A recent survey found that 62% of social media managers now use AI social media tools to draft or schedule posts. The problem? Most of those posts sound like they were written by a machine. Generic phrasing, predictable structure, no personality. I spent 30 days testing four AI social media tools to see which ones actually produce posts you would want to read, and which ones make your brand sound like every other account in your niche. These are the results, with data.
How I tested these AI social media tools
I tested four platforms over 30 days: Buffer, Hootsuite, Later, and Typefully. Each tool generated at least 20 posts for the same three accounts: a personal brand on X and LinkedIn, a product page on Instagram, and a newsletter promotion on Threads. I used each platform’s default AI settings first, then optimized prompts where the tool allowed it. Engagement metrics were tracked week over week. These numbers are based on my own accounts and audience, not a clinical study. Take them as directional.
Buffer: Simple, cheap, and surprisingly decent
Buffer’s AI Assistant is baked into every plan, including the free tier. You type a topic or paste a link, and it generates a caption, suggests hashtags, and even creates variations. The interface is clean to the point of feeling barebones, which is either a strength or a limitation depending on how much control you want.
Buffer’s per-channel pricing is the most affordable in this group: free for up to 3 channels with 10 posts each, $5/month per channel for unlimited posts, and $10/month per channel for team features. That is hard to beat for solo creators and small businesses. Check out their pricing at buffer.com/pricing.
What Buffer’s AI does well and where it falls short
The AI generates decent first drafts. Sentences are natural enough, hashtag suggestions are relevant, and the tone customization (casual, professional, humorous) works about 70% of the time. The weakness is that every variation it produces feels like the same post rewritten. After generating 5-6 options, you notice the same sentence starters, the same transition words, and the same call to action patterns. For one-off posts, Buffer is fine. For a sustained content calendar, the repetitiveness shows.
Buffer engagement results
| Metric | Before AI | After AI (default) | After AI (optimized prompts) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Avg. impressions per post | 342 | 318 | 389 |
| Avg. engagement rate | 3.2% | 2.1% | 3.5% |
| Posts flagged as “robotic” by followers | 0 | 4 | 1 |
The “flagged as robotic” metric came from direct replies and DMs where followers commented on the change in tone. Default AI settings dropped engagement. Optimized prompts (adding specific instructions like “use short sentences, reference the article by name, no emojis”) recovered it and slightly improved it. The takeaway: Buffer’s AI is a starting point, not a finished product.
Hootsuite: Built for teams that need control
Hootsuite’s OwlyWriter AI generates captions, suggests post times, and repurposes existing content into new posts. It integrates with Hootsuite’s full suite: scheduling, analytics, social listening, and team approval workflows. The platform is powerful, but at $99/user/month for the Standard plan, it is priced for teams, not solo creators.
OwlyWriter’s problem: It writes like a press release
Hootsuite’s AI produces grammatically correct, structurally sound captions that read like corporate communications. Every post sounds professional, which is fine for enterprise brands and terrible for personal brands and small businesses. The tone controls exist but are limited to broad categories. You cannot say “write like a tired startup founder who uses too many coffee references.” You get “professional,” “casual,” or “friendly,” and the AI interprets those labels conservatively.
Hootsuite engagement results
| Metric | Before OwlyWriter | After OwlyWriter |
|---|---|---|
| Avg. engagement rate | 3.8% | 2.4% |
| Post creation time | 12 min | 4 min |
| Edits needed before publishing | 0 | 3-4 per post |
OwlyWriter cut post creation time by 70%, which matters for teams juggling multiple accounts. But the engagement drop means you are trading reach for speed. For teams that need approval workflows, compliance checks, and centralized control, the tradeoff may be worth it. For creators who live and die by engagement, it is not.
Later: Made for Instagram and TikTok first
Later started as an Instagram scheduling tool and has since expanded to nine platforms. Its AI focuses on visual content: generating captions for images and videos, suggesting posting times based on audience activity, and creating content variations from a single source. Later’s pricing starts at $25/month for one social set and goes up to $110/month for advanced features.
Later’s visual-first approach is its edge
What Later does differently is treat the image or video as the primary content and the caption as secondary. Its AI caption generator produces text that complements the visual rather than trying to stand on its own. For Instagram and TikTok, this matters because the image stops the scroll, not the text. The AI also generates hashtag sets grouped by theme, which is more useful than random hashtag dumps.
Later engagement results
| Metric | Before Later AI | After Later AI |
|---|---|---|
| Avg. Instagram engagement | 4.1% | 3.9% |
| Avg. TikTok engagement | 5.8% | 6.2% |
| Caption quality score (1-10) | 7 (manual) | 6 (AI default) |
Later’s AI held steady on Instagram and slightly improved TikTok engagement. The caption quality score is subjective, based on my assessment of tone, accuracy, and readability. Default captions felt slightly generic but not terrible. With manual edits to add personality, the results were better than writing from scratch because the AI handled the structure while I added the voice.
Typefully: X, LinkedIn, and Threads specialists
Typefully is built specifically for text-first platforms: X (Twitter), LinkedIn, and Threads. It does not try to do Instagram Reels or TikTok captions. This narrow focus means its AI understands the format constraints of each platform: character limits, thread structures, and platform-specific conventions like Twitter hooks and LinkedIn bullet points.
Typefully’s AI writes like someone who actually uses the platform
This is where Typefully separates itself. Its AI-generated tweets follow the proven Twitter thread format: hook in the first line, supporting points in subsequent tweets, a call to action at the end. LinkedIn posts get bullet points and a professional but not corporate tone. The AI also suggests thread hooks based on trending topics in your niche. Pricing starts at free (limited) and $8/month for the Starter plan with AI writing and analytics.
Typefully engagement results
| Metric | Before Typefully | After Typefully AI |
|---|---|---|
| Avg. X impressions | 1,240 | 1,890 |
| Avg. X engagement rate | 4.5% | 5.1% |
| Avg. LinkedIn impressions | 890 | 1,120 |
| Threads per week published | 3 | 7 |
Typefully was the only AI social media tool in this test that improved engagement across the board, not just maintained it. The reason is platform specificity. When AI understands the format and audience expectations of a platform, it produces better content. A generalist AI that writes the same caption for Instagram and LinkedIn will always lose to one that knows the difference between a tweet hook and a LinkedIn opening paragraph.
AI social media tools compared
| Tool | Best for | AI quality | Price | Engagement impact |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Buffer | Solo creators | 7/10 | Free to $5/mo | Neutral to positive |
| Hootsuite | Enterprise teams | 6/10 | $99/user/mo | Negative |
| Later | Instagram/TikTok | 6.5/10 | $25-110/mo | Neutral |
| Typefully | X/LinkedIn/Threads | 8.5/10 | Free to $8/mo | Positive |
My overall winner
If I had to recommend one AI social media tool, it would be Typefully. Not because it has the most features. Hootsuite and Later both do more. Typefully won because it understood the platforms it serves and produced posts that improved engagement, not just saved time. At $8/month with a free tier, the barrier to entry is low. The AI writes like someone who actually uses X and LinkedIn daily, which is the hardest thing to fake.
The catch is that Typefully only works on text platforms. If you need Instagram Reels captions, TikTok content, or multi-platform management, Typefully is not the right tool. For visual platforms, Later’s AI is the better option. For teams that need centralized control and approval workflows, Hootsuite is the only one that handles that at scale, even if its AI writing needs heavy editing.
Buffer vs Typefully: Which one should you pick
This is the comparison that matters most because both are affordable and creator-friendly. Buffer handles more platforms (including Instagram and Facebook) and its free plan is generous. Typefully handles fewer platforms but does them better. If you post primarily on X and LinkedIn, Typefully is the clear choice. If you need to manage Instagram, Facebook, LinkedIn, and X from one tool, Buffer is the practical option. Buffer’s AI is a good starting point across platforms. Typefully’s AI is excellent on the platforms it covers.
Where all AI social media tools fall short
None of these tools can replace your voice. AI can generate drafts, suggest structures, and save 10-15 minutes per post. But the posts that get the most engagement are the ones that sound like a specific person wrote them. The best workflow I found during this test was using AI for the first draft and spending 3-5 minutes editing for voice, adding a personal observation or a joke that the AI would never generate. That combination of speed and personality produced better results than either pure AI or pure manual writing.
For more on automating your workflow end to end, check out our guide to building AI automation workflows in 20 minutes. If you are also looking to automate task management alongside social media, our comparison of AI task managers covers tools that pair well with these platforms.