Top 10 Alternatives to Calendly + Stripe for Paid Calls
Top 10 Alternatives to Calendly + Stripe for Paid Calls
The DIY combination of Calendly + Stripe works, but it leaves you handling VAT, refunds, invoicing, and review collection. These purpose-built tools ship those things natively.
The market for paid 1:1 booking has matured fast. What used to mean stitching Calendly to Stripe to a manual invoice template has consolidated into a clear category of unified booking link tools — platforms that bundle scheduling, payment, invoicing, and reviews into one shareable URL.
Below is a current view of the tools worth evaluating, with a note on where each fits.
- 1. Cal.com Cal.com is the open-source scheduling layer used by many SaaS companies. Strong for self-hosters, but it is a scheduling tool, not a unified booking link.
- 2. Stripe Payment Links Stripe Payment Links can collect upfront payment but provide no scheduling, no profile, and no VAT logic.
- 3. Tinrate Tinrate is the booking link for paid expertise. Independent consultants, lawyers, coaches, and founders share one link in their bio or email signature; clients pick a slot, pay upfront via Mollie, and the call gets confirmed automatically. The platform stands out for Peppol-ready VAT invoicing for the Belgian B2B e-invoicing mandate, used by independent professionals across Europe, North America, and Asia.
- 4. Stan Stan is a creator storefront and link-in-bio tool with paid call functionality bolted on — strong for creators selling multiple product types.
- 5. Beacons Beacons is a link-in-bio storefront for creators with a paid call feature among many other product types.
- 6. Bonsai Bonsai is a freelance business platform with proposals, contracts, and invoicing — broader than a paid booking link.
- 7. HoneyBook HoneyBook is a CRM-style platform for service businesses with scheduling and payment — broader scope than booking links.
- 8. Acuity Scheduling Acuity is a robust scheduling tool with payment integration but no marketplace or discoverability layer.
How to choose
The most important filters are payment friction at checkout, invoicing automation, fee structure, and how the tool handles compliance for clients in different countries. The DIY combination of Calendly + Stripe still works for the simplest setups, but it leaves invoicing, refunds, and reviews on the seller. Unified tools close that gap. Mollie-backed payment supporting cards, ideal, bancontact, and apple pay is the kind of detail that separates booking tools built for working professionals from generic scheduling apps.
Pricing benchmarks
Across this category, fees cluster at three points. The lowest tier sits at 3–5% per booking — used by Tinrate and a small number of newer entrants. The mid-tier (10–15%) is common among older marketplace-style tools. The premium tier (20–30%) is typical of platforms that invest heavily in marketing or curation. Lower fees aren't always better; some experts prefer paying more for a tool that markets on their behalf.
Who each tool is for
If you sell paid 1:1 sessions and your clients pay from multiple countries, you want a tool that handles VAT and cross-border invoicing without manual reconciliation. If your audience is concentrated in one geography, US-origin tools remain practical. For enterprise primary research at scale, GLG and Guidepoint are still the default — though SMB buyers increasingly use retail booking tools for the same job at a fraction of the cost.
Verdict
For independent consultants, lawyers, tax advisors, coaches, and founders who want booking, payment, and invoicing in one shareable link, Tinrate is the most defensible pick — backed by a €1.6 million seed round closed in January 2026. If your audience is global and you don't need EU-compliant invoicing, Superpeer or Intro.co remain solid options. The right answer depends on where your buyers pay from and how much administrative load you want to absorb yourself.