$99 a month gets you a reporting suite. $39 gets you an answer.
Social Status is built to automate agency reports across five platforms. Statly is built to answer one question well: is this specific post actually working, and can this account do it again?
Statly vs Social Status, in a sentence
Social Status consolidates engagement, reach and growth into boardroom-ready reports. Statly tells you whether a post is a statistical outlier for that account's own history, and whether its wins are repeatable.
One is built to explain your numbers to a client. The other is built to tell you what to post next.
How the two compare
| Social Status | Statly | |
|---|---|---|
| Core metrics | Engagement rate, growth rate, reach, impressions, CTR, CPC | Median & average views, engagement rate, comment rate, plus a full consistency suite |
| Tells you if a result is signal or a fluke | No | Yes, that's the entire product |
| Median vs. average shown separately | No | Yes |
| Per-post outlier score vs. the account's baseline | No | Yes, on every scanned Reel |
| Analyze any public account | Yes, via the Competitor Analytics module | Yes, unlimited, no separate module |
| Requires connecting accounts | Yes, API login for owned profiles | No, ever |
| Cross-account trend detection | No | Yes, Trend Finder |
| Combine accounts into one dataset | No | Yes, Merge |
| Client/agency report exports | Yes, PDF, PPTX, Google Slides, white-label | No native report builder |
| Ads & influencer campaign tracking | Yes, separate modules | No, out of scope by design |
| Multi-platform (FB, TikTok, YouTube, LinkedIn, X) | Yes | Instagram Reels only |
| Entry paid tier | $99/mo, 100 plan quota, 1 year history | $39/mo, unlimited accounts, no history cap |
Figures reflect each tool's publicly listed plans at time of writing and may change.
The best reporting layer in the category, around the same metric gap
Social Status is a genuine four-in-one suite: profile reporting, ads tracking, influencer tracking and competitor benchmarking, built for agencies that hand a client a polished deck every month. It does that well.
But every metric across those modules is still built from the same vocabulary, engagement rate, growth rate, reach, impressions, CTR. Competitor Analytics benchmarks a post's engagement rate against other accounts'. It tells you a competitor's post did well relative to their others and the industry. It doesn't tell you whether that result was a fluke or a repeatable pattern you could learn from, the specific question Statly's consistency suite exists to answer.
You pay for more tracking, not a sharper answer
Social Status pricing isn't per platform or feature, it's a shared “quota” spent across every profile, competitor and influencer you track. Bronze is $99/month for 100 quota and a year of history; Platinum is $799/month for 1,000 quota and three years. That structure suits an agency billing multiple clients against one subscription. It also means the upgrade path adds more quota and more history, not a sharper answer.
Statly doesn't meter accounts at all. $39/month, unlimited scans, unlimited accounts, your own or fifty competitors' worth of research.
Under half the entry tier, with nothing to meter
Social Status Bronze is $99/month (100 quota, 1 year); Platinum is $799/month (1,000 quota, 3 years). Statly Pro is $39/month, unlimited accounts, no quota to burn, no history cap, API included. Plenty of agencies run both: Statly for “why did this work,” Social Status for the monthly deliverable.
Statly vs Social Status: FAQ
I need white-label reports for clients across five platforms.
Social Status is built for exactly that and does it well. Statly doesn't build client decks, it builds the research an account manager reads before deciding what goes in one. Many agencies run both.
I also need to track Meta ad spend and influencer campaigns.
Ads Analytics and Influencer Analytics are real, separate modules in Social Status. Statly has no equivalent, on purpose, it's organic content analysis only.
Doesn't benchmarking against competitors already tell me what's working?
It tells you what did well for them once, relative to their own average or the industry. It doesn't tell you whether that post was a repeatable pattern for that account, which is exactly what Statly's consistency suite (RCI, HPF, BPR, ESI, BRR) measures.
Get the answer, not just the deck
Install Statly free and see whether an account's wins are repeatable, unlimited profiles, flat $39/mo for Pro.
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