How Does It Compare? / Reviews

Honest Blaze AI Review (2026)

“Marketing Done For You” is the tagline. This review asks the only question that matters: done for you — or done by you, with better software?

Blaze AI sells itself in four words: “Marketing Done For You.” It is one of the boldest promises in the AI marketing category — not “write faster” or “never stare at a blank page,” but the whole job, handled.

So this review applies one simple test. Who picks the topics? Who approves and schedules? And what actually happens the week you don’t log in?

Credit where it’s due: Blaze automates more than most tools in this space. But its own pricing page quietly answers the “done for you” question — and the answer costs a lot more than the tagline suggests. Let’s go through it.

One Tool, Eight Channels.
What Blaze AI Actually Is.

Blaze is an AI marketing platform that builds a Brand Kit from your website, your past content, and a short questionnaire — capturing tone, vocabulary, and visual style. From that kit it generates social posts, emails, blog articles, and short-form videos across roughly eight channels, including the major social networks, newsletters, blogs, and Google Business Profile.

Its standout feature is Autopilot: generated content flows into a calendar and, once approved, publishes automatically to your connected channels at scheduled times. A “Learning Loop” feeds performance analytics back into what it generates next.

And the reception is genuinely good. Blaze holds around 4.6 out of 5 on Trustpilot across 1,300+ reviews and about 4.8 on Capterra. Who it suits is clear: solo creators, coaches, local and e-commerce businesses that would otherwise post nothing. If your alternative is silence, Blaze keeps six or eight channels alive for less than a freelancer costs per post. That is real value, and reviewers consistently say so.

Two Very Different Numbers.
Blaze AI Pricing, Verified.

As of this writing, Blaze’s own pricing page splits into two halves — and the split is the most honest thing about the product.

The software plans sit under a heading Blaze itself labels DIY Marketing: Starter at $79/month (1 user, 3 posting accounts, 600 generation credits) and Growth at $149/month (unlimited users, 10 posting accounts, 1,500 credits), both with a 7-day free trial. Content burns credits at different rates — a static post is 1 credit, an email or blog post is 3, an AI video is 15 — so heavy publishing eats the allowance faster than the headline price implies. Note that Blaze has repriced recently: third-party roundups from earlier in 2026 still list the old $39/$85 tiers, and at least a few Trustpilot reviewers mention being caught out by pricing changes.

Then there is the half that matches the tagline: managed, done-for-you plans from $899/month per service line on a 12-month commitment ($999/month on 6-month and $1,049/month on 3-month terms). The organic social package covers up to 40 posts, 12 blogs, and 12 emails a month with a monthly check-in; paid ads, landing pages, an AI SDR, and reputation management are each their own separately priced service, with add-ons like video editing packs from $400.

Read that structure again: Blaze sells “done for you” as a separate human service at roughly 6–13x the software price. The $79 product is the tool. The $899+ tier is the promise.

More Automated Than Most.
Where Blaze Delivers.

Applying our test honestly: Blaze automates more of the loop than almost any DIY tool we have reviewed — noticeably more than Sintra’s copy-paste workflow.

Autopilot actually publishes

Approved content posts itself across connected channels — no copy, paste, or format step.

Brand Kit beats blank prompts

Voice and visual style pulled from your site and past content, applied to everything it drafts.

Genuine breadth for the money

Posts, emails, blogs, and short video across ~8 channels — wide coverage at software prices.

Independent reviewers who tested it with a real business land in the same place: invest in the Brand Kit setup, review the calendar weekly, and Blaze will keep your accounts consistently active.

Done For You—ish.
The Real Catch.

Notice the phrase hiding inside every positive review: review the calendar weekly. That is the catch. On the software plans, Blaze is a very good machine that you operate — and three patterns recur across independent sources.

You are still the editor-in-chief

Reviewers on Capterra and Reddit repeatedly flag inconsistent output — usable one day, generic and repetitive the next, with visuals that miss the brand. Someone has to catch that before Autopilot ships it. That someone is you.

The week you skip is the week it shows

Skip your weekly review and you face a fork: let unreviewed AI content publish under your name, or let the queue run dry. Trustpilot complaints add a third failure mode — auto-posting silently stopping and integrations breaking until someone notices.

Strategy is nobody’s job

Blaze generates plausible topics from your Brand Kit, but no one is deciding what your company should be saying this quarter and why. On the software tier, positioning, angles, and the publishing plan remain your homework.

None of this makes Blaze a bad product. It makes it a tool with an autopilot, not a pilot — which is exactly why Blaze also sells you a human team from $899/month per service if you want the tagline taken literally.

Blaze vs FirstOrg.
Side by Side.

This is where FirstOrg starts from a different premise. FirstOrg is not a toolkit with a human service bolted on — it is a content engine that runs the whole loop itself, built for early-stage B2B founders. It owns the whole loop — strategy, calendar, writing, publishing — drafts blog content in your captured voice, and auto-publishes to LinkedIn and X. Trust Levels let you supervise every piece at first, then delegate as confidence grows — so “the week you don’t log in” is the system working as designed, not a gamble. For the full head-to-head, see FirstOrg vs Blaze.

Blaze AI FirstOrg
Delivery model Self-service software; human “done-for-you” sold separately from ~$899/mo per service Content engine that runs the loop itself — one system, no human upsell
Who owns strategy You — Blaze suggests topics; direction and the weekly calendar review are yours FirstOrg runs the strategy → calendar → write → publish loop end to end
Who publishes Autopilot posts what you approve — the queue stalls when you do Auto-publishes to LinkedIn and X; Trust Levels let you supervise or delegate
Voice capture Brand Kit from your site and a questionnaire; reviewers report tone drift on the details Your captured voice, deepened over time by Deep Lattice memory
Pricing model $79–$149/mo software plus credits; managed services from ~$899/mo each Early access — join the waitlist

So, Is Blaze AI Worth It?
The Verdict.

Yes — for the right buyer. Blaze is a well-built, well-reviewed content tool with real automation, and at $79/month it is honest value for anyone happy to be their own marketing manager. Just buy it knowing what the tagline means: on the software plans, marketing is done with you, on your weekly watch. The version that is genuinely done for you is a different product at a different price — here’s what done-for-you should actually mean.

Choose Blaze if

You want a powerful tool you operate

You have an hour or two a week to steer, edit, and approve — and want broad multichannel output at software prices.

Choose FirstOrg if

You want the loop owned for you

You are a B2B founder who wants strategy through publishing handled in your voice — supervised only as much as you choose.

More customers. On autopilot.

FirstOrg wins you customers with high-quality content that runs itself.

Join Waitlist →