Kompozy
Summary
Content repurposing across formats usually means four separate tools, a Notion board tracking what went where, and a Sunday afternoon you never get back — Kompozy collapses that into a single ingest-compose-publish pipeline.
Drop a YouTube URL, podcast feed, or blog link and the vendor states Kompozy's pipeline produces up to five output types — video shorts, image cards, text posts, blog articles, and newsletters — then pushes them to eight platforms simultaneously without a scheduler touch. The compose layer runs on Claude AI through eight fixed brand templates across six content tones, so you pick the voice and the bucket; the engine picks the template. That fixed pipeline is the speed advantage and the ceiling: when your brand needs a format or distribution logic outside the eight templates, there is no canvas to extend. Credit metering runs across all output types from one pool, which keeps accounting clean but means high-volume video runs can drain the month's allocation before the newsletter queue ships.
Bottom line: For a solo creator or a small agency pushing daily posts across eight platforms from a single weekly source, this pipeline earns its fee — but teams who need content approval before publish, custom template logic, or a ninth platform will hit hard stops the current architecture does not route around.
Pricing Plans
SubscriptionLast verified 2 weeks ago- Price
- $49/mo
- Free Tier
- No free tier available
Creator
Show up everywhere u2014 daily, without the editing.
- 2,500 credits/mo
- Every format u2014 video, image & text
- Publish to all 9 platforms
- 1 brand
- u2248 160 AI videos or 600+ posts a month
Pro
Your whole content engine u2014 on autopilot.
- 18,000 credits/mo
- Everything in Creator, plus:
- Full autopilot u2014 hands-free
- 3 brands
- u2248 1,200 AI videos or 4,500+ posts a month
Enterprise
Custom pools, SSO & dedicated support for teams at scale.
- Custom credit pools
- SSO + dedicated support
- Enterprise API keys
- Unlimited brands
View full pricing on kompozy.io →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Single-URL ingestion that fans out to five output formats and eight platforms simultaneously, so you avoid the tool-switching and manual reformatting that typically consumes a full day of production work per week.
- Fixed HyperFrames template engine picks the structural format for each piece of content, which means you are not staring at a blank prompt or rebuilding a template from scratch each time a new source comes in.
- Six content tones (Educational through Sales) applied at the compose stage, so a single podcast episode can produce a LinkedIn thought-leadership post and a conversion-focused newsletter without re-prompting or separate tools.
- Credit pool shared across all five output buckets with no per-platform fees, which means you can shift production toward video-heavy weeks or text-heavy weeks without hitting a separate pricing wall.
- Multi-brand support on the higher paid tier, so an agency operator can run three distinct brand voices through the same pipeline without spinning up separate accounts or manually segregating outputs.
Cons
Sign in to edit- The eight HyperFrames templates are fixed — when a brand's content strategy requires a format outside those eight structures, there is no template editor or extension layer. Teams with a distinct content format (interview-style breakdowns, data-driven threads, product changelog posts) will manually rework every output, which eliminates the autopilot value proposition entirely.
- There is no human approval step between compose and publish. Posts ship to platforms automatically once the pipeline runs. Any team with a legal review requirement, a brand safety policy, or a client approval step cannot use the autopilot mode and must build a manual hold into a workflow the tool was not designed to support — at which point they are running Kompozy as a drafting tool, not an autopilot, and the pricing case weakens against dedicated drafting tools.
- Video output draws from the same credit pool as text and image, and the vendor states high-volume video production consumes credits at a substantially higher rate. A week that skews toward Shorts and Reels can exhaust the monthly allocation before newsletters and blog posts queue, forcing a choice between formats or an upgrade to the higher paid tier mid-cycle.
- There is no self-hosted option and no open-source path. Teams operating in environments with data residency requirements or who need to run inference on-premises have no workaround — this is the condition under which those teams evaluate a self-hosted pipeline (such as a custom n8n or Dify stack with their own Claude API key) instead.
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About
- Platforms
- Web (SaaS)
- API Available
- Yes
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-20T16:23:35.324Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Solo creators producing 20+ posts weekly
- Agencies handling multiple brands
- Users needing cross-format repurposing from one input
What it does well
- Repurposing podcasts or videos into shorts and posts
- Generating newsletters and blogs from a single source
- Automating daily posting across multiple social platforms
- Managing content for multiple brands with minimal oversight
Integrations
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Kompozy free?
- Kompozy is a paid tool ($49/mo). No permanent free tier is offered.
- Is Kompozy open source?
- No — Kompozy is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- Does Kompozy have an API?
- Yes. Kompozy exposes a developer API. See the official documentation at https://kompozy.io for details.
- What platforms does Kompozy support?
- Kompozy is available on: Web (SaaS).
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Curated lists that include this category
Repurposing a podcast episode into a LinkedIn post, a newsletter, a reel, and a blog article without touching four separate tools is the exact problem Kompozy is built around. The pipeline has three fixed stages: ingest from any of six autopilot source types (RSS, YouTube, TikTok, webhook, scrapers, or a source-less brand prompt lane), compose through Claude AI into five output buckets (Video, Image, Text, Blog, Newsletter), and publish simultaneously to eight platforms. The vendor states the flow runs 24/7 on autopilot with no manual scheduling step between source ingestion and post publication.
The differentiating design choice is the HyperFrames template layer. Rather than giving you a blank prompt or a drag-and-drop editor, Kompozy maps each piece of source content through one of eight brand-matched templates — including formats like POV Hook into Product Demo — across six content tones from Educational to Rage Bait. The engine selects the template; you select the tone and the output bucket. This removes the blank-canvas decision fatigue that stalls most repurposing workflows, but it also means you cannot extend or modify the templates themselves.
The tool fits cleanly when the volume is high, the formats are predictable, and the operator does not need to review posts before they ship. The docs describe an autopilot mode on the paid-only higher tier that removes the operator from the loop entirely. That is the right fit for an agency running three brands on a fixed content calendar — it is the wrong fit for a regulated industry, a brand with a legal review step, or any team whose content strategy requires branching based on performance data from the last post. There is no conditional logic layer and no human approval gate in the pipeline as described.
