Penfriend vs Rankdots in 2026: A drafting tool with an expired domain vs a working topical authority platform
Penfriend generated long-form blog drafts through a collaborative writing model before its domain went dark. Rankdots turns keyword research into topic clusters and SEO-structured drafts, though you have to sit through a sales call to find out what it costs.
Penfriend's domain, penfriend.ai, was inaccessible at the time of this review, leaving the product's current availability unconfirmed.
Rankdots builds topic clusters from keyword research and generates SEO-structured drafts around them, a planning step Penfriend never covered.
Neither tool offers API access, so pulling data into an existing content or reporting stack means manual export either way.
Rankdots includes competitor gap analysis to surface topic clusters competitors already rank for that you do not; Penfriend had no competitive intelligence feature at all.
Rankdots does not publish pricing and requires a sales conversation; Penfriend's last confirmed price, before the domain went down, was around $19 per month.
Penfriend was scoped narrowly to drafting, while Rankdots covers keyword clustering, drafting, and competitor gap analysis inside a single workflow.
Penfriend and Rankdots technically compete in the same Content Strategy category, but only one of them is currently reachable. Penfriend built its reputation on a collaborative drafting model for long-form blog content, reportedly priced around $19 a month. At the time of this review, penfriend.ai does not resolve, and there is no public information on whether the product shut down, changed hands, or is mid-migration. Rankdots, by contrast, is live and does more: it clusters keywords into topic groups, checks those groups against what competitors already rank for, and generates AI drafts structured around a cluster's target keywords rather than a single query. The catch is that Rankdots keeps its pricing behind a sales call and has no API, so you are trading transparency for a working, more complete product. Choosing between these two today is less about feature parity and more about whether you can use one of them at all.
The tools at a glance
Penfriend
AI-powered blog drafts in a collaborative writing style
Penfriend was built around a "penfriend" concept: instead of generating a finished article in one shot, the tool worked with the writer in stages to develop a first draft that could be reviewed and redirected as it came together. The focus was long-form content, typically 800 to 2,000 words, aimed at bloggers and small content teams who wanted a faster starting point without a steep learning curve. A topic-based planning layer helped writers figure out what to write before generating anything.
The important caveat is availability. At the time of this review, the penfriend.ai domain did not load and appeared to have expired. There is no confirmation of whether the product shut down, was acquired, or is temporarily offline, and no way to verify current pricing or features. Everything described here reflects the last information available before the outage.
Before the domain went dark, Penfriend positioned itself as a lower-friction entry point compared to more complex AI writing platforms. That positioning only matters if you can actually reach the product, and right now you cannot confirm that you can.
| Feature | Unknown Status unclear |
|---|---|
| Blog post drafts | ✓ |
| Long-form generation | ✓ |
| API access | ✗ |
| Currently accessible | ✗ |
Rankdots
AI SEO platform for keyword clustering, topical authority building, and SEO-optimized content drafts
Rankdots is built around three connected steps: finding high-potential keywords, grouping them into semantically related topic clusters, and generating SEO-structured article drafts around those clusters from the start rather than optimizing them after the fact. The pitch is aimed at teams that already understand topical authority as a ranking strategy but need help turning a keyword list into an actual content plan.
Competitor gap analysis compares your current topical coverage against domains you name as competitors and flags clusters where they rank and you do not. Growth potential scoring then ranks those gaps by estimated traffic opportunity, which gives a content team a starting point for prioritization instead of a flat keyword list to sort through manually.
The trade-off is transparency. Rankdots does not publish pricing anywhere on its site, so getting a quote means going through a demo or sales conversation. There is also no API, which limits how well the platform fits into an agency's existing reporting or CMS workflows. Both are structural limitations rather than product weaknesses, and worth weighing against what the clustering and gap analysis actually save in planning time.
| Feature | Contact for pricing Custom |
|---|---|
| Keyword clustering | ✓ |
| AI content drafts | ✓ |
| Competitor gap analysis | ✓ |
| Growth potential scoring | ✓ |
| API access | ✗ |
| Self-serve trial | ✗ |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Content type focus | Long-form blog draft generation (800-2,000 words) | SEO-structured articles built around keyword clusters |
| AI content drafting | Yes (collaborative draft-then-edit model) | Yes (drafts structured around cluster keywords) |
| Keyword clustering / topical authority mapping | No | Yes |
| Competitor gap analysis | No | Yes |
| Content planning / briefing | Yes (topic-based planning) | Yes (cluster-based, not brief-based) |
| API access | No | No |
| Self-serve pricing | Unclear (reportedly ~$19/mo before the outage) | No (contact for pricing) |
| Current availability | Domain inaccessible at time of writing | Active |
| Starting price | Unknown (domain down) | Custom (sales-led) |
Which should you choose?
This is not a close call feature-for-feature. Rankdots does more: keyword clustering, topical authority mapping, competitor gap analysis, and SEO-structured drafts, all inside one workflow. Penfriend only ever covered the drafting step, and even that comparison is moot if the product is not reachable. Note that "self-serve" here is relative: Rankdots still requires a sales conversation to see pricing, it just has a product you can actually sign into once you get there, which Penfriend currently does not. The deciding factor overall is not which tool has the better feature set, it is whether one of them is confirmed to still exist.
Bottom line
Rankdots is the sensible pick in mid-2026: it clusters keywords into topics, checks them against competitor coverage, and drafts SEO-structured content around them, even if you have to sit through a sales call to find out what it costs. Penfriend's collaborative drafting model might still be worth revisiting if the domain comes back online, but recommending a tool whose website does not currently load is not something we can do in good conscience. If Rankdots' pricing opacity is a dealbreaker, SEOBoost and StoryChief both publish their prices upfront and are worth comparing directly.
Frequently asked questions
Is Penfriend.ai still a working tool in 2026?
As of this review, the penfriend.ai domain does not load and appears to have expired, so there is no way to confirm whether Penfriend is still operating. If you are evaluating it, check the domain directly before assuming the product is available, since the last confirmed pricing and features date from before the outage.
What does Rankdots do that a basic keyword research tool does not?
Rankdots turns a keyword list into semantic topic clusters and then generates a draft structured around each cluster's primary and secondary keywords, rather than stopping at a spreadsheet of terms. It also compares your topical coverage against competitor domains and flags clusters where they rank and you do not, work most keyword tools leave for the user to do manually.
Does Rankdots publish its pricing anywhere?
Rankdots does not publish pricing on its website, so getting a quote means going through a demo or sales conversation. That is a real friction point if you are used to self-serve tools like SEOBoost or StoryChief, both of which list prices directly on their sites.
Can I use Rankdots or Penfriend through an API for content automation?
Neither tool offers API access on any plan, so getting keyword clusters, drafts, or content data into an external workflow means manual export from Rankdots, or, if Penfriend is even reachable, from its own dashboard. Teams that need programmatic access should look elsewhere in the Content Strategy category, such as Ranklytics or StoryChief's Agency plan.
Is Rankdots a good replacement for Penfriend specifically for blog drafting?
Rankdots covers blog drafting as part of a broader keyword-clustering and topical-authority workflow, so it replaces what Penfriend did and adds keyword strategy and competitor gap analysis on top. The trade-off is that Rankdots' drafts are built around SEO clusters rather than Penfriend's more conversational, collaborative drafting style, so writers who liked Penfriend's approach specifically may find Rankdots feels more structured and less exploratory.
Does Rankdots replace a full SEO suite like Ahrefs or Semrush?
Rankdots does not replace a full SEO suite. It is scoped to keyword clustering, topical authority planning, and AI content drafts, and does not include rank tracking, backlink analysis, or technical site auditing. Teams still need a dedicated SEO suite alongside Rankdots for those functions, the same way they would have needed one alongside Penfriend.

