Switch to Onetapvote if
- You run quick polls, not long surveys.
- You want people to vote without creating an account or filling forms.
- You need live-updating results shareable by link or QR code.
- Your poll volume outgrew Typeform's free-tier response limits.
Stick with Typeform if
- You need a long, branching form with rich conditional logic.
- Your use case is lead capture, not opinion gathering.
- You rely on Typeform's polished one-question-at-a-time flow.
- Your workflow already depends on Typeform's ecosystem of integrations.
Feature-by-feature
| Feature | Onetapvote | Typeform |
|---|---|---|
| Best for | Quick polls, pulse checks, live audience polls | Long-form surveys, lead capture, job applications |
| Voting without a vote account | Yes, one tap | Yes, but a multi-step form flow |
| Branching / conditional logic | Limited (poll-level, not question-level) | Extensive per-question branching |
| Free tier | Generous — multiple polls, hundreds of votes | Restrictive monthly response cap |
| Live results & QR sharing | Built-in, realtime | Reports-style, not designed for live reveal |
| Design & brand customisation | Clean defaults, limited custom theming | Deep theming and branded domains on higher plans |
| Integrations ecosystem | Core integrations + public API | Large marketplace with Zapier, HubSpot, Salesforce, etc. |
Comparisons reflect each product's typical positioning and commonly documented feature set. Plans and feature availability change — always verify on the vendor's site before committing.
Where Onetapvote is better
Zero friction to vote
Typeform's one-question-at-a-time experience is beautiful for forms, but it's overhead for a single-question poll. Onetapvote shows the question, captures a tap, and shows results — no in-between.
Made for quick polls
Typeform is a Swiss Army knife. If the only thing you need is the bottle opener, Onetapvote is just the bottle opener — faster to set up, faster to share, faster to read the results.
Pricing scales with polls, not 'responses'
Typeform meters aggressive response caps on low tiers. Onetapvote's limits are built around poll count and active audiences, which is how most real usage actually scales.
Better for live events
Drop a QR code on a slide, audience votes in one tap, results update live on screen. Typeform isn't designed for live stage use — Onetapvote is.
Where Typeform is better
Conditional logic is deeper
If you need 'if answered X, then show question Y' branching across 10+ questions, Typeform's form logic is more flexible than our poll model.
Polished brand customisation
Typeform's higher plans let you theme the entire experience, use custom domains, and remove all Typeform branding. We cover the basics but they go further.
Integrations breadth
Typeform has been around longer and has a larger integrations marketplace. If you rely on a specific deep integration (Salesforce, HubSpot workflows), Typeform is more plug-and-play.
Best for Onetapvote
- Quick team polls and meeting decisions
- Live audience polls at events and webinars
- Post-event feedback (1–5 stars)
- NPS, CSAT, and pulse surveys
- Community and audience polls where voters shouldn't need an account
Best for Typeform
- Lead-generation forms with many fields
- Job applications and candidate screeners
- Deep multi-step surveys with heavy branching
- Conversational-style marketing forms
Frequently asked questions
Can I import my Typeform surveys into Onetapvote?
Not automatically — the data models are different (Typeform forms are multi-question, our polls are single-question). For simple yes/no and rating surveys, recreating is usually faster than any importer would be.
Is Onetapvote cheaper than Typeform?
For most poll-shaped use cases, yes — both on the free tier and the paid plans. The difference widens as you send more polls or collect more votes. Use Typeform for form-shaped use cases and you'll likely find its pricing is justified.
Does Onetapvote have conditional logic like Typeform?
We have poll-level branching via our Feedback Flows (high ratings route one way, low ratings route another). We don't match Typeform's per-question branching, because our product is built around a single tap, not a multi-step form.
Can respondents answer without creating an account?
Yes, on both platforms. The difference is friction: Typeform walks the respondent through a sequenced form; we present the question, capture the tap, and show results immediately.
Try Onetapvote — takes a minute
Set up your first poll in under 60 seconds. Free tier, no credit card, cancel any time.
More comparisons
vs SurveyMonkey
SurveyMonkey is the classic enterprise survey platform — deep, broad, and long in the tooth. Onetapvote is built for the modern, low-friction end of the same problem: one question, one tap, live results. If you want a 40-question employee engagement survey, SurveyMonkey is the better tool. If you want a 1-question pulse every week, you're paying for features you don't use.
vs Google Forms
Google Forms is free, familiar, and fine for internal surveys inside a Google Workspace. Onetapvote is a focused polling product with live results, public shareable pages, and event-ready features. If you're running a casual internal survey, Forms is hard to beat on price. If you need public polls, live reveal, or anything that needs to look like a product rather than a spreadsheet, we're the better fit.
vs Strawpoll
Strawpoll is the classic name in quick public polls — fast, ubiquitous, ad-supported. Onetapvote is a polished alternative in the same space: same speed to set up, cleaner respondent experience, proper analytics, and no ads on the poll page. If you just need a single disposable poll, Strawpoll still works. If you're running polls as part of a product, brand, or ongoing feedback loop, we're built for that.