Honest comparison · updated July 2026
Unbusied vs OneUp
OneUp bills itself as the simplest way to schedule and manage your posts, with wide network coverage, evergreen re-queuing, and a low flat price.
OneUp and Unbusied are literally competing on the same word: simple. OneUp is cheap, covers a lot of networks, and adds handy touches like auto-re-queuing evergreen posts. If the pitch stopped at price and coverage, it'd be a close call.
Where they part ways is focus. OneUp spreads across a very wide network list and leans on recycling features. Unbusied keeps to the seven platforms most businesses use, organizes them by brand into Social Sets, and puts founder support behind it.
Choose OneUp if…
Choose OneUp if you want the lowest price, the widest network coverage, and evergreen auto-re-queuing of your best posts.
Choose Unbusied if…
Choose Unbusied if you'd trade a few dollars and some breadth for a per-brand structure, careful native video, and support from the founder.
Side by side
| OneUp | Unbusied | |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | About $15/month ($180/year) | $33/month per brand, flat |
| Pricing model | Flat tiers by account and post volume | One plan. One price per Social Set (a brand's accounts on every platform we support). |
| Platforms | About 13 networks, including Google Business, Pinterest, and Reddit | Instagram, Facebook, Threads, YouTube, TikTok, LinkedIn, and X, all included |
| Signature feature | Evergreen auto-re-queuing of posts | Per-brand Social Sets, native video handled carefully |
| Posts | Generous, tier-dependent | Unlimited |
| Team members | Tier-dependent | Up to 5 people per Social Set (you and 4 teammates), included with no per-seat fees |
| Support | Support team | Email answered by Jeff, the person who built it |
OneUp details from their public pricing and marketing pages as of July 2026. Plans change, so check their pricing page for the latest.
When OneUp is the right call
- You want the lowest price and the widest list of networks.
- You want to auto-recycle evergreen posts on a schedule.
- You post to Google Business, Pinterest, or Reddit.
When Unbusied is the right call
- You want each brand kept clean in its own Social Set.
- You care about how your Reels covers and videos land on each platform.
- You want a human founder on the other end of support.
What you’d actually pay
OneUp starts around $15/month ($180/year), which is meaningfully cheaper than Unbusied, and it covers more networks. For pure reach on a budget, it's a strong pick.
Unbusied is $33/month per brand. You're paying more for a tighter, per-brand experience, careful native publishing, and founder support, not for extra network logos.
Switching from OneUp?
There’s nothing to migrate. Your social accounts stay exactly where they are. Create your Unbusied account, connect the accounts to a Social Set (a few minutes of OAuth), rebuild your upcoming queue, and cancel OneUp whenever it feels safe. Most people are fully moved in one sitting.
Fair questions
Is OneUp cheaper than Unbusied?
Yes, around $15/month versus $33, and it lists more networks. If price and breadth are your top priorities, OneUp is a fair choice.
Does Unbusied auto-recycle evergreen posts?
No. OneUp's evergreen re-queuing is a nice feature Unbusied doesn't have. Unbusied schedules the posts you compose rather than re-sharing a library.
Why would I pay more for Unbusied?
For the per-brand Social Set structure, careful native video, team included, and support from the founder. If those don't matter to you, OneUp's lower price is compelling.