Statusbrew is a Sprout- and Hootsuite-class social media suite priced in USD by users and social profiles, starting at a listed $69/month for one user and five profiles. Here is what each tier includes, where the costs stack as you add profiles and seats, and who the agency-suite price makes sense for — as listed on Statusbrew’s pricing page in June 2026.
Quick answer
Statusbrew lists at $69/month for Lite (billed annually; $89 monthly), covering 1 user and 5 social profiles. It bills per user and per profile, so growth means a tier jump: Standard $129 (10 profiles), Premium $229 (15 profiles). There is no free plan — a 14-day no-card trial only. Approvals start on the $229 Premium tier (as listed, June 2026).
| Plan | Billed monthly | Billed annually | Key limits |
|---|---|---|---|
| Lite | $89/month | $69/month | 1 user · 5 social profiles · unlimited publishing · best-time queue · bulk scheduling · all-in-one social inbox · email support |
| Standard | $179/month | $129/month | 3 users · 10 social profiles · reporting with 18-month data backfill · Google My Business integration · chat support |
| Premium | $299/month | $229/month | 6 users · 15 social profiles (expandable) · assignment & approval workflows · social listening · competitor benchmarking · team & SLA reporting · priority support |
| Enterprise | Custom quote | — | Unlimited profiles · Insights API · SAML SSO · advanced security & onboarding (sales-led, custom-priced) |
Statusbrew displays USD prices with a monthly/annual toggle — annual rates shown above, with the higher month-to-month price in the monthly column. Every plan includes a 14-day free trial (no credit card required) plus free migration and onboarding. There is no free-forever plan, and no money-back guarantee is listed. A separate Agency offer starts from $49/month per client. As listed on Statusbrew’s pricing page, June 2026.
Prices as listed on Statusbrew’s site, June 2026. Prices may change — see Statusbrew's current pricing page.
Hidden costs
Lite lists at $69/month billed annually ($89 month-to-month) and includes just 1 user and 5 social profiles (as of June 2026). That is roughly four times SocialKit’s annual-billing entry rate for a third of the included accounts. Statusbrew is honest that it is a cheaper Sprout/Hootsuite — but if you never needed an agency suite, you are paying agency rates for headroom you may not use.
Because profiles are capped per tier (5 on Lite, 10 on Standard, 15 on Premium), connecting one more brand or channel can mean a full tier jump, not an add-on. Going from 5 to 6 profiles moves you from Lite at $69/month to Standard at $129/month — computed from the audited list prices — nearly doubling the bill for a single extra connection (as of June 2026).
On Statusbrew’s pricing page, assignment and approval workflows are listed on Premium — $229/month billed annually ($299 monthly), with 6 users and 15 profiles (as of June 2026). A small team that just wants a review step before posts go live is looking at the Premium price of admission, even if the surrounding moderation tooling is genuinely strong.
Statusbrew’s Insights API and SAML SSO are listed only on the sales-led, custom-priced Enterprise plan (as of June 2026). If you want automation hooks or single sign-on, there is no self-serve price — you book a call. Reporting with 18-month backfill and the Google My Business integration also sit a tier up, starting from Standard at $129/month.
Statusbrew offers a generous 14-day trial with no card required and free migration help, but there is no free-forever plan and no money-back guarantee is listed on its pricing page (as of June 2026). Once the trial ends, the cheapest way in is $69/month at annual rates. Some users also report on G2 and Capterra that onboarding takes time to learn and the platform can occasionally feel slow.
| Channels | Statusbrew | SocialKit |
|---|---|---|
| 5 channels | Lists at $69/month — Lite, 1 user / 5 profiles (annual billing)$89/month billed monthly; 5 profiles is Lite’s ceiling (June 2026) | Solo: €29/month flat (€17.40/month billed annually) |
| 10 channels | Lists at $129/month — Standard, 3 users / 10 profilesA 6th profile pushes you off Lite onto Standard ($129/mo annual) | Solo: €29/month flat — same plan, 15 accounts included |
| 15 channels | Lists at $229/month — Premium, 6 users / 15 profilesApproval workflows start on this $229/mo Premium tier (June 2026) | Team: €49/month flat (€29.40/month billed annually), 30 accounts |
Statusbrew costs are derived from the rates published on their public pricing page as of June 2026 and may change. SocialKit Solo includes 15 social accounts across all 11 platforms at one flat price.
Honest take
Statusbrew is worth it for the buyer it is built for: agencies, franchises, and enterprise teams that live in a unified inbox moderating high engagement volume. The depth is genuine — it pitches 1:1 feature parity with Sprout Social and Hootsuite, advertises 68+ comment-moderation automations and 230+ analytics metrics with 18-month data backfill, and adds WhatsApp and Line coverage SocialKit lacks. It backs that with a 14-day no-card trial, free migration, no long contracts, and a published “No Price Hikes, Ever” promise — real substance at a price that undercuts the suites it benchmarks against.
The math turns when you mainly need to publish content. Then the entry tier costs roughly four times SocialKit’s annual rate for a third of the accounts, approvals sit on the $229 Premium tier, and API access requires a sales call. Agency with a moderation team: worth it. Creator scheduling posts: do the profile math first.
If you landed here doing profile-and-seat math, SocialKit attacks the exact line items that make Statusbrew expensive. Every plan covers all 11 platforms — Instagram, TikTok, YouTube, Facebook, LinkedIn, X, Threads, Bluesky, Pinterest, Mastodon, and Google Business — with no per-network pricing. Solo is €29/month (€17.40/month billed annually) with 15 social accounts: three times Lite’s five-profile cap, for a fraction of Lite’s $69/month annual rate. SocialKit also publishes natively to Mastodon, which Statusbrew does not list.
The team math is where the gap widens. SocialKit’s Team plan is a flat €49/month (€29.40/month billed annually) with 30 social accounts, 2 seats, and approval workflows included — the feature Statusbrew reserves for its $229 Premium tier — with extra teammates at €2 each and extra accounts at €4 each. API + webhooks and AI come on every plan, including Solo (metered AI credits, not unlimited). Honest caveat: if your day is spent in comments and DMs and you need a unified inbox with moderation automations, social listening, and SLA reporting — or you engage customers on WhatsApp or Line — Statusbrew plays in a class SocialKit does not compete in. For everyone else, the trial is 7 days, €0.00 due today, with a 7-day money-back guarantee.
billed annually · €29/month billed monthly
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Full plan details on our pricing page.
FAQ
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The full head-to-head: every feature, platform, and price compared with Statusbrew.
Best Statusbrew alternativesStatusbrew makes a fair pitch: Sprout Social and Hootsuite-class engagement tooling — a unified inbox, 68+ moderation automations, 230+ analytics metrics — at lower prices than either, with a 14-day no-card trial, free migration, and a published “No Price Hikes, Ever” promise. The friction is that it is still an agency suite priced like one: the entry Lite plan lists at $69/month billed annually ($89 month-to-month) for one user and five profiles, approval workflows arrive with the $229/month Premium tier, the API sits on a custom-priced Enterprise plan, and there is no free plan or money-back guarantee (as of June 2026). Whether you want a different suite or never needed a suite at all, this list compares the strongest alternatives honestly. All facts come from each vendor’s public pricing page as of June 2026.
Statusbrew reviewsWhat real users praise and complain about in Statusbrew — pulled from verified reviews.
Sked Social pricing explainedSked Social starts at $290/year (~$24/month billed annually, as of June 2026) — but that buys one user and one social profile. The billing unit is per profile and per seat, so realistic multi-profile use lands on Grow at $690/year, with approval workflows a +$500–$1,000/year add-on. There is a 14-day no-card trial, but no free plan.