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Argus vs Buffer

Looking for a Buffer alternative? Buffer is a multi-network scheduler: a posting queue and basic analytics for X, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook and more. Argus does a different job. It's X-only, reads your funnel, ranks the single next reply worth making while the thread is still climbing, and drafts it in your voice. See how it works or the full comparison hub.

The short version

Want to plan a week of content and publish it across several networks from one queue, with analytics on how each post did? Buffer is built for that and is well known for it. Argus is built for the part a scheduler can't do: deciding who to reply to next and what to say on X, from your real numbers and in your real voice. They barely overlap, so plenty of people run both.

 ArgusBuffer
Core jobTell you the next reply to make on X, and draft itSchedule and publish original posts across networks
FormatChrome extension, overlaid on x.comWeb app + mobile app
Multi-network schedulingNo - X-only, and no schedulingYes - a core strength, X, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook and more
Reads your X analytics as a funnelYes - reach → visits → follows → savesNo - has post analytics, not a funnel view
Ranks who to reply toYes - live posts by reply opportunity, before they get crowdedNo
Drafts replies in your voiceYes - optional AI, using your own keyNo
AutomationNo, draft-and-insert only, never automates your accountScheduled publishing to your queue
Best forPeople who grow on X by replying and want to be told where to spend each replyTeams planning and publishing content across multiple networks

Competitor details based on public information as of 2026. Check buffer.com for current features and pricing.

Where Argus is different

Buffer's job ends when your post is published: it plans, queues, and sends original content across networks. Argus starts somewhere a scheduler never goes. It reads your X analytics as a funnel so you can see whether your problem is reach or conversion, then it ranks live posts by reply opportunity: rising, relevant, uncrowded posts where an early reply borrows out-of-network reach. Then it drafts a reply that sounds like you. That's the engine behind the reply-first playbook, and it's not something a posting queue does.

Where Buffer is stronger

If you need to plan and publish across several networks, Buffer is far more complete. It's mature, it covers X, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook and more from one queue, it has team features and collaboration, and scheduling is genuinely its strength. Argus does none of that: it's X-only, there's no queue, no scheduler, and it never publishes anything for you. If your bottleneck is getting a content calendar out the door across networks, Buffer helps more.

Which should you pick?

Pick Buffer if the job is planning and scheduling original content across multiple networks, with a queue, analytics, and a team. That's what it's built for.

Pick Argus if you're growing on X and replies are how you grow, and the hard part is choosing which live post to reply to right now and writing something in your own voice before the thread crowds. Run both if you want Buffer to schedule and Argus for replies; they don't overlap.

Common questions

Is Argus a Buffer alternative?

Only for a narrow slice. Buffer is a multi-network scheduler that publishes original posts across X, LinkedIn, Instagram, Facebook and more, with a queue and basic analytics. Argus is X-only: it reads your own X analytics as a funnel, ranks live posts by reply opportunity, and drafts replies in your voice. If your goal is deciding who to reply to on X, Argus is the closer fit; if it's scheduling across networks, Buffer is.

Does Argus schedule posts like Buffer?

No. Argus has no posting queue and no scheduling, and it never publishes anything for you. It reads your analytics, ranks who to reply to, and drafts the reply, which you insert and send yourself. Scheduling original posts across networks is Buffer's job.

Can I use Argus and Buffer together?

Yes, and they barely overlap. Use Buffer to plan and schedule original posts across your networks, and Argus to decide which live X conversations to reply to and to draft those replies in your voice.

See also: Argus vs Hootsuite · Argus vs Hypefury · full comparison

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