Quick Picks (TL;DR)
- Calendly — Best low-friction option for consultants who just need reliable booking links
- Acuity Scheduling — Best when intake forms, packages, and payment collection matter
- SavvyCal — Best for consultants who hate the impersonal "pick a slot" experience
- TidyCal — Best one-time-purchase option for budget-conscious consultants
- YouCanBookMe — Best for teams booking shared consultant capacity
Comparison Table
| Tool | Best for | Free plan | Starting price | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Calendly | Quick, no-friction booking | Yes (1 event type) | $10/mo (verify) | Widest integration ecosystem |
| Acuity Scheduling | Service packages + payments | No (7-day trial) | $16/mo (verify) | Intake forms + Stripe built in |
| SavvyCal | Humanizing the booking flow | Yes (limited) | $12/mo (verify) | Recipient overlay on their calendar |
| TidyCal | One-time cost, no subscription | Yes | $29 one-time (verify) | No recurring fee |
| YouCanBookMe | Team availability management | Yes (1 calendar) | $9/mo (verify) | Multi-person booking logic |
Calendly
Best for: Consultants who send dozens of booking links a week and need something that just works, every time.
I've had Calendly open in a pinned tab for three years running. It's not glamorous, but the reason consultants keep coming back is reliability: it syncs with Google, Outlook, and iCloud without drama, it handles time zones automatically, and the booking page loads fast on mobile. When a prospect sends me a message at 11pm, I paste a Calendly link and they're booked by the time I wake up.
Pros:
- Integrates with virtually every calendar, CRM, and video tool
- Buffer time, daily limits, and booking windows are easy to configure
- Routing forms send different lead types to different event types automatically
Cons:
- Free tier is limited to one event type — solo consultants usually need at least three
- The experience can feel transactional; some clients mention it feels like a cold scheduling system
- Round-robin and team features require the Teams plan
Who should skip it: Consultants who want clients to feel welcomed, not processed. The booking experience is efficient, not warm.
Acuity Scheduling
Best for: Consultants who sell coaching packages, retainers, or anything involving intake information before the call.
Acuity is what I reach for when a new coaching client needs to fill out a questionnaire, choose a package, pay a deposit, and get confirmation — all before I see their name in my calendar. The intake form builder is legitimately good: conditional logic, file uploads, e-signature fields. I set it up once for a six-week coaching program and it ran without touching for months.
Pros:
- Intake forms with conditional logic — collect exactly what you need
- Payment collection (Stripe, Square, PayPal) tied directly to booking
- Package and subscription management for retainer-style consulting
Cons:
- No free plan — you're committing from day one
- The interface is functional but feels older than Calendly or SavvyCal
- Overkill if you just need a simple one-on-one link
Who should skip it: Consultants with simple call types. If your booking flow is "30-min intro call, nothing else," Acuity's power is wasted.
SavvyCal
Best for: Consultants who've heard "sorry, I can't get to Calendly right now" one too many times.
SavvyCal's defining feature is the overlay: instead of showing your recipient a grid of empty slots, it overlays your availability on top of their own calendar so they can see what works for both of you simultaneously. The first time I showed a client how it worked, they said "oh, that's actually thoughtful." That reaction is exactly what SavvyCal is going for.
Pros:
- Calendar overlay reduces the "I need to check my calendar" back-and-forth
- Ranked availability lets recipients see your preferred slots without hard restrictions
- Polling feature for group scheduling (useful for workshops and team calls)
Cons:
- Less mature integration ecosystem than Calendly
- Smaller user base means fewer native integrations
- Free tier is limited enough that most consultants will want paid
Who should skip it: Consultants doing high-volume booking where speed matters more than experience. The overlay adds a step.
TidyCal
Best for: Consultants who want to pay once and never think about a scheduling subscription again.
TidyCal is the rare scheduling tool with a one-time pricing option — you pay once and the tool is yours indefinitely. I tested it for two months after AppSumo featured it, and it covers every fundamental: unlimited event types, calendar sync, buffer times, group bookings, and Stripe payments. It's not as polished as Calendly, but for consultants who resent SaaS subscription stacking, it's genuinely liberating.
Pros:
- One-time payment eliminates recurring cost
- Unlimited event types on the paid tier
- Payment collection (Stripe) included
Cons:
- Fewer integrations than Calendly or Acuity
- UI and automation depth are behind the leading tools
- Customer support is lighter given the one-time model
Who should skip it: Consultants who rely on deep CRM integrations or advanced routing logic. TidyCal covers fundamentals, not advanced workflows.
YouCanBookMe
Best for: Boutique consulting firms managing shared capacity across a small team.
Most scheduling tools treat "team booking" as an afterthought. YouCanBookMe was built around it. When I was running a two-consultant advisory practice, we used YCBM to show clients a single booking page that automatically routed to whichever of us had availability — with rules for client affinity (returning clients route to their original consultant). The configuration is more involved than solo tools, but the result is a professional shared booking page that handles most edge cases.
Pros:
- Built around team availability, not bolted on
- Highly customizable booking pages (custom CSS, domain)
- Zapier integration for sending bookings into CRM workflows
Cons:
- UI has not kept pace with competitors visually
- Setup complexity is higher than Calendly for simple use cases
- Pricing per calendar can add up for larger teams
Who should skip it: Solo consultants. The team logic is its main differentiator; without a team, you're paying for features you won't use.
How to Choose / Verdict
Scheduling tools look identical until you try to do something specific. Here's how I think about it:
Volume and simplicity: Calendly. If your core need is a reliable link you can paste anywhere, nothing beats Calendly's ubiquity and integration depth.
Service delivery with payments: Acuity. If clients need to answer questions, choose a package, and pay before you get on the call, Acuity's intake + payment combination is best in class.
Client experience: SavvyCal. If your consulting relationships are high-value and the booking experience reflects on you, the overlay feature genuinely stands out.
No subscription: TidyCal. Pay once, stop thinking about it. Covers 90% of what most consultants need.
Team capacity: YouCanBookMe. Purpose-built for shared availability across a small practice.
For most independent consultants starting fresh in 2026, my honest starting point is: use Calendly free for the first three months. Learn what you actually need. Then decide whether to pay for Calendly's features or switch to a specialist tool.
FAQ
Is Calendly free enough for a solo consultant? For light use, yes. The free tier gives you one event type — which works if you only offer one kind of call. Most consultants hit the limit quickly and upgrade to get multiple event types and reminder sequences.
Do scheduling tools handle time zone conversions automatically? All five tools on this list detect the booker's time zone and display availability accordingly. You set your availability in your local time zone, and they handle the math.
Can I collect payment at the time of booking? Yes — Acuity, TidyCal, Calendly (on paid tiers), and YouCanBookMe all support Stripe or equivalent payment processors. Acuity's package system is the most sophisticated for selling retainers.
What if I want to send reminders automatically before the call? All five tools send email reminders. Calendly and Acuity also support SMS reminders. If you want custom reminder sequences (e.g., a prep questionnaire the day before), Acuity handles this natively; others need Zapier.