Make logo

MakevsZapier

Zapier logo

Visual automation platform built for complex, multi-step workflows with advanced data transformation and flexible logic.The most widely adopted no-code automation tool, connecting 6,000+ apps with a simple trigger-action model built for speed and ease.

The Verdict

Make vs Zapier

Make and Zapier are both powerful automation platforms, but they serve fundamentally different user profiles — and confusing the two is one of the most expensive mistakes a GTM team can make. **Choose Zapier if:** You're a marketer, SDR, or ops professional who needs to connect popular SaaS tools quickly, without technical support. Zapier's linear Zap model (trigger → action) is genuinely easy to learn in an afternoon, and its [6,000+ app integrations](https://zapier.com/blog/zapier-vs-make/) mean you'll rarely hit a wall. If your workflows are straightforward — 'When a lead fills out a form, add them to HubSpot and send a Slack notification' — Zapier executes this faster and more reliably than any competitor. For small teams automating common GTM tasks, Zapier's free plan (100 tasks/month) and polished UI justify the higher per-task cost at scale. **Choose Make if:** You're a RevOps engineer, a technical founder, or a power user who needs to build multi-branch workflows with conditional logic, data parsing, iterators, and API calls chained together. Make's visual canvas lets you see the entire data flow at once, and its operations-based pricing model becomes dramatically cheaper at volume. A workflow processing 10,000 operations per month costs roughly $9 on Make's Core plan versus $49–$73 on Zapier's Professional plan. That delta compounds fast. **The honest tradeoffs:** Zapier's simplicity comes with a real cost ceiling — its per-task pricing model punishes high-volume automations, and [users on Reddit consistently flag](https://zapier.com/blog/zapier-vs-make/) frustration with how tasks are counted (a 3-step Zap counts as 3 tasks, not 1). Make's learning curve is steeper — expect 1–2 weeks before a non-technical user is productive — but the payoff in flexibility and cost efficiency is substantial for teams running dozens of complex workflows. **What about n8n?** For technically-minded teams willing to self-host, n8n is a legitimate third option that undercuts both on cost and wins on customizability. However, self-hosting introduces DevOps overhead, and the hosted n8n cloud pricing is competitive but not obviously better than Make for mid-market teams. **Bottom line:** Zapier is the right default for most small business and marketing teams. Make is the right choice for technical teams, high-volume workflows, and anyone who's hit Zapier's pricing ceiling. If you're a developer or open-source advocate, n8n deserves serious consideration. No single tool wins universally — the best choice depends entirely on your team's technical depth, workflow complexity, and monthly operation volume.

Feature Comparison

Workflow Builder & UX

Feature
Make
Zapier
Workflow Design Interface
Visual drag-and-drop canvas (scenario builder) showing all modules, branches, and data paths simultaneously. Ideal for complex, non-linear flows. Steeper learning curve — most non-technical users need 1–2 weeks to feel comfortable.
Linear, step-by-step Zap builder with a guided UI. Each Zap follows a single trigger → action(s) path. Extremely beginner-friendly — most users build their first Zap in under 30 minutes.Winner
Multi-Branch / Conditional Logic
Native support for routers, filters, iterators, aggregators, and error handlers built directly into the visual canvas. True multi-path branching with full data transformation at each node.Winner
Paths (conditional branches) available but limited — each path still follows a linear structure. More complex logic requires workarounds or multiple chained Zaps. Available only on Professional plan and above.
Data Transformation & Parsing
Built-in JSON/XML parsers, regex support, array aggregators, math operations, and a native data store for temporary variable storage. Can manipulate complex data structures without third-party tools.Winner
Basic text formatting, date/number manipulation via Formatter by Zapier. No native JSON parser — complex transformations typically require Code by Zapier (JavaScript/Python) or external webhooks.
Error Handling
Dedicated error handler routes within scenarios. Can define exactly what happens when a module fails — retry, skip, or route to an alternate path. Full execution history with visual debugger.Winner
Basic error notifications via email or Slack. No native conditional error routing. Failed Zaps go to a replay queue but there's no branching on failure. Execution logs available but less visual.

App Integrations & Connectivity

Feature
Make
Zapier
Native App Integrations
1,500+ native app integrations including Salesforce, HubSpot, Slack, Google Workspace, Airtable, and all major marketing/CRM platforms. Smaller library but integrations tend to be deeply featured.
6,000+ native app integrations — the largest library of any automation platform. Covers virtually every SaaS tool a GTM team uses, including many niche tools that Make doesn't support natively.Winner
HTTP / Webhook Connectivity
Powerful native HTTP module supporting any REST API with full control over headers, auth methods, body format, and response parsing. Effectively connects to any service with an API regardless of native integration.Winner
Webhooks by Zapier available on paid plans. Less flexible than Make's HTTP module — fewer options for custom auth or response handling. Works well for standard webhook scenarios.
Integration Depth (Quality vs. Quantity)
Integrations generally expose more API endpoints and configuration options. For example, the Salesforce module supports bulk operations and advanced SOQL queries that Zapier's Salesforce integration does not.Tie
Integration breadth is unmatched but depth varies — some connectors only support basic triggers/actions. For common GTM tools (HubSpot, Salesforce, Gmail), Zapier's integrations are mature and reliable.Tie
Custom App / API Builder
Custom apps can be built using Make's App builder (previously Integromat). Requires JSON configuration and some technical knowledge but is well documented.
Zapier Developer Platform allows building custom integrations. More polished developer experience with better documentation and a larger developer community.Winner

Pricing & Value

Feature
Make
Zapier
Free Plan
Free plan includes 1,000 operations/month, unlimited scenarios (active limit: 2), 15-minute minimum execution interval, and access to most core features. More generous for experimentation.Winner
Free plan includes 100 tasks/month, unlimited Zaps (but only single-step Zaps), and 15-minute update time. Very limited for real GTM use cases — essentially a trial tier.
Cost at 10,000 Operations/Month
Core plan at $10.59/month includes 10,000 operations. This covers 10,000 individual module executions — a 5-step scenario running 2,000 times = 10,000 operations. Extremely cost-effective.Winner
Professional plan starts at $49/month for 2,000 tasks. To reach 10,000 tasks, you need a higher Professional tier at approximately $73–$99/month depending on billing cycle. Each action in a Zap counts as a separate task.
Cost at 50,000 Operations/Month
Pro plan at $18.82/month includes 40,000 operations; next tier handles 80,000 operations at ~$34/month. 50,000 operations falls between tiers — approximately $34/month total.Winner
At 50,000 tasks/month, Zapier Professional plan costs approximately $299–$399/month. Team plan (required for multi-user) starts at $449/month. Costs escalate dramatically at scale.
Pricing Model Transparency
Operations-based pricing is predictable once understood. One operation = one module execution. Building complex scenarios doesn't change what 'counts' — straightforward math.Winner
Task-based pricing is frequently cited as confusing and punishing on Reddit and review sites. A 5-step Zap counts 5 tasks per run, not 1. Users often discover they're consuming far more tasks than expected.

AI & LLM Automation Capabilities

Feature
Make
Zapier
Native AI/LLM Integration
Make AI modules connect directly to OpenAI, Anthropic, and Google Gemini with support for chat completions, embeddings, image generation, and audio transcription. AI responses can be parsed and routed through the visual canvas for downstream processing.Tie
Zapier AI (formerly AI Actions) includes AI-powered Zap builder (describes workflow in plain English), ChatGPT and Claude integrations, and AI-generated draft actions. Zapier Central (beta) offers agentic AI behavior with bots that monitor and act autonomously.Tie
AI Workflow Orchestration
Make's scenario canvas is well-suited to building multi-step AI pipelines: ingest data → call LLM → parse JSON response → branch on output → update CRM. The visual debugger makes LLM prompt/response debugging practical.Winner
Zapier AI orchestration (Zapier Central) enables event-driven AI agents that respond to triggers without predefined Zaps. More 'agentic' in nature but less transparent in execution flow. Better suited to simpler AI-assisted tasks.
AI-Assisted Workflow Building
Make has introduced AI-assisted scenario building where you describe your workflow in natural language and Make suggests the scenario structure. Still maturing — best results on common workflow patterns.
Zapier's AI Zap builder is more mature and produces reliable Zap suggestions from natural language descriptions. Works well for standard integrations and saves meaningful setup time for non-technical users.Winner

Team Collaboration & Enterprise

Feature
Make
Zapier
Team & Multi-User Access
Team features available on Core plan and above. Multiple users can access the same organization with role-based permissions. Scenario ownership and sharing is built in.Winner
Multi-user access requires Team plan ($449+/month). Includes shared app connections, user management, and permission controls. Enterprise plan adds SSO, advanced admin, and compliance features.
Audit Logs & Compliance
Execution history available on all plans. Advanced logging and data residency options on Enterprise plan. SOC 2 Type II and GDPR compliant.
Advanced audit logging on Enterprise plan. SOC 2 Type II, GDPR, and HIPAA compliance available. Stronger enterprise compliance posture overall, with dedicated customer success on higher tiers.Winner
Scenario / Workflow Templates
500+ pre-built scenario templates in the Make template library. Templates cover marketing, sales, HR, and e-commerce use cases and can be customized after import.
2,000+ pre-built Zap templates. Larger library with better discoverability. Templates are directly accessible from the app integration pages, making it easy to find relevant automations by app.Winner

Execution Speed & Reliability

Feature
Make
Zapier
Minimum Polling Interval
Free plan: 15 minutes. Core: 5 minutes. Pro: 1 minute. Enterprise: on-demand/instant for webhook-triggered scenarios.Tie
Free plan: 15 minutes. Starter: 15 minutes. Professional: 2 minutes. Team/Enterprise: 1 minute. Instant triggers available via webhooks on all paid plans.Tie
Execution History & Debugging
Full visual execution history showing every module's input/output data for each run. Can click into any historical run and see exactly where it succeeded or failed. Extremely powerful for debugging.Winner
Task history shows trigger data and action results but is less visual. Can replay failed tasks. Debugging complex multi-step Zaps requires more manual inspection compared to Make's visual flow.
Uptime & Reliability
Make reports 99.9% uptime SLA on Enterprise plans. General reliability is strong but has historically had occasional outage events. Status page available at status.make.com.
Zapier reports 99.9% uptime SLA. As the market leader with more infrastructure investment, Zapier's reliability track record is marginally stronger. Status page at status.zapier.com.Winner

Pricing Comparison

Make

Free

$0/mo
  • 1,000 operations/month
  • 2 active scenarios
  • 15-minute minimum execution interval
  • Access to all core modules
  • Basic HTTP/webhook support
  • Community support only

Core

$10.59/mo (billed annually)
  • 10,000 operations/month
  • Unlimited active scenarios
  • 5-minute minimum execution interval
  • Multi-user team access
  • Full execution history
  • Email support
  • Custom variables and data stores

Pro

$18.82/mo (billed annually)
  • 40,000 operations/month
  • Unlimited active scenarios
  • 1-minute minimum execution interval
  • Priority execution
  • Advanced scheduling
  • Full API access
  • Priority email support

Teams

$34.12/mo (billed annually)
  • 80,000 operations/month
  • Unlimited active scenarios and users
  • 1-minute minimum execution interval
  • Team folders and collaboration
  • Shared connections
  • Role-based access control
  • Priority support with faster response times

Enterprise

Custom pricing
  • Custom operations volume
  • Dedicated infrastructure options
  • SSO / SAML integration
  • Advanced audit logs
  • Data residency options (EU/US)
  • SLA guarantees
  • Dedicated customer success manager
  • Custom onboarding and training

Zapier

Free

$0/mo
  • 100 tasks/month
  • Unlimited Zaps (single-step only)
  • 15-minute update time
  • Access to 6,000+ app integrations
  • Basic Zap templates
  • Community support

Starter

$19.99/mo (billed annually)
  • 750 tasks/month
  • Unlimited Zaps including multi-step
  • 15-minute update time
  • Filters and formatters
  • Webhooks (outgoing)
  • Email support

Professional

$49/mo (billed annually) for 2,000 tasks — scales up
  • 2,000–50,000 tasks/month (tiered)
  • Unlimited Zaps
  • 2-minute update time
  • Paths (conditional branching)
  • Custom logic and filters
  • Webhooks (incoming and outgoing)
  • Auto-replay on error
  • Priority support

Team

$69/mo per user (billed annually), minimum ~$449/mo
  • Unlimited tasks (on higher tiers)
  • Shared Zaps and app connections
  • 1-minute update time
  • User roles and permissions
  • Premier support
  • Shared workspace
  • Advanced analytics

Enterprise

Custom pricing
  • Unlimited tasks
  • SSO / SAML
  • Advanced admin controls
  • HIPAA compliance available
  • Audit logs
  • Custom data retention
  • Dedicated customer success
  • Custom integrations support
  • SLA guarantees

Use Case Recommendations

Solo founder or small marketing team automating lead routing (100–2,000 tasks/month)

Zapier

For a solo founder or small team running common GTM automations — form submissions to CRM, Slack notifications on deal close, email list syncs — Zapier is the clear winner. The setup time is minimal (most Zaps go live in under an hour), the 750-task Starter plan at $19.99/month covers most small-team needs, and the 6,000+ app library means you'll find native integrations for tools like Typeform, HubSpot, Gmail, and Calendly without any configuration overhead. Make's power is wasted here; the steeper learning curve adds unnecessary friction when the automation requirements are straightforward. Save the engineering time and use Zapier.

RevOps team running high-volume data sync workflows (20,000–100,000 operations/month)

Make

This is where Make's pricing model becomes a significant competitive advantage. A RevOps team syncing CRM data between Salesforce, HubSpot, and a data warehouse — running 50,000 operations per month — would pay approximately $34/month on Make's Teams plan versus $299–$450/month on Zapier's Professional or Team plan. Over 12 months, that's a cost difference of $3,000–$5,000 for the same operational output. Beyond cost, Make's visual canvas makes it easier to build the complex conditional logic that data sync workflows require: deduplication checks, field mapping with transformations, error handling that routes failed records to a separate review queue. For RevOps engineers who live in this complexity daily, Make is the more capable and cost-effective platform.

Marketing team building AI-powered lead enrichment and personalization workflows

Make

When building AI-powered GTM workflows — for example, 'enrich new leads with Clay, pass enriched data to GPT-4 for personalized email drafting, validate the output, and push to Outreach' — Make's visual canvas provides a critical advantage. The ability to see the entire AI pipeline at once, parse LLM JSON responses within the scenario, and route outputs conditionally (e.g., if confidence score > 0.8, send email; else flag for human review) makes complex AI workflows tractable without custom code. Zapier's AI features are improving rapidly with Zapier Central, but the linear Zap structure makes multi-step AI pipelines harder to debug and maintain. Make's execution history with full input/output visibility at each module is invaluable when prompts produce unexpected results.

Enterprise team requiring SOC 2, HIPAA, and SSO compliance

Zapier

For enterprise teams in regulated industries — healthcare, financial services, legal — Zapier's Enterprise plan offers a more mature compliance posture. HIPAA Business Associate Agreements (BAAs) are available on Zapier Enterprise, making it viable for workflows touching protected health information. Zapier's SSO/SAML implementation is more polished and better documented, and its enterprise customer success team has deeper experience with compliance-driven deployment requirements. Make offers SOC 2 Type II and GDPR compliance and has Enterprise data residency options, but Zapier's HIPAA support and longer enterprise track record give it the edge for highly regulated environments. Both platforms require a custom Enterprise contract for these features — budget accordingly.

Technical developer or agency managing 20+ client automation workflows with self-hosting preference

Make

Agencies and technical developers managing automations across multiple clients benefit from Make's organization and team structure, which allows scenario separation by client without the per-user pricing cliff that Zapier's Team plan creates. For developers who want maximum control and are comfortable with technical configuration, the serious alternative to consider here is n8n — the open-source automation platform that can be self-hosted for near-zero infrastructure cost (a $5–$10/month VPS handles most small-to-mid agency workloads). n8n offers JavaScript-native code nodes, a visual canvas similar to Make, and no per-operation pricing on self-hosted deployments. Agencies comfortable with DevOps should seriously evaluate n8n before committing to either Make or Zapier at scale. However, for agencies that prefer a managed SaaS platform, Make's pricing tiers and organizational structure make it the better fit over Zapier.

SDR team automating outreach sequences and CRM updates in real time

Zapier

For SDR teams needing fast, reliable automations tied to their existing sales stack — Salesforce, Outreach, Salesloft, Apollo, LinkedIn Sales Navigator — Zapier's native integrations and near-instant webhook triggers make it the pragmatic choice. SDR workflows tend to be high-frequency but relatively simple in logic: 'When a prospect opens an email 3 times, create a Salesforce task and notify the SDR in Slack.' Zapier handles these patterns natively with little configuration. The 2-minute polling interval on Professional (and instant webhook triggers) is sufficient for sales workflows. Make can do the same, but requires more setup time and the cost efficiency gains only materialize at higher volumes. At the 2,000–5,000 task/month range typical of a small SDR team, Zapier's ease of use outweighs Make's cost advantage.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is Zapier the same as Make?
No, Zapier and Make are separate competing automation platforms with different architectures, pricing models, and target users. Zapier uses a linear trigger-action model (called Zaps) that's extremely beginner-friendly and connects 6,000+ apps. Make uses a visual scenario canvas with advanced branching, data transformation, and error handling that's better suited for complex workflows. They both automate tasks between apps, but they serve different user profiles — Zapier for simplicity and breadth, Make for flexibility and cost efficiency at scale. Make was previously called Integromat before rebranding in 2022, which contributes to some confusion.
Which is cheaper, Make or Zapier?
Make is significantly cheaper than Zapier at scale. At 10,000 operations/month, Make's Core plan costs approximately $10.59/month versus $49–$99/month on Zapier's Professional plan for a comparable task volume. The gap widens dramatically at higher volumes — 50,000 operations/month costs roughly $34/month on Make versus $300–$450/month on Zapier. However, Zapier's free plan (100 tasks/month) and Starter plan ($19.99/month) are competitive for very low-volume use cases. The key difference is pricing model: Make charges per 'operation' (each module execution), while Zapier charges per 'task' (each action step in a Zap), which makes complex multi-step Zaps disproportionately expensive on Zapier.
Is Zapier easier to use than Make?
Yes, Zapier is considerably easier to use than Make for non-technical users. Zapier's step-by-step Zap builder guides users through selecting a trigger app, trigger event, and action apps in a linear wizard-style interface. Most users can build and activate their first working Zap in under 30 minutes. Make's visual canvas is more powerful but has a steeper learning curve — concepts like routers, aggregators, iterators, and data stores require dedicated learning time, and most non-technical users need 1–2 weeks before they're comfortable building scenarios independently. For GTM professionals without a technical background, Zapier is the more accessible starting point. Make rewards the investment in learning but the upfront cost is real.
What is the difference between Make, Zapier, and n8n?
Make, Zapier, and n8n are all automation platforms but serve different user profiles. Zapier is the most beginner-friendly with 6,000+ integrations and a simple linear workflow model — best for non-technical teams automating common SaaS connections. Make offers a visual canvas with advanced logic, data transformation, and operations-based pricing that's more cost-effective at scale — best for technical RevOps teams and power users. n8n is an open-source platform that can be self-hosted for near-zero cost — a $10/month VPS handles most workflows — and offers JavaScript-native code nodes for maximum flexibility. n8n's learning curve is similar to Make's but with greater extensibility for developers. The hosted n8n cloud plan starts at $20/month for 2,500 workflow executions. Choose Zapier for ease, Make for visual complexity on a managed platform, and n8n if you have DevOps capacity and want to minimize long-term licensing costs.
Is Make.com a competitor to Zapier?
Yes, Make.com (formerly Integromat) is a direct competitor to Zapier in the workflow automation market. Both platforms allow users to connect apps and automate tasks without writing code. Make competes most directly with Zapier's Professional and Team plans, targeting users who need more complex automation logic and better pricing at higher operation volumes. Make is owned by Celonis (acquired in 2022) and has grown its market presence significantly, particularly among technical users, agencies, and RevOps professionals who find Zapier's pricing prohibitive at scale. In G2 ratings, Make and Zapier both score highly, though Zapier leads on ease of use and Make leads on flexibility and value.
What are the disadvantages of Zapier?
Zapier's main disadvantages include: (1) Expensive at scale — per-task pricing means a 5-step Zap counts 5 tasks per run, which surprises many users and makes high-volume workflows cost-prohibitive; (2) Limited branching logic — complex conditional workflows require workarounds or multiple chained Zaps; (3) Weak data transformation — handling complex JSON structures or multi-step data manipulation typically requires external tools or code; (4) Multi-user cost — the Team plan at $449+/month is a significant jump from Professional for teams needing shared access; (5) Debugging difficulty — tracing errors in complex multi-step Zaps is harder than in Make's visual execution history; (6) Reddit users frequently cite task-counting as the top frustration, particularly when discovering that a 10-step Zap running 1,000 times consumes 10,000 tasks, not 1,000.
Is Make.com or Zapier free?
Both Make.com and Zapier offer free plans, but with significant limitations. Make's free plan includes 1,000 operations/month and 2 active scenarios — more generous than Zapier's free tier for experimentation. Zapier's free plan includes only 100 tasks/month and restricts users to single-step Zaps (no multi-step automations), which severely limits practical use. For real GTM workflows, neither free plan is sufficient for production use. Make's free tier is better for evaluating the platform, while Zapier's free tier is essentially a trial. Most teams move to Make's Core plan ($10.59/month) or Zapier's Starter plan ($19.99/month) once they're ready to automate in earnest.
Does Make.com integrate with Zapier?
Make.com and Zapier do not have a direct native integration with each other — you would not typically run both platforms in tandem for the same workflow. However, both platforms support webhooks, which means a workflow triggered in Make can send data to a Zapier webhook endpoint (and vice versa), technically enabling cross-platform chaining. In practice, this is uncommon and introduces unnecessary complexity and latency. Most teams choose one platform and rebuild workflows if they migrate. The rare exception is organizations with legacy Zaps that haven't been migrated — they might use Make for new workflows while keeping old Zaps active in Zapier temporarily.
What do Reddit users say about Make vs. Zapier?
Reddit discussions on r/nocode, r/zapier, and r/automation consistently reflect a few recurring themes: (1) Zapier users frequently complain about the task-counting model — discovering their multi-step Zaps consume far more tasks than expected is the top source of frustration and a common reason for switching to Make; (2) Make users praise the visual canvas and pricing but acknowledge the learning curve is a real barrier — 'Make is powerful but you need to invest time to learn it' is a common sentiment; (3) Technical users almost universally recommend n8n over both for teams with DevOps capability; (4) For simple automations, Zapier gets consistent praise for 'just working' with minimal setup; (5) Agency owners tend to favor Make for client work due to better organizational structure and lower per-client costs. The general Reddit consensus: 'Start with Zapier, switch to Make when you hit the pricing wall.'
Should I switch from Zapier to Make, and what does migration involve?
Switching from Zapier to Make is viable but involves a real rebuilding effort — there is no automated migration tool that converts Zaps to Make scenarios. Each workflow must be rebuilt manually in Make's scenario canvas. For simple, linear Zaps (trigger + 1–3 actions), the rebuild time is typically 15–45 minutes per workflow. For complex multi-step Zaps with paths and formatters, expect 1–3 hours per workflow. Key considerations: (1) App connections need to be re-authorized in Make; (2) Webhook URLs change, so any external services posting to Zapier webhooks need to be updated; (3) Run a parallel period where both platforms are active to validate Make scenarios before deactivating Zaps; (4) Task history in Zapier is not portable to Make. The migration is most justified when your monthly Zapier bill exceeds $100 and your workflows are sufficiently complex to benefit from Make's canvas. Teams with 20+ Zaps should budget 2–4 weeks for a full migration project.

Find the Right GTM Stack with Maestro

Stop guessing which tools to use. Maestro analyzes your GTM workflow and recommends the best-fit tools for your team.

Try Maestro Free