Zapier vs Make 2026: Which Automation Tool Gives You More?

Zapier sells simplicity and the widest reach, connecting 7,000+ apps so beginners can wire up a flow in minutes; Make (formerly Integromat) trades that for a visual node canvas with far stronger logic control and a cheaper per-operation price. Choosing wrong hits your wallet and your flexibility: as workflows grow complex, Zapier's task pricing gets scary, while someone who only needs a simple trigger but forces themselves onto Make may bounce off its learning curve.

Side-by-side Comparison

DimensionZapierMake
Core positioningEasiest, widest integrationsVisual, powerful logic
PricingPricier (per task)Cheaper (per operation) ★
Integrations7,000+ apps ★2,000+ apps
Complex flowsLinear, limited branchingBranching, loops, routers ★
Visual editorList-basedIntuitive canvas ★
Built-in AIZapier AI & Agents mature ★Growing AI modules
Learning curveNear-zero ★Moderate, takes practice
Best forNon-tech, ship fastPower users, cost-savers

★ = Winner

Verdict

Choose Zapier if: you're non-technical, want to wire two or three apps together in minutes, and care most about whether your app is supported—its 7,000+ integrations are virtually unmatched. For simple triggers and fast team rollout, Zapier has the least friction. Choose Make if: your flows involve branching, loops, and data transformation, or your monthly volume makes Zapier's pricing unbearable. Make's visual canvas lets you see the whole flow, and per-operation pricing is far cheaper at scale—the go-to for power users and cost-conscious teams.

Master it faster with our 50-tip guidebook: Zapier 50 Essential Automation Tips (US$5)

Master it faster with our 50-tip guidebook: Make 50 Automation Workflow Hacks (US$5)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Make really cheaper than Zapier?

At high volume or with complex flows, yes. Zapier bills per task with every step counting; Make bills per operation, so you run more steps on the same budget. The more complex and high-volume your flows, the more Make tends to save.

Can I use Make with zero coding?

Yes, but expect a small ramp. Make's visual canvas requires no code, but you need to grasp modules, routers, and data mapping. For simple connections Zapier is faster to learn; if you'll invest a little, Make does more.

What if neither supports my app?

Both offer Webhooks and generic HTTP/API modules to connect almost any service with an API. Make's HTTP module is more flexible for custom integrations; Zapier has Webhooks too, but with slightly less advanced customization.

Reviewed and verified by FeiYueh · Last verified 2026-05-20. Independently maintained — not AI-generated boilerplate.

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