Make vs Bardeen
Make is visual automation platform for building complex workflows with a drag-and-drop builder, while Bardeen is AI-powered browser automation for scraping, data entry, and workflow automation. The biggest difference up front: Bardeen is free, while Make starts at $9/mo. Make is built for power users who want complex automations at a lower cost than zapier, whereas Bardeen targets non-technical users wanting browser-based automation.
At a glance
|
|
|
|
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Power users who want complex automations at a lower cost than Zapier | Non-technical users wanting browser-based automation |
| Starting price | $9/mo | Free |
| Free tier | ✓ | ✓ |
| Open source | — | — |
| Free tier available | ✓ | ✓ |
| Open source | — | — |
| AI Scraping | — | ✓ |
| Branching Logic | ✓ | — |
| Browser Automation | — | ✓ |
| Data Mapping | ✓ | — |
| Error Handling | ✓ | — |
| Integrations | — | ✓ |
| Real-Time Webhooks | ✓ | — |
| Templates | — | ✓ |
| Visual Builder | ✓ | — |
Make
Strengths
- Visual workflow builder is more powerful than Zapier
- Significantly cheaper — more operations per dollar
- Complex logic: branching, loops, aggregation
- Real-time webhooks (not polling)
Weaknesses
- Steeper learning curve than Zapier
- Smaller app library than Zapier
- Interface can be overwhelming for beginners
- Documentation not as comprehensive
Bardeen
Strengths
- Includes Browser Automation as a core feature, purpose-built for automation workflows
- Includes AI Scraping as a core feature, purpose-built for automation workflows
- Free for 100 runs/mo — generous enough for most small teams to get real work done
- Includes templates alongside the core feature set — fewer separate tools needed
Weaknesses
- Free plan exists but key features are locked behind the paid upgrade
- Developer-oriented tooling may not suit non-technical team members
- Complex automations can break silently if a connected service changes its API
- Limited team/admin features if your organization eventually scales up
The bottom line
Pricing: Bardeen is completely free (Free for 100 runs/mo), which makes it the obvious pick if budget is the top concern. Make starts at $9/mo, but Free for 1,000 ops/month. That cost buys you a more polished or feature-rich experience, so it comes down to whether the extras justify the spend.
Feature gaps: Make offers Branching Logic, Data Mapping and Error Handling that Bardeen lacks. Bardeen brings AI Scraping, Browser Automation and Integrations that Make does not have.
Team fit: Make is geared toward small teams teams, while Bardeen is aimed at individual users and small setups. Pick the one that matches where your team is today and where it is headed — migrating tools later is always painful.
Where each tool shines: Make's biggest strengths are: visual workflow builder is more powerful than zapier. significantly cheaper — more operations per dollar. Bardeen's biggest strengths are: includes browser automation as a core feature, purpose-built for automation workflows. includes ai scraping as a core feature, purpose-built for automation workflows.
Watch out for: With Make, users commonly note that steeper learning curve than zapier. With Bardeen, the main complaint is that free plan exists but key features are locked behind the paid upgrade.
Choose Make if...
- You need a tool built for power users who want complex automations at a lower cost than zapier
- You specifically need Branching Logic and Data Mapping
- You care about significantly cheaper — more operations per dollar
- Your team size fits the small teams profile Make is designed for
- The free tier works for you: free for 1,000 ops/month
Choose Bardeen if...
- You need a tool built for non-technical users wanting browser-based automation
- Budget is a hard constraint — Bardeen is free, Make is not
- You specifically need AI Scraping and Browser Automation
- You care about includes ai scraping as a core feature, purpose-built for automation workflows
- Your team size fits the individuals profile Bardeen is designed for
Looking for more options?
Related comparisons
Stay sharp
price changes, and honest takes — weekly.