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· 8 min read

Best Product Feedback Tools in 2026

A no-BS comparison of the tools that help you collect, organize, and prioritize product feedback. We'll be honest about all of them — including ourselves.

If you're building a product, you need feedback. The question is: where does it all go? Slack threads get buried. Email gets lost. Spreadsheets get abandoned. That's where feedback tools come in.

Here's an honest look at the top feedback tools in 2026, what they're good at, what they're not, and how much they'll cost you.


1. Canny

Canny is the most well-known name in the space. It's polished, has AI features, and integrates with everything from Jira to Salesforce. If you're an enterprise team with budget, Canny delivers.

The catch: Their free plan caps at 25 tracked users — that's anyone who votes, posts, or comments. Most products burn through that in a week. Paid plans start at $79/mo (1,000 users) and go up to $359/mo (5,000 users).

Best for: Funded startups and mid-size companies who need enterprise integrations and have the budget.

2. Nolt

Nolt is simple and clean. No bloat, no unnecessary features. It supports anonymous posting, which is a unique edge. The UI is minimal and gets out of your way.

The catch: No free plan at all. Just a 10-day trial, then $29/mo per board. Need 3 boards? That's $87/mo. The per-board pricing adds up fast.

Best for: Teams who want simplicity and don't mind paying per board. Great if anonymous feedback is important.

3. Featurebase

Featurebase is the newer kid on the block, positioning itself as a modern all-in-one: feedback, roadmap, changelog, and even a help desk. They've got AI features and a decent free tier.

The catch: Per-seat pricing on paid plans ($29/seat/mo). A 5-person team pays $145/mo. If you just need feedback and not a full support suite, you're paying for features you won't use.

Best for: Teams who want feedback + help desk + knowledge base in one tool and don't mind per-seat pricing.

4. Upvoty

Upvoty used to be one of the more affordable options at $15/mo. Then they consolidated to a single plan at $199/mo. Yes, a 13x price increase. The product itself is solid — upvoting, roadmaps, embeddable widgets — but the pricing shift has pushed many users to look elsewhere.

The catch: $199/mo flat. No free plan. Existing customers are being gradually migrated to the new pricing.

Best for: Teams who need an embeddable widget and custom domains and are ok with the price.

5. FeedMango

That's us. We built FeedMango because we thought feedback tools were overpriced for what they do. You get upvoting, nested comments, boards, categories, statuses, team roles, roadmap view, and email notifications.

Free plan: 1 brand, 1 board, 50 tracked users, unlimited posts. Actually usable, not a 10-day bait-and-switch.

Pro plan: $3/mo. Unlimited everything. That's not a typo.

The catch: We're newer, so we don't have AI features, embeddable widgets, or third-party integrations yet. If you need those, Canny or Featurebase are better choices today.

Best for: Indie hackers, small teams, and anyone who thinks $79/mo for an upvote button is absurd.


Quick pricing comparison

ToolFree planPaid starts at
FeedMangoYes (50 users)$3/mo
CannyYes (25 users)$79/mo
NoltNo$29/mo per board
FeaturebaseLimited$29/seat/mo
UpvotyNo$199/mo

The bottom line

If you need enterprise integrations and AI, go with Canny. If you want an all-in-one suite, try Featurebase. If you want anonymous posting, check out Nolt. If you want a solid feedback tool that does the core job well and doesn't cost more than a coffee, give FeedMango a try.

Try FeedMango free

No credit card. No time limit. No gotchas.