddinbox both promise to cut through Reddit noise, but they hand you different things at the end of the process. Linkeddit is built for action: it surfaces buying-intent threads and competitor complaints continuously and gives you a CMS to manage the outreach that follows. Reddinbox is built for understanding: you ask a plain-language question, and it scans Reddit alongside X, Bluesky, Hacker News, and Facebook, filters out bot and AI-generated noise, and hands back structured, themed insights with source links. If you need a system that keeps working in the background finding people to talk to, that is a different job than needing a sharp, citation-backed answer to a specific market question.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
Linkeddit$49/moTeams that want a continuous, unlimited Reddit lead pipeline plus a CMS to manage the resulting outreach, especially those wiring lead data into AI-assisted workflows via MCP or API.
Reddinbox$39/moContent teams, product managers, and agencies who need citation-backed, cross-platform audience research on a specific question, without needing an ongoing publishing or lead-management layer.

Linkeddit

Reddit lead generation and content management with lifetime deal and MCP integration

Full review →
Linkeddit screenshot

Linkeddit runs persistent lead generation pipelines that scan subreddits for buying-intent conversations and competitor complaints, scoring each by AI relevance as new posts appear. That continuous feed is the core difference from a query-based research tool: you configure a pipeline once by keyword and subreddit, and Linkeddit keeps working without you having to ask it a new question each time.

Leads flow into a Reddit-specific CMS with campaigns, a kanban board, and a content calendar, which is where teams actually manage the outreach that follows discovery. Combine that with API access on every tier and an MCP integration that lets Claude query lead data directly, and Linkeddit is designed to be a working system inside a broader stack, not a one-off lookup tool.

What Linkeddit does not offer is Reddinbox's cross-platform reach or its explicit spam and AI-post filtering. It scores relevance, but it does not run a dedicated authenticity check on the content it surfaces, and its coverage stops at Reddit.

Pricing
Feature
Pro Monthly
$49/mo
Lifetime Deal
$249 one-time
Enterprise
Custom
Lead generation pipelinesUnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Reddit CMSYesYesYes
AI content writerYesYesYes
MCP integrationYesYesYes
API accessYesYesYes
White-labelNoNoYes
Best for: Teams that want a continuous, unlimited Reddit lead pipeline plus a CMS to manage the resulting outreach, especially those wiring lead data into AI-assisted workflows via MCP or API.

Reddinbox

Multi-platform social research agent that filters spam to surface real audience signals

Full review →
Reddinbox screenshot

Reddinbox works like a research assistant you ask plain-language questions: "what is blocking trial users from upgrading?" or "why do marketers dislike our competitor?" It scans Reddit, X, Bluesky, Hacker News, and Facebook in a single query, no keyword syntax or subreddit list required, and returns findings grouped by theme with links back to the original threads.

The genuinely differentiated piece is the filtering step. Before any result reaches you, Reddinbox runs a detection pass to strip out spam bots and AI-generated posts, and shows how many were removed versus verified. On platforms where synthetic content has become common enough to pollute a raw keyword search, that filtering meaningfully changes what you can trust in the output.

Reddinbox is not a publishing or lead-management tool. There is no way to schedule content, track individual conversations through a pipeline, or reach out to anyone from inside the platform. It packages findings into shareable Market Briefs, 3 per month on Starter and 5 on Pro, and stops there. The monthly conversation caps, around 100 on Starter and 266 on Pro, mean daily heavy use runs out faster than a subscription tool built for continuous monitoring.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
$39/mo
Pro
$99/mo
Platforms coveredReddit, X, Bluesky, HN, FacebookReddit, X, Bluesky, HN, Facebook
Conversations per month~100~266
Market Briefs per month35
Spam and bot filteringYesYes
API accessNoNo
Best for: Content teams, product managers, and agencies who need citation-backed, cross-platform audience research on a specific question, without needing an ongoing publishing or lead-management layer.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
Linkeddit
Reddinbox
Primary functionReddit lead generation and content managementMulti-platform natural-language research
Platforms coveredReddit onlyReddit, X, Bluesky, Hacker News, Facebook
Query styleConfigured pipelines by keyword and subredditNatural language questions, no query syntax
Spam / AI-post filteringNo, relevance scoring onlyYes, explicit filtering with removed-post counts
Lead generation pipelinesYes, unlimited and continuousNo
Reddit CMS (campaigns, kanban, calendar)YesNo
Content publishing or schedulingYes, drafts requiring manual approvalNo
Usage limitsNone, unlimited on paid tiersYes, ~100-266 conversations per month
API accessYes, all tiersNo
Starting price$49/mo or $249 lifetime$39/mo

Which should you choose?

Teams needing a continuous, unlimited Reddit lead pipelineLinkeddit
Anyone needing a fast, citation-backed answer to a specific market question across several platformsReddinbox
Agencies researching a new client vertical across Reddit, X, and Hacker News in one queryReddinbox
Teams managing ongoing Reddit outreach through a CMSLinkeddit
Anyone concerned about AI-generated or bot content skewing their researchReddinbox, via its explicit filtering pass
Teams wiring Reddit data into Claude or other AI agent workflowsLinkeddit, via MCP and API access

The real dividing line here is continuous versus bounded. Linkeddit is meant to run indefinitely in the background, scoring new leads as they appear, with no cap on paid tiers, which fits a team that treats Reddit as an always-on channel. Reddinbox is meant to be queried, get an answer, and queried again for the next question, with monthly conversation caps that make sense for periodic research sprints but would feel restrictive as a full-time monitoring tool. Reddinbox's multi-platform reach and bot filtering are genuinely useful for research quality, but that scope comes at the cost of any publishing or pipeline-management layer, which is exactly where Linkeddit is strongest.

Bottom line

Choose Linkeddit if you need an always-on system finding Reddit leads and managing the outreach that follows, particularly at the $249 lifetime price point if you plan to stick with Reddit long-term. Choose Reddinbox if the job is periodic, cross-platform research, competitor sentiment, customer pain points, market questions, where the bot-filtered, citation-backed answer matters more than a continuous pipeline, and where the roughly 100 to 266 monthly conversations are enough for how often you actually need to ask. Teams doing both continuous Reddit outreach and periodic multi-platform research will likely want both tools rather than forcing one to do the other's job.

Frequently asked questions

Is Reddinbox worth it over Linkeddit if I only need Reddit research, not lead generation?

It depends on whether you need an ongoing pipeline or a one-time answer. Reddinbox is stronger for a bounded research question since it filters out bot and AI-generated posts and covers Reddit alongside four other platforms in one query, but its monthly conversation caps make it a poor fit for continuous Reddit lead monitoring, which is what Linkeddit is built for.

Does Linkeddit filter out spam or AI-generated Reddit posts the way Reddinbox does?

No, Linkeddit scores leads by AI relevance to your keywords and subreddits, but it does not run a dedicated spam or AI-generated-content detection pass. Reddinbox is the tool built specifically to strip out bot and synthetic posts before results reach you, showing a count of what was removed.

Can Reddinbox manage ongoing outreach or campaigns the way Linkeddit does?

No, Reddinbox has no CMS, campaign tracking, or publishing feature. It packages research findings into Market Briefs, capped at 3 to 5 per month depending on plan, and stops there. Linkeddit is the one built with a kanban board, content calendar, and campaign management for running outreach continuously.

Which tool covers more platforms, Linkeddit or Reddinbox?

Reddinbox covers more ground, running a single query across Reddit, X, Bluesky, Hacker News, and Facebook. Linkeddit is scoped to Reddit only, but goes deeper on that one platform with continuous lead pipelines and a full content management system that Reddinbox does not attempt to offer.

Does either tool have usage limits I should know about before subscribing?

Reddinbox does: roughly 100 conversations per month on Starter and 266 on Pro, which can run out within a few weeks of daily use. Linkeddit has no equivalent cap, its lead generation pipelines run unlimited and continuously on every paid tier, including the $249 lifetime deal.

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