Make connects apps through visual scenarios with drag-and-drop modules. Tavallio understands your intent and automates tasks through conversation — no scenario building required.
See how Tavallio and Make stack up across the features that matter.
What makes Tavallio fundamentally different from Make.
Make requires building scenarios with modules, routers, and iterators. Tavallio lets you describe what you want in plain English — no visual programming skills needed.
Tavallio can navigate websites, fill forms, and extract data from any page. Make has no native browser automation — you need third-party tools or custom HTTP modules.
Make charges per operation — every action in a scenario costs. Tavallio offers flat monthly pricing with no per-task metering, so you never worry about overages.
Can Tavallio replace Make?
For most everyday automation tasks, yes. Tavallio handles email management, calendar scheduling, spreadsheet updates, and web browsing through natural language. If you need 3,000+ integrations or SOC 2 compliance, Make may still be the better fit.
Does Make have AI features?
Yes — Make offers AI Agents and an AI-powered builder called Maia. However, these are add-ons to the visual builder. Tavallio is AI-native from the ground up — every interaction is powered by AI understanding.
Which is more cost-effective?
It depends on usage. Make has a free tier and starts lower at $10.59/month, but charges per operation. Tavallio starts at $20/month with flat pricing. For heavy automation users, Tavallio often works out cheaper since there are no per-operation costs.
Can I migrate from Make to Tavallio?
There is no direct migration tool, but you can recreate most Make scenarios by simply describing them to Tavallio in plain English. Complex multi-step workflows that took hours to build in Make can often be set up in minutes.