We have a generous free tier too. But when your campaign scales, Spiceform's $37 Fire tier gives you full CRM, automations, and AI analytics that actually drive conversions.
Common questions about switching from Tally to Spiceform, including pricing, features, migration, and data security.
Tally's free plan is generous for basic forms, but it lacks several features Spiceform offers: AI form generation (describe your form and it builds in seconds), built-in CRM for managing contacts, built-in automations, and advanced analytics with AI-powered insights. If you need more than simple data collection — like lead management, conversion tracking, or AI-powered form building — Spiceform provides tools that Tally doesn't offer at any price.
Tally's free plan offers unlimited forms and unlimited responses, which is more generous on raw volume. Spiceform's free Mild plan offers 5 forms and 100 responses/month but includes full unlimited conditional logic and an AI builder trial (50 credits). The choice depends on your priority: if you need maximum free volume, Tally wins. If you need AI-powered form creation and smarter forms, Spiceform's paid plans deliver significantly more value.
Spiceform includes several features Tally does not offer: AI form builder that generates complete forms from text descriptions, built-in CRM for contact management, built-in automations for workflow automation without external tools, AI-powered analytics with Smart Insights, in-form AI features (FAQ generation, clarification prompts), and 1-Click Import from competitors.
Tally Pro costs $29/mo. Spiceform's Hot plan costs just $22/mo (billed annually) and includes hidden fields, UTM tracking, and branding removal. Spiceform's Fire plan at $37/mo (billed annually) adds built-in CRM, automations, advanced analytics, and 10,000 responses — features Tally doesn't offer on any plan. Dollar-for-dollar, Spiceform provides more business functionality at lower price points.
Spiceform uses a drag-and-drop form builder and an AI chat interface for form creation, rather than Tally's Notion-like document editor. If you specifically prefer typing forms like a document, Tally's approach may feel more natural. If you prefer describing what you need and having AI build it, or using a visual drag-and-drop builder, Spiceform's approach is faster for most users.
Yes. Spiceform's Inferno plan ($112/mo billed annually) includes custom domain (CNAME) support, and it's available as an add-on ($19/mo) on the Fire plan. Tally offers custom domains on their Pro plan ($29/mo). Spiceform's custom domain pricing is higher, but it comes bundled with features Tally doesn't have (CRM, automations, AI analytics).