Comparison

Redreach vs ReplyAgent in 2026: manual-post inbound and DM platform vs full auto-posting with pre-warmed accounts

Both tools find Reddit threads that already rank on Google. Redreach hands you a draft and lets a human post it, while adding outbound DM automation. ReplyAgent actually posts the comment for you, using aged accounts, at a per-comment fee.

Updated July 3, 2026
Redreach
ReplyAgent
Key takeaways
  • ReplyAgent posts comments on your behalf using pre-warmed Reddit accounts. Redreach never auto-posts public comments, it drafts a suggestion and a human posts it manually.
  • Redreach's pricing is contact-only across all three tiers, Starter, Growth, and Agency. ReplyAgent publishes pricing: $79/month for the Basic Plan, plus $4 per comment and $8 per post for actual publishing.
  • Redreach's outbound reach comes from a DM automation Chrome extension with anti-ban delays, daily limits, and a built-in CRM. ReplyAgent has no DM feature at all, its automation is limited to comment and post publishing.
  • Both tools flag their own compliance risk directly: Redreach's review notes DM automation carries Reddit account ban risk, and ReplyAgent's own review states managed-account posting operates in a gray area of Reddit's terms of service.
  • ReplyAgent includes UTM tracking and ROI measurement on every plan. Redreach does not list UTM or conversion attribution as a feature.
  • Redreach offers white-label delivery on its Agency tier for agencies managing multiple client brands. ReplyAgent has no white-label option at any price point.
  • Neither tool offers API access: Redreach scores 6 out of 10 on API and integrations in independent review, and ReplyAgent confirms it has no API on any plan.

Redreach and ReplyAgent both start from the same discovery insight, that a Reddit thread ranking on page one of Google is worth more attention than a thread only Reddit users will ever see, but they take opposite positions on who should hit the post button. Redreach drafts AI reply suggestions that a human reviews, edits, and posts manually, and pairs that with a Chrome extension for automated outbound DMs. ReplyAgent goes further on the inbound side: it generates the comment and then posts it itself, using a pool of pre-warmed Reddit accounts with established karma, for a per-comment or per-post fee on top of its base plan. That single design decision, who actually presses publish, is the real fork in this comparison, and it changes the risk profile of each tool more than any feature list does.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
RedreachContactSaaS founders, e-commerce brands, and agencies who want inbound reply discovery plus outbound DM automation with a human still writing every public comment, and who are comfortable with a sales-led buying process.
ReplyAgent$79/mo (or $699/yr)Performance marketers who want the full posting workflow handled end-to-end, including account management, and who are comfortable trading some compliance risk for volume and UTM-tracked attribution.

Redreach

Find the Reddit threads your customers are reading and get AI-guided replies that convert

Full review →
Redreach screenshot

Redreach runs two motions from one dashboard. The inbound side scores Reddit threads that already rank on Google for your target keywords and drafts a reply you edit and post yourself, keeping a human voice in every comment that actually goes live. The outbound side is a Chrome extension that automates Reddit DMs at scale, with spintax personalization, daily send limits, anti-ban delays, and a built-in CRM for tracking who responded.

Competitor mention tracking runs continuously across email, Slack, Telegram, and webhook, so a team can jump into a comparison thread while it is still fresh rather than a day later. The trade-off for keeping comment posting manual is that Redreach cannot promise the volume ReplyAgent can, since every public reply still needs a human to press publish, even though the DM side is fully automated and carries its own real ban risk if pushed past the recommended limits.

Every tier is contact-only, Starter, Growth, and Agency alike, which means there is no published price to compare against ReplyAgent's line-item costs without booking a call first. White-label is reserved for the Agency tier, making Redreach the stronger pick for agencies that need both outbound DM reach and branded delivery in one platform.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
Contact
Growth
Contact
Agency
Contact
Google-ranking post finder
AI reply suggestions
Competitor trackingLimitedFullFull
DM automation extension
Multi-channel notifications
White-label
CRM for DM responses
Best for: SaaS founders, e-commerce brands, and agencies who want inbound reply discovery plus outbound DM automation with a human still writing every public comment, and who are comfortable with a sales-led buying process.

ReplyAgent

AI Reddit comment automation with pre-warmed accounts and UTM tracking

Full review →
ReplyAgent screenshot

ReplyAgent covers the whole workflow: it monitors subreddits 24/7, identifies posts that rank on Google, generates an AI reply, and then actually posts that reply using an account from its pool of pre-warmed, karma-established Reddit accounts. That last step is what separates it from Redreach and most of the category, where the tool stops at drafting and a person finishes the job.

The pre-warmed account system exists because fresh accounts posting branded content get flagged and removed almost immediately. Aged accounts with real karma histories reduce that risk without eliminating it, and ReplyAgent's own review is direct about the trade-off: this practice sits in a gray area of Reddit's terms of service, which prohibit coordinated inauthentic behavior, and account bans or post removals remain possible outcomes.

UTM tracking is baked into every posted comment, which closes an attribution gap that most Reddit marketing struggles to justify internally, you can see which threads actually drove clicks and conversions. Pricing is transparent but metered: $79 a month covers monitoring and comment generation, while actual publishing costs $4 per comment or $8 per post, and there is no API to pull data into another system.

Pricing
Feature
Basic Plan
$79/mo (or $699/yr)
Comment Add-On
$4 per comment
Post Publishing Add-On
$8 per post
Subreddit monitoringN/AN/A
Google ranking analysisN/AN/A
AI comment generationIncludedN/A
Comment postingN/A
Post publishingN/A
UTM tracking
API access
Best for: Performance marketers who want the full posting workflow handled end-to-end, including account management, and who are comfortable trading some compliance risk for volume and UTM-tracked attribution.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
Redreach
ReplyAgent
Google-ranking post detectionYesYes
AI reply draftingYesYes
Actually posts the comment for youNo, human posts manuallyYes, via pre-warmed accounts
Outbound DM automationYes, via Chrome extension with CRMNo
Competitor mention trackingYes, 24/7 with multi-channel alertsNot a dedicated feature
UTM tracking / ROI attributionNot listed as a featureYes, on every tier
Notification channelsEmail, Slack, Telegram, webhookNot specified
White-label deliveryYes (Agency tier)No
API accessLimited (6/10 on API and integrations)None, confirmed no API
Pricing transparencyContact-only on all tiersPublic pricing, base plus per-use fees
Starting priceCustom (sales-led)$79/mo + per-comment fees

Which should you choose?

Brands that want a human reviewing every public comment before it postsRedreach
Teams that want the full posting workflow automated, including publishingReplyAgent
Agencies needing outbound DM reach alongside inbound engagementRedreach
Marketers who need UTM-tracked ROI attribution built into the base planReplyAgent
Brands with high reputational sensitivity that cannot risk a visible spam patternRedreach
Teams that want transparent, published pricing instead of a sales callReplyAgent
Agencies that specifically need white-label delivery under their own brandRedreach

The decision here is really about how much control you want to give up. Redreach keeps a human in the loop for every public comment, which is slower and caps your daily volume, but it avoids the specific gray-area risk that ReplyAgent's own review flags directly: managed accounts posting content that Reddit's terms treat as potentially coordinated behavior. ReplyAgent trades that risk for speed and a metered, published price, and it backs the trade with UTM tracking that actually proves whether the automation is paying for itself. Neither tool is wrong to prioritize what it prioritizes, but a brand that cannot absorb a public Reddit backlash should not be the one testing ReplyAgent's pre-warmed accounts first.

Bottom line

Choose Redreach if you want inbound thread discovery and optional outbound DM reach while keeping a human writing and posting every public comment, and you are fine booking a sales call to see pricing. Choose ReplyAgent if you want the entire workflow automated end to end, including actual comment and post publishing, you can accept the compliance gray area that comes with pre-warmed accounts, and you want UTM-tracked attribution without waiting for an Agency-tier upsell. For most brands with any public reputational exposure, Redreach's manual-post model is the safer default.

Frequently asked questions

Does Redreach or ReplyAgent post Reddit comments automatically?

ReplyAgent does, using a pool of pre-warmed Reddit accounts with established karma to publish comments and posts on your behalf. Redreach only drafts AI reply suggestions, a human still has to review, edit, and post them manually, which is the core structural difference between the two tools.

Is ReplyAgent's automated posting against Reddit's terms of service?

ReplyAgent's own review describes managed-account posting as operating in a gray area of Reddit's terms of service, which prohibit coordinated inauthentic behavior and artificial engagement. Account bans and post removals remain possible even with pre-warmed accounts, so teams should weigh this risk against their brand's reputational sensitivity.

Which tool is cheaper for a small Reddit outreach campaign?

ReplyAgent has transparent pricing starting at $79 per month plus $4 per comment or $8 per post, so a small campaign's cost is calculable upfront. Redreach requires a sales conversation on every tier with no published price, making direct cost comparison difficult without contacting the vendor first.

Does either tool support outbound Reddit DMs?

Redreach does, through a Chrome extension that automates bulk DMs with anti-ban delays, daily send limits, and a built-in CRM for tracking responses. ReplyAgent has no DM feature at all, its automation is limited to generating and publishing public comments and posts.

Can I track ROI from Redreach or ReplyAgent campaigns?

ReplyAgent includes UTM tracking and ROI measurement on every plan, letting you see which threads and comments drove clicks and conversions in your analytics platform. Redreach does not list UTM tracking or conversion attribution as a feature in its current offering.

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