Frill is a clean, flat-priced all-in-one board, roadmap, and changelog for indie makers, and a genuinely well-liked one. Usero is a feedback-to-PR tool that takes a request and drafts the code. Both collect feedback; Frill organizes it prettier, Usero ships a first pass at the fix.
Frill vs Usero, feature by feature
Prices and features as of 2026-06-03. Confirm on the vendor site before you commit.
| Feature | Frill | Usero | Edge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free tier | No (14-day trial) | Yes (real) | Usero |
| Entry price | $25/mo flat | $19/mo flat | Tie |
| Pricing model | Flat, unlimited seats/tracked users | Flat, not per seat | Tie |
| Board / roadmap UI polish | Best-in-class | Boring substrate | Frill |
| Changelog / announcements | Yes | No | Frill |
| Surveys | Yes (add-on) | No | Frill |
| White-labeling | Yes (add-on) | No | Frill |
| AI clustering | No | Yes | Usero |
| Dev-tool integration | One-way send to Jira / Linear | Opens a draft GitHub PR | Usero |
| Opens a draft GitHub PR | No | Yes | Usero |
| Support | Email-only, reported slow | Founder-direct | Tie |
| Open-source widget | No | Yes (npm, self-hostable) | Usero |
Price
Frill is 25 dollars a month (Startup, 50 ideas) up to 149 dollars a month (Growth, everything included). Usero is free to start, paid from 19 dollars a month. Both are refreshingly flat, not per seat and not per tracked user, a real shared strength over Canny and Aha!. The two are closest on price of any pair in this set. The catch on Frill is add-ons: privacy, surveys, and white-labeling cost extra on the lower tiers, and Startup caps ideas at 50. Confirm on frill.co, checked 2026-06-03.
Where Frill wins
- Changelog, announcements, and surveys in one tool. Frill bundles a changelog/announcements widget and surveys alongside its board and roadmap, so a small team can collect feedback, post release notes, and run a survey from one place. Usero ships none of that surface. If you want announcements and surveys with your feedback, Frill covers ground Usero does not (Frill homepage).
- White-labeling the public board. Frill offers white-labeling as an add-on so the public board can carry only your brand. Usero does not offer that today. For a team that wants the feedback surface to look fully its own, that is a real capability Usero lacks (Frill pricing).
- Best-in-class board and roadmap design. Reviewers rate Frill board, roadmap, and changelog among the cleanest in the category (4.7 across 26 Capterra reviews, checked 2026-06-03). Frill board is frankly prettier than Usero deliberately-boring substrate. That is genuine polish on the feedback surface, not a capability gap.
Where Usero wins
- It opens a draft PR, not a one-way ticket. The furthest a Frill request travels toward engineering is a one-way send to Jira or Linear, where it lands as a ticket. Usero closes that last gap: it drafts the code change for the request and surfaces it as a draft PR in your repo. You own the merge button, it never ships anything without your approval. So instead of a card a developer still has to pick up and build, you get a starting implementation to review (full disclosure, this is my product).
- AI clustering and a free tier. Usero clusters duplicate reports with AI and has a real free tier, not a 14-day countdown. Frill has no AI clustering and runs a 14-day trial before its 25-dollar Startup plan, where privacy, surveys, and white-labeling are paid add-ons (Frill pricing, checked 2026-06-03).
The verdict
Pick Frill if: you want the cleanest, most affordable all-in-one board, roadmap, and changelog with flat pricing, plus surveys and announcements, and you have the engineering capacity to act on the requests it organizes. The UI is genuinely better and the flat unlimited-seat pricing is a real strength.
Pick Usero if: your constraint is shipping, not collecting. Your feedback pile is fine and what you lack is engineering hours. You want a request to come back as a reviewable draft PR rather than a well-designed card you still have to build.
The comparison above is feedback-to-feedback, but Usero reaches further. Alongside the draft PR, Usero also bundles session replay, mic-recorded user testing, and AI user-research analysis, which Frill does not. The PR is still the headline; treat the rest as useful substrate.
Frill founder also started as a LTD to get initial customers... This isn’t a model for life time pricing IMO. Besides frill isn’t $99/mo, right?
Sources
- Frill pricing page (flat tiers $25/$49/$149/$349, unlimited teammates and tracked users, surveys/privacy/white-label add-ons, 14-day trial) (accessed 2026-06-03)
- Frill homepage (feedback boards, public roadmap, changelog/announcements widget, surveys positioning) (accessed 2026-06-03)
- Frill reviews on Capterra (4.7/5 across 26 reviews; UI praise, slow email-only support, add-on confusion) (accessed 2026-06-03)
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