Comparison

Linkeddit vs SubredditSignals in 2026: lifetime CMS bundle vs a metered buyer-intent scanner

Linkeddit sells lead generation, a full Reddit CMS, and MCP access as a $249 one-time purchase. SubredditSignals charges monthly for a tighter buyer-intent engine that scores every post across seven dimensions and, on Pro, attributes traffic back to five AI engines.

Updated July 3, 2026
Linkeddit
SubredditSignals
Key takeaways
  • Linkeddit sells a $249 one-time lifetime deal covering unlimited lead pipelines, a full Reddit CMS, and MCP integration. SubredditSignals has no lifetime option, only $29/mo Starter or $59/mo Pro, billed indefinitely.
  • SubredditSignals classifies posts across 7 buyer-intent dimensions and separates out Purchase-Ready leads explicitly. Linkeddit scores leads by AI relevance but does not publish a comparable multi-dimensional intent model.
  • Linkeddit includes a full Reddit CMS, campaigns, kanban board, and content calendar, on every tier including the lifetime plan. SubredditSignals has no content management layer at all; it is a monitoring and engagement queue, not a publishing workflow.
  • SubredditSignals' Starter plan caps Purchase-Ready leads at 3 per week. Linkeddit's lead pipelines are unlimited on every plan, including the $49/mo Pro Monthly tier.
  • SubredditSignals explicitly runs on the official Reddit API, a compliance distinction it calls out after GummySearch's shutdown. Linkeddit does not make the same claim in its own documentation.
  • Linkeddit includes MCP integration for Claude and other AI assistants on every plan. SubredditSignals does not mention MCP support anywhere in its feature set.
  • SubredditSignals' Pro plan tracks Reddit and AI referral traffic across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Copilot, and Claude. Linkeddit has no traffic attribution feature at any tier.

Linkeddit and SubredditSignals both promise to turn Reddit threads into a sales pipeline, but they price and structure that promise very differently. Linkeddit bundles unlimited lead pipelines with a full content management system, campaigns, kanban board, content calendar, and sells the whole thing as a $249 lifetime deal instead of a recurring subscription. SubredditSignals is narrower and metered: it classifies posts across seven buyer-intent dimensions, caps how many Purchase-Ready leads you get on the entry plan, and reserves its most interesting feature, a first-party pixel tracking Reddit and AI referral traffic, for the $59/month Pro tier. One is a flat-fee toolkit you own outright, the other is a subscription that gets sharper and more expensive as you use more of it.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
Linkeddit$49/moTeams committing to Reddit long-term who want lead generation, a content calendar, and campaign tracking bundled into one purchase, and who would rather pay $249 once than meter their usage every month.
SubredditSignals$29/moFounders, growth marketers, and B2B sales teams who want live Reddit conversations pre-sorted by buying intent, with Pro-tier attribution showing which AI engines are sending converting traffic.

Linkeddit

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

Full review →
Linkeddit screenshot

Linkeddit pairs unlimited Reddit lead generation with a full content management system in one place: campaigns, a kanban board, and a content calendar sit next to the lead feed instead of living in a separate scheduling tool. Pipelines are configured by keyword and subreddit, and one preset is built specifically to surface competitor complaint threads, which tends to be the highest-conversion pattern for Reddit outreach.

The MCP integration lets Claude and other AI assistants pull live lead data directly into an agent workflow, which is a genuine differentiator among Reddit tools. Combined with the $249 lifetime deal, a team that plans to run Reddit outreach for more than about six months breaks even against the $49/mo Pro plan and then pays nothing further.

What Linkeddit does not have is a formal buyer-intent scoring model. Leads are surfaced by AI relevance, but there is no published multi-dimension classification separating a purchase-ready comment from someone just asking for recommendations. First-time users also report the feature breadth makes initial setup feel busy, and the AI-drafted replies need real editing before they read as human.

Pricing
Feature
Pro Monthly
$49/mo
Lifetime Deal
$249 one-time
Enterprise
Custom
Lead generation pipelinesUnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Reddit CMS (campaigns, kanban, calendar)
AI content writer
MCP integration
API access
White-label
Priority support
Best for: Teams committing to Reddit long-term who want lead generation, a content calendar, and campaign tracking bundled into one purchase, and who would rather pay $249 once than meter their usage every month.

SubredditSignals

Real-time Reddit buying-intent scanner with AI-drafted comment suggestions

Full review →
SubredditSignals screenshot

SubredditSignals scores every Reddit post it surfaces across seven buyer-intent dimensions, from problem-aware to purchase-ready, so a sales team gets a pre-sorted feed instead of every keyword match dumped into one inbox. Purchase-Ready leads are pulled out explicitly, which is the feature Linkeddit does not really match: Linkeddit surfaces relevant threads, SubredditSignals tells you which ones represent an actual buying decision in progress.

Comment Builder with Voice Profiles drafts replies trained on your product and tone, and Subreddit Discovery finds niche communities you would not have thought to monitor. The Pro plan goes further with a first-party attribution pixel tracking Reddit and AI referral traffic across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Copilot, and Claude, which is traffic measurement after someone clicks through, not a check on whether those AI models are citing your brand inside the answer itself.

The Starter plan's cap of 3 Purchase-Ready leads per week is real friction for an active sales team, and there is no API for piping leads into an external CRM at any tier. SubredditSignals is also Reddit-only with no CMS layer, so campaign tracking and content scheduling happen somewhere else.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
$29/mo
Pro
$59/mo
Brands monitored1Up to 5
Purchase-Ready leads3/weekUnlimited
Buyer Intent Classification (7 dimensions)
Comment Builder + Voice Profiles
Pain Points Radar
Reddit + AI traffic attribution
API access
Best for: Founders, growth marketers, and B2B sales teams who want live Reddit conversations pre-sorted by buying intent, with Pro-tier attribution showing which AI engines are sending converting traffic.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
Linkeddit
SubredditSignals
Lead generation pipelinesUnlimited, all plansNo dedicated lead-gen pipeline builder
Buyer-intent classificationAI relevance scoring, not published as dimensionsYes, 7 dimensions
Reddit CMS (campaigns, kanban, calendar)Yes, all plansNo
AI-drafted reply suggestionsYes, with human review queueYes, with Voice Profiles
MCP integration for AI assistantsYes, all plansNo
Reddit + AI traffic attributionNoYes (Pro, 5 AI engines)
Official Reddit API complianceNot specifiedYes, official Reddit API
API for external integrationYes, all plansNo
Lifetime pricing optionYes, $249 one-timeNo
Free trialNo published trial14-day trial, no credit card
Starting price$49/mo ($249 lifetime)$29/mo

Considering AI Peekaboo alongside Linkeddit and SubredditSignals?

AI Peekaboo dashboard

SubredditSignals Pro tracks referral traffic from five AI engines, ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Copilot, and Claude, but that pixel only fires after someone clicks through to your site. It does not tell you whether those models are citing or recommending your brand inside the answer itself, and Linkeddit has no comparable attribution feature at all. AI Peekaboo measures the step before the click: it monitors ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, Google AI Overviews, and Google AI Mode directly for brand mentions, with a read and write API and white-label reporting on every plan from $50/month, so you can see whether your Reddit activity is earning AI citations, not just counting the traffic that shows up once it already has.

Read the AI Peekaboo review →

Which should you choose?

Teams committing to Reddit long-term who want lead gen plus a CMS in one purchaseLinkeddit
Sales teams needing live buyer-intent classification on every postSubredditSignals
Teams that would rather pay once than subscribe indefinitelyLinkeddit
Teams needing Reddit and AI traffic attribution across five enginesSubredditSignals
AI builder teams wiring Reddit data into Claude via MCPLinkeddit
Teams that specifically need compliance-safe official Reddit API accessSubredditSignals
Marketing teams managing content across 10+ subredditsLinkeddit

The real difference here is not features, both tools find good Reddit conversations, it is how each one prices depth. Linkeddit sells everything up front for a flat fee and bets you will use the CMS and MCP layer enough to justify $249. SubredditSignals sells precision: a tighter buyer-intent model and, on Pro, traffic attribution, but meters it by plan tier and caps the highest-value output (Purchase-Ready leads) on the entry plan. A team that knows it is committing to Reddit for the long haul gets more total value from Linkeddit's lifetime deal. A team that wants the sharpest intent signal on a smaller subreddit footprint, and is willing to pay monthly for it, gets more precision from SubredditSignals.

Bottom line

Buy the Linkeddit lifetime deal if Reddit is a committed channel and you want lead generation, a kanban board, and content scheduling without stitching together three tools, especially if MCP access to Claude matters to your workflow. Start with SubredditSignals' $29/mo Starter plan if buyer-intent precision and official Reddit API compliance matter more than CMS features, and upgrade to Pro once you need the AI traffic attribution pixel or want the Purchase-Ready cap lifted. Teams running a serious Reddit sales motion will likely find one is not quite enough on its own.

Frequently asked questions

Is Linkeddit's lifetime deal actually cheaper than SubredditSignals over a year?

Linkeddit's $249 lifetime deal breaks even against its own $49/mo Pro Monthly plan in about five months, and after that costs nothing further. Against SubredditSignals' $29/mo Starter plan, Linkeddit takes roughly nine months to break even, but SubredditSignals never stops billing while Linkeddit's lifetime tier does not include the Pro-only attribution features SubredditSignals offers at $59/mo.

Which tool is better for identifying purchase-ready Reddit leads specifically?

SubredditSignals is built specifically for this. Its buyer-intent classification scores every post across seven dimensions and separates out Purchase-Ready leads explicitly, though the Starter plan caps that category at 3 per week. Linkeddit scores leads by AI relevance and includes a competitor-complaint preset, but does not publish a comparable multi-dimensional intent model.

Does either tool track whether ChatGPT or Gemini is sending me traffic from Reddit?

SubredditSignals' Pro plan includes a first-party attribution pixel tracking referral traffic and conversions across ChatGPT, Perplexity, Gemini, Copilot, and Claude, but that only measures visitors after they click through to your site. Linkeddit has no traffic attribution feature at any tier.

Can I manage a content calendar or campaign workflow in SubredditSignals like I can in Linkeddit?

SubredditSignals has no content calendar or campaign workflow. It is a monitoring and engagement tool with a Comment Builder and Engagement Queue, but no campaigns, kanban board, or scheduling layer. Linkeddit's full Reddit CMS is a meaningful differentiator for teams that want lead generation and content scheduling in one platform.

Which tool has an official Reddit API compliance guarantee?

SubredditSignals explicitly states it uses the official Reddit API rather than scraping, a design decision it calls out directly in light of GummySearch's shutdown over API compliance. Linkeddit does not make an equivalent compliance claim in its own documentation.

Does Linkeddit or SubredditSignals integrate with Claude through MCP?

Linkeddit includes MCP integration on every plan, including the $249 lifetime tier, letting Claude and other AI assistants pull live lead data directly. SubredditSignals does not list MCP support anywhere in its feature set.

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