Comparison

Devta vs Linkeddit in 2026: solo freelancer outreach vs a full Reddit CMS with a lifetime deal

Devta automates Reddit, LinkedIn, and Upwork outreach for one freelancer on a pay-as-you-go credit system. Linkeddit is Reddit-only but pairs unlimited lead pipelines with a full content management system, MCP integration, and a $249 lifetime deal built for teams committing to the channel long-term.

Updated July 3, 2026
Devta
Linkeddit
Key takeaways
  • Linkeddit queues AI-drafted posts and replies for human review before anything publishes; Devta can run in a fully automated auto-posting mode with no review step required, a meaningfully different risk profile on Reddit specifically.
  • Devta covers Reddit, LinkedIn, and Upwork in one pipeline built for a single freelancer's business development. Linkeddit is Reddit-only, but adds a full CMS, campaigns, kanban board, and content calendar that Devta does not have.
  • Linkeddit's $249 lifetime deal includes API access and MCP integration on every tier, including Lifetime. Devta has no API access on any plan at any price.
  • Devta uses pay-as-you-go credits with a $49 minimum top-up and no monthly fee. Linkeddit charges $49 a month, or $249 once for the lifetime option that breaks even against the monthly plan in about five months.
  • Linkeddit's MCP integration lets Claude and other AI assistants query live Reddit lead data directly. Devta has no equivalent integration for AI assistant workflows.
  • Devta adds Upwork job monitoring and an AI proposal generator with shareable public URLs, features aimed squarely at closing freelance deals that Linkeddit's lead-gen and CMS tools do not attempt to replicate.

Devta and Linkeddit both automate Reddit engagement with AI, but they were built for different scales of operation entirely. Devta is a one-person tool: pay-as-you-go credits, Reddit and LinkedIn engagement, Upwork lead monitoring, and a proposal generator, all aimed at a freelancer's variable outreach workload. Linkeddit goes deep on Reddit alone, wrapping unlimited lead generation pipelines in a full CMS with campaigns, a kanban board, and a content calendar, then adds MCP integration so Claude and other AI assistants can query the lead data directly. One is priced for occasional use by an individual; the other is priced, including a $249 lifetime option, for a team that has decided Reddit is a real channel worth building a workflow around.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
Devta$0Solo freelancers and solopreneurs doing founder-led sales across Reddit, LinkedIn, and Upwork who want a low-commitment, pay-as-you-go tool rather than a team content platform.
Linkeddit$49/moFounders, marketers, and AI builder teams committing to Reddit as a long-term channel who want lead generation, content management, and MCP access in one place.

Devta

AI networking agent for freelancers: Reddit, LinkedIn, DMs, and Upwork leads in one tool

Full review →
Devta screenshot

Devta is scoped to one person's workload rather than a team's content operation. It automates comment replies and DMs on Reddit and LinkedIn based on your keywords and audience profile, monitors Upwork for matching job posts, and generates client proposals with a shareable public URL once a lead is identified. The pay-as-you-go credit system, with a $49 minimum top-up and no expiry, fits the irregular rhythm of freelance business development rather than a fixed monthly cadence.

What Devta does not attempt is content operations at scale. There is no kanban board, no content calendar, no campaign structure, and no way to organize dozens of active subreddit conversations the way a marketing team would need to. It is built for a pipeline of one person's leads, not a shared team workflow.

It also has no API and no AI-assistant integration of any kind, so if the plan is to wire Reddit lead data into a broader automation stack the way Linkeddit's MCP support allows, Devta simply does not offer that path.

Pricing
Feature
Free
$0
Pay-as-you-go
$49 min top-up
Reddit and LinkedIn engagementLimitedUnlimited (credit-based)
DM outreach automationNoYes
Upwork lead monitoringNoYes
AI proposal generatorLimitedYes
API accessNoNo
Best for: Solo freelancers and solopreneurs doing founder-led sales across Reddit, LinkedIn, and Upwork who want a low-commitment, pay-as-you-go tool rather than a team content platform.

Linkeddit

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

Full review →
Linkeddit screenshot

Linkeddit is built for teams treating Reddit as a real, ongoing channel rather than an occasional prospecting stop. Its lead generation pipelines run continuously across subreddits, scoring buying-intent conversations and competitor complaints by AI relevance, and feeding results into a kanban board and content calendar rather than a raw list a person has to triage manually.

The MCP integration is what separates Linkeddit from a monitoring tool with a CMS bolted on. Claude and other compatible AI assistants can pull live lead data directly from Linkeddit into agent workflows, which matters for teams building AI-assisted sales or marketing pipelines that need Reddit intelligence wired in without custom API work. That access is included on every tier, including the Lifetime Deal.

The pricing reflects a longer time horizon than Devta's. Pro Monthly runs $49 a month, but the $249 one-time Lifetime Deal breaks even against that in about five months and then costs nothing further. For a freelancer only running an occasional campaign, that up-front commitment is a harder sell than Devta's pay-per-use model; for a team planning to work Reddit for a year or more, it is the cheaper option by a wide margin.

Pricing
Feature
Pro Monthly
$49/mo
Lifetime Deal
$249 one-time
Enterprise
Custom
Lead generation pipelinesUnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Reddit CMSYesYesYes
MCP integrationYesYesYes
API accessYesYesYes
White-labelNoNoYes
Best for: Founders, marketers, and AI builder teams committing to Reddit as a long-term channel who want lead generation, content management, and MCP access in one place.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
Devta
Linkeddit
Primary functionFreelance outreach automation and lead prospectingReddit lead generation and content management
Platforms coveredReddit, LinkedIn, UpworkReddit only
Lead generation pipelinesNo dedicated pipeline, surfaces engagement targets by keyword and audience profileYes, unlimited on every plan
Reddit CMS (campaigns, kanban, calendar)NoYes, all plans
Posting review workflowConfigurable per campaign, auto-post or manual approvalAI drafts queue for human review before publishing
DM outreach automationYesNot documented as a dedicated feature
Upwork lead monitoringYesNo
Proposal generationYes, AI proposal generator with shareable public URLNo
MCP integration for AI assistantsNoYes, all plans including Lifetime
API accessNoYes, all plans including Lifetime
Free tierYes, limited manual testingNo permanent free tier
Pricing modelPay-as-you-go credits, $49 minimum top-up$49/mo or $249 one-time lifetime
Platform ban / ToS riskReal risk on automated Reddit and LinkedIn posting, per Devta's own documentationLower on the posting side, drafts require human approval before publishing
Starting price$0 free / $49 min top-up$49/mo ($249 lifetime)

Which should you choose?

Solo freelancers prospecting across Reddit, LinkedIn, and Upwork at onceDevta
Teams or founders committing to Reddit long-term as a core channelLinkeddit
Anyone who wants Claude or another AI assistant to query live lead dataLinkeddit
Freelancers who need an AI-drafted proposal to close a deal, not just find itDevta
Teams managing content across 10 or more active subredditsLinkeddit
Users who want to pay only when actively prospecting rather than a flat feeDevta

The real difference here is organizational scale, not raw feature count. Devta assumes one person is doing the prospecting, pitching, and following up themselves, so it skips content-operations features a solo user would never touch. Linkeddit assumes multiple people, or at least a sustained campaign, are working the same subreddits over time, which is why it bothers with a kanban board, a content calendar, and an MCP endpoint that only pays off once you are automating around the lead data rather than just reading it. Buying the wrong one means either paying $49 a month for CMS features you never open, or hitting a wall the moment you need to track more than what fits in your own head.

Bottom line

Pick Devta if you are a solo freelancer whose Reddit and LinkedIn activity is one piece of a broader Upwork-driven pipeline, and you want to pay only for the credits you actually use. Pick Linkeddit, and seriously consider the $249 lifetime deal, if Reddit is or will become a dedicated channel for your business and you want lead generation, campaign tracking, and AI-assistant integration in one place instead of stitching together a monitoring tool, a scheduler, and a spreadsheet. Trying to use Devta for Linkeddit's job means losing the CMS and MCP access entirely; trying to use Linkeddit for Devta's job means paying for a Reddit tool that never touches LinkedIn or Upwork.

Frequently asked questions

Is Linkeddit's $249 lifetime deal a better value than Devta for a freelancer?

Not necessarily. Linkeddit's lifetime deal is a strong value for anyone committing to Reddit for more than about five months, but it is Reddit-only and has no Upwork or LinkedIn features, which are core to Devta's freelancer pitch. A freelancer who prospects across all three platforms and only occasionally touches Reddit will likely get more use out of Devta's pay-as-you-go credits than a $249 up-front commitment to a Reddit-only tool.

Does Devta have anything like Linkeddit's MCP integration for Claude?

No, Devta has no MCP integration or API of any kind, so it cannot be wired into Claude or another AI assistant workflow. Linkeddit is one of the few Reddit tools with first-class MCP support, available on every plan including the lifetime tier.

Which tool is better for managing Reddit content across a marketing team?

Linkeddit is the clear choice for a team, since its Reddit CMS includes campaigns, a kanban board, and a content calendar built specifically for coordinating multiple people working the same subreddits. Devta has no equivalent team-content layer; it is scoped around a single freelancer's own outreach.

Can Linkeddit monitor Upwork job postings the way Devta does?

No, Linkeddit is Reddit-only and has no Upwork integration, LinkedIn engagement, or proposal-generation features. Devta is the tool built specifically for freelancers who need Upwork lead monitoring alongside Reddit and LinkedIn outreach.

Does Devta let AI post to Reddit without any human review, unlike Linkeddit?

Yes, Devta can run in a fully automated auto-posting mode with no review step, though it recommends manual review specifically for Reddit given the platform's sensitivity to bot-like posting. Linkeddit takes a more conservative approach by design, queuing all AI-drafted posts and replies for human approval before anything publishes.

Is Devta cheaper than Linkeddit for someone just testing Reddit outreach?

Devta is the cheaper entry point for testing, since its free tier allows limited manual use before the $49 minimum credit top-up, while Linkeddit has no permanent free tier and starts at $49 a month, or $249 for the lifetime option. Devta's pay-as-you-go structure also means you are not committing to a monthly fee just to try it out.

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