Back-and-forth emails to find a meeting time are a productivity killer. Scheduling tools fix this by letting people book time on your calendar directly. But which one should you use?

We tested all four by setting up real booking pages, connecting calendars, and running them with actual meetings. Here's what we found.

In This Article

  1. Calendly
  2. Cal.com
  3. SavvyCal
  4. Acuity Scheduling
  5. Comparison Table

1. Calendly — Best Overall

Calendly

The most widely used scheduling tool — simple, reliable, and universally recognized.

Our take: Calendly is the scheduling tool people recognize. When you send a Calendly link, people know exactly what to do. The free plan handles basic scheduling perfectly. The Standard plan ($10/seat/month) adds multiple event types, team scheduling, and integrations.
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Calendly dominates scheduling for a reason: it just works. Connect your Google or Outlook calendar, set your availability, share your link. Recipients pick a time, it appears on your calendar, everyone gets a confirmation. Reminders go out automatically.

On the Standard plan ($10/seat/month), you unlock multiple event types (15-min call, 30-min meeting, 60-min consultation), group events, round-robin team scheduling, and integrations with Zoom, Salesforce, HubSpot, and more.

The Teams plan ($16/seat/month) adds routing forms that ask questions before booking and direct people to the right team member. The admin features let managers control scheduling rules across the organization.

Pros

Cons

2. Cal.com — Best Free & Open Source

Cal.com

Open-source scheduling that rivals Calendly — free forever, self-hostable, fully featured.

Our take: Cal.com is what happens when developers build an open-source Calendly alternative and make it genuinely good. The free plan includes unlimited event types, no Cal.com branding, and most features that Calendly charges for. If you're technical or just want to save money, this is the pick.
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Cal.com's free plan is remarkably generous. Unlimited event types, calendar connections, and bookings. No Cal.com branding forced onto your pages. Custom scheduling links. Integrations with Zoom, Google Meet, and other video tools. This is what Calendly charges $10/month for.

Being open-source means you can self-host Cal.com on your own server for complete data control. For most people, the hosted version at cal.com works perfectly — but developers and privacy-conscious businesses love the self-hosting option.

The Team plan ($12/seat/month) adds round-robin scheduling, team event types, and admin controls. The Enterprise plan adds SAML SSO, custom SLAs, and priority support.

Pros

Cons

3. SavvyCal — Best for Sales Teams

SavvyCal

Scheduling that respects both sides — overlay your calendar to find the best time together.

Our take: SavvyCal rethinks scheduling from the recipient's perspective. Instead of showing a grid of your available slots, recipients can overlay their own calendar and visually find a time that works for both. This subtle UX improvement makes a real difference for high-stakes meetings.
Try SavvyCal Free →

SavvyCal's killer feature is the calendar overlay. When someone opens your booking link, they can connect their own calendar and see their events alongside your availability. No more switching tabs to check if a time works. This is especially valuable for sales meetings where you want the booking experience to feel collaborative, not transactional.

Prioritized scheduling is another smart feature. You can rank time preferences — prefer mornings over afternoons, Tuesdays over Fridays — and SavvyCal visually highlights your preferred slots. Recipients naturally gravitate toward those times.

The Individual plan ($12/user/month) adds unlimited links, multiple calendars, and integrations. The Teams plan ($16/user/month) adds round-robin, collective scheduling, and admin features.

Pros

Cons

4. Acuity Scheduling — Best for Service Businesses

Acuity Scheduling

Scheduling with built-in payments, intake forms, and packages — built for service providers.

Our take: Acuity (by Squarespace) is built for businesses that sell time. Clients book, fill out intake forms, pay, and get confirmation — all in one flow. If you're a consultant, coach, therapist, or freelancer who takes bookings with payment, Acuity is purpose-built for you.
Try Acuity — 7 Day Trial →

Where Calendly is meeting-first, Acuity is appointment-first. The difference matters. Acuity supports intake forms (collect information before the appointment), payment collection (Stripe, Square, PayPal), packages (buy 5 sessions, use them anytime), gift certificates, and tipping. This is a booking system for a service business, not just a meeting scheduler.

Intake forms let you ask custom questions when someone books. A therapist might ask about symptoms, a consultant about business goals, a photographer about event details. This information arrives before the meeting, so you're prepared.

The Emerging plan ($16/month) includes 1 calendar, unlimited appointments, and payment collection. Growing ($27/month) adds multiple calendars, text reminders, and packages. Powerhouse ($49/month) adds multiple time zones, custom API access, and HIPAA compliance.

Pros

Cons

Comparison at a Glance

ToolFree PlanPaid FromPaymentsBest For
Calendly1 event type$10/seat/moPaid plansGeneral scheduling
Cal.comUnlimited$12/seat/moVia StripeFree/open-source
SavvyCal1 link$12/user/moNoSales meetings
Acuity7-day trial$16/moBuilt-inService businesses

The Quick Decision Guide

For most people, start with Cal.com (free, unlimited) or Calendly's free plan. Move to Acuity if you need payments and intake forms for a service business.