Okara vs ReplyAgent in 2026: an AI CMO that makes you post every reply vs a tool that posts for you from pre-warmed accounts
Okara drafts Reddit replies across a ten-agent roster for $0 to $99/month, but every output waits in a review queue for a human to post. ReplyAgent goes further, posting comments on your behalf from aged accounts starting at $79/month plus per-comment fees, in a gray area of Reddit's terms of service.
ReplyAgent posts Reddit comments automatically from a pool of pre-warmed accounts. Okara's Reddit Agent only drafts replies; every output requires manual review and posting by a human.
ReplyAgent's managed-account posting sits in a gray area of Reddit's terms of service, which explicitly prohibit coordinated inauthentic behavior. Okara avoids that risk entirely by never posting on a user's behalf.
ReplyAgent includes UTM tracking and ROI measurement tying Reddit comments to actual traffic and conversions. Okara has no attribution or UTM feature anywhere in its agent roster.
ReplyAgent's $79/month Basic Plan covers monitoring and comment generation only; actual posting costs $4 per comment or $8 per post on top. Okara's $66-99/month covers unlimited drafting across all agents within its credit allowance, with no per-action fee.
Okara has a genuine $0/month free tier with 5 credits. ReplyAgent has no free tier; the entry point is the $79/month Basic Plan before any posting fees.
Neither tool offers API access. ReplyAgent lists "No" for API on every tier and add-on. Okara has no API on any plan either.
Okara bundles Reddit with SEO, GEO, LinkedIn, X, and Hacker News agents. ReplyAgent is Reddit-only with no equivalent for other channels or AI-search visibility.
Okara and ReplyAgent land on opposite sides of the one decision that matters most in Reddit automation: who actually clicks post. Okara's Reddit Agent, one piece of a ten-plus-agent AI CMO covering SEO, GEO, and social for $0 to $99 a month, drafts a reply and stops, deliberately, because the team believes automated posting at scale gets accounts banned. ReplyAgent starts where Okara stops. It monitors subreddits, finds threads already ranking on Google, generates a comment, and posts it itself using a pool of pre-warmed accounts with real karma history, then tracks the resulting clicks with UTM tags, for $79 a month plus $4 per comment or $8 per post. One tool is a careful co-pilot; the other is an autopilot operating in territory Reddit's own terms of service do not clearly permit.
The tools at a glance
Okara
AI CMO platform running 10+ marketing agents across Reddit, SEO, GEO, and social
Okara's Reddit Agent scans communities for relevant threads and drafts a reply in your brand voice, one of more than ten agents running under a single AI CMO subscription that also covers SEO content, GEO-aimed drafting toward ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews, and LinkedIn, X, and Hacker News posts. Every one of those outputs lands in a review queue; nothing publishes without you clicking post yourself.
That manual step is a deliberate design choice, not a missing feature. Automated Reddit posting at scale risks account bans and violates most subreddit rules, and Okara is explicit that the review queue exists to keep a human in the loop for exactly that reason. The trade-off is time: founders relying on Okara for Reddit engagement still need 30 to 60 minutes a day to review and post drafts across channels.
Pricing is public and predictable: $0/month on the Free tier with 5 credits, up to $66/month on the annual AI CMO plan (or $99/month billed monthly) for the full roster and 2,000 monthly credits, with no per-action fees on top. There is no API and no attribution or UTM tracking feature anywhere in the product.
| Feature | Free $0/mo | AI CMO $66/mo (annual) or $99/mo |
|---|---|---|
| Credits per month | 5 (~50 messages) | 2,000 (~20,000 messages) |
| Reddit Agent | Limited | Full |
| GEO Agent | No | Yes |
| Google Search Console | No | Yes |
| GA4 integration | No | Yes |
| UGC Videos Agent | No | Yes |
| API access | No | No |
ReplyAgent
AI Reddit comment automation with pre-warmed accounts and UTM tracking
ReplyAgent goes further than a drafting tool by actually posting on your behalf. It monitors configured subreddits around the clock, prioritizes posts already ranking on Google, generates an AI comment, and publishes it using one of a pool of pre-warmed Reddit accounts with established karma histories, accounts that look like genuine long-time users rather than something spun up for marketing.
The compliance trade-off is real and the product is upfront about it: Reddit's terms of service prohibit artificial engagement and coordinated inauthentic behavior, and managed-account posting, even from aged accounts, falls into ambiguous territory under those rules. Bans and post removals remain possible. Brands with high reputational sensitivity should weigh this before automating any posting at all.
The Basic Plan at $79/month (or $699/year) covers monitoring, Google ranking analysis, and comment generation, but actual publishing costs extra: $4 per comment or $8 per post on top of the base subscription. UTM tracking is bundled throughout, which is the one capability here Okara does not offer at all, letting you tie specific comments to clicks and conversions in your own analytics.
| Feature | Basic Plan $79/mo (or $699/yr) | Comment Add-On $4 per comment | Post Publishing Add-On $8 per post |
|---|---|---|---|
| Subreddit monitoring | ✓ | N/A | N/A |
| Google ranking analysis | ✓ | N/A | N/A |
| AI comment generation | ✓ | Included | N/A |
| Comment posting | ✗ | ✓ | N/A |
| Post publishing | ✗ | N/A | ✓ |
| UTM tracking | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| API access | ✗ | ✗ | ✗ |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Channels covered | Reddit, LinkedIn, X, Hacker News, plus SEO/GEO content | Reddit only |
| Posts comments automatically on your behalf | No, drafts only | Yes, via pre-warmed accounts |
| Filters for Google-ranking threads | No | Yes |
| UTM tracking / ROI attribution | No | Yes, bundled on every tier and add-on |
| Pre-warmed / aged account management | No | Yes, core mechanism |
| SEO / GEO / social drafting beyond Reddit | Yes, SEO, GEO, LinkedIn, X, Hacker News agents included | No |
| Compliance posture with Reddit ToS | Deliberately avoids automation risk by design | Gray area, managed-account posting risks bans under Reddit ToS |
| Human review required before posting | Yes, every output | No, for automated posting; comments generated then published without per-item approval |
| API access | No | No |
| Free tier | Yes, $0/mo with 5 credits | No, no free tier |
| Starting price | $66/mo (annual) or $99/mo | $79/mo (Basic Plan, posting billed separately) |
Considering AI Peekaboo alongside Okara and ReplyAgent?

Neither tool measures AI-answer citation over time. ReplyAgent's Google ranking analysis is about traditional search results, not whether ChatGPT or Google AI Overviews cite your brand, and it has no GEO feature at all. Okara's GEO Agent gets closer, drafting content aimed at ChatGPT and Google AI Overviews citations, but it is a one-time content pass with no tracking dashboard behind it, no ongoing monitoring, and no API to pull the data anywhere. AI Peekaboo is purpose-built for that gap: continuous tracking across five AI engines with a read/write API on every plan from $50/month and white-label reports, useful for a team running Okara's drafts or ReplyAgent's automated comments who still needs a defensible answer to whether AI search visibility is actually improving.
Read the AI Peekaboo review →Which should you choose?
This comparison really comes down to risk tolerance rather than feature depth. ReplyAgent is the more operationally complete tool for Reddit specifically: it finds Google-ranking threads, writes a comment, posts it from an aged account, and hands you UTM-tagged attribution data, closing a loop that most Reddit tools, Okara included, leave open. But every part of that loop after comment generation runs through managed-account posting that Reddit's own terms of service do not clearly permit, and the product itself is upfront that bans and removals remain possible. Okara's Reddit Agent is less capable in isolation, no UTM tracking, no automated posting, but it is also structurally safer, because the review-queue requirement means a human always makes the final call on what actually goes live. Neither approach is wrong; they reflect different bets on how much automation risk a brand is willing to carry on a platform that actively polices exactly this kind of activity.
Bottom line
Choose ReplyAgent if closing the loop from Reddit comment to tracked conversion matters more than avoiding automation risk, and you are prepared for the $79/month base cost plus $4-8 per published item to add up with volume. Choose Okara if you want Reddit engagement bundled with SEO, GEO, and social drafting under one subscription, and you would rather review and post every comment yourself than hand that decision to a pool of managed accounts. Brands with real reputational exposure should default to Okara's slower, human-reviewed approach; performance-focused teams chasing measurable Reddit ROI at scale are the more realistic audience for what ReplyAgent is actually built to do.
Frequently asked questions
Does ReplyAgent post to Reddit automatically, unlike Okara?
Yes. ReplyAgent generates a comment and publishes it itself using a pool of pre-warmed Reddit accounts with established karma, with no per-item human approval step once posting is enabled. Okara's Reddit Agent only drafts a reply; you have to review, edit, and post every single output yourself.
Is ReplyAgent's automated posting against Reddit's rules?
It operates in a gray area. Reddit's terms of service prohibit coordinated inauthentic behavior and artificial engagement, and managed-account posting, even from aged accounts with real karma, can fall under those rules, meaning bans and post removals are possible. Okara avoids this exposure entirely by never posting on a user's behalf.
How much does it actually cost to publish Reddit comments with ReplyAgent?
The Basic Plan is $79/month (or $699/year) and covers monitoring, Google ranking analysis, and comment generation only. Publishing costs extra: $4 per comment or $8 per post. A team publishing 50 comments a month would pay roughly $279 total, well above Okara's flat $66-99/month for its entire agent roster with no per-action fees.
Does Okara have anything like ReplyAgent's UTM tracking for Reddit ROI?
No. Okara has no attribution or UTM tracking feature anywhere in its product; it focuses on drafting content across Reddit, SEO, GEO, and social channels rather than measuring the downstream traffic or conversions that content generates. ReplyAgent bundles UTM tracking on every tier and add-on, which is one of its clearer advantages for teams that need to prove ROI.
Is Okara or ReplyAgent safer for a well-known brand worried about reputational risk?
Okara is the safer choice for a brand with real reputational exposure, since every output requires manual review before it posts and there is no automated publishing mechanism to misfire. ReplyAgent's core value, posting from managed accounts without per-item review, is exactly the kind of activity that carries the platform risk a cautious brand should avoid.
Do either Okara or ReplyAgent offer API access for integrating into other tools?
No, neither one does. ReplyAgent lists API access as unavailable across the Basic Plan and both add-ons, and Okara has no API on any tier either. Teams needing programmatic access to Reddit engagement data will not find it in either product as of mid-2026.

