hotjar vs microsoft clarity 2026: free tier showdown
most small business owners hear about heatmaps and session recordings from a podcast or a YouTube video. they install Hotjar, watch a few session recordings, get a “huh, interesting” feeling, and never open it again. or they hear that Microsoft Clarity is “the free Hotjar” and install that instead, with the same outcome.
both tools are genuinely useful when you have a specific question to answer. both are wasted when you do not. and the choice between them in 2026 comes down to a clearer set of tradeoffs than most comparison articles let on, particularly because Hotjar’s free tier got significantly more restricted in late 2024.
this comparison is for solopreneurs, indie SaaS founders, and small business owners who want visual user behavior insights without paying for them. you will get the honest comparison, the cases where each one wins, and the workflow for actually using session recordings and heatmaps to make decisions instead of just collecting curiosities. by the end you will know which to install this week and how to extract real signal from it.
what they do (in plain english)
both tools record what users actually do on your website. they overlay that behavior in two main ways:
- heatmaps: aggregated visualization of where users click, hover, scroll
- session recordings: video-like replays of individual user sessions
hotjar and microsoft clarity are session-replay and heatmap tools. they record anonymized user behavior so you can see clicks, scrolls, and friction points on real visits. microsoft clarity is fully free with unlimited sessions; hotjar’s 2026 free tier caps at 35 daily sessions and limits feature breadth. for solopreneurs, clarity is the better default unless you specifically need hotjar’s surveys, feedback widgets, or richer reporting.
both also offer feature add-ons (surveys, feedback widgets) that go beyond pure recording.
the 2026 free tier comparison (the headline)
| feature | Hotjar Basic (free) | Microsoft Clarity (free) |
|---|---|---|
| sessions per day | 35 | unlimited |
| heatmaps | yes (limited pages) | yes |
| session recordings | yes | yes |
| recording retention | 365 days | 30 days |
| user count | unlimited | unlimited |
| sites | up to 3 | unlimited |
| filtering | basic | rich (frustration signals, dead clicks) |
| surveys | basic (1 active) | no surveys |
| feedback widget | basic | no |
| AI session summary | paid only | yes (free) |
| GA4 integration | yes | yes |
| price beyond free | $32/month minimum | always free |
the deal-breaker for many solopreneurs: 35 sessions per day on Hotjar’s free tier means a site getting 1,000 daily visitors will only sample about 3 percent of sessions. Clarity records all of them.
what each one is good at
Hotjar wins when:
- you want surveys integrated into the same tool (NPS, on-page surveys)
- you want feedback widgets on the page
- you need 365-day session retention
- your site has very low traffic (under 35 daily sessions, so the cap does not bite)
- you value the slightly more polished interface
Microsoft Clarity wins when:
- you want every session recorded, not a sample
- you want AI-generated insights on session behavior (free)
- you have many sites (Clarity supports unlimited; Hotjar caps at 3 free)
- you want frustration metrics out of the box (rage clicks, dead clicks, error tracking)
- you do not want a paid trajectory ever
key feature deep-dive
heatmaps
both tools generate heatmaps from real user behavior. types include:
- click heatmap: where users click
- scroll heatmap: how far down the page they scroll
- move heatmap (Hotjar) / hover heatmap: where the cursor moves
quality is comparable. Hotjar’s heatmaps are slightly more polished visually. Clarity’s are more functional.
both offer mobile/tablet/desktop split. both let you filter by URL or page type.
session recordings
both record anonymized sessions you can replay. sensitive elements (password fields, credit cards) are auto-masked.
| capability | Hotjar | Clarity |
|---|---|---|
| video-like playback | yes | yes |
| filter by date, page, country | yes | yes |
| filter by frustration signals | basic | strong (dead clicks, rage clicks, JS errors) |
| AI session summary | paid only | free |
| skip-to-action | basic | strong |
Clarity’s frustration filters are genuinely useful. you can filter to “sessions with rage clicks on the pricing page” in two clicks, which surfaces the highest-signal sessions immediately.
surveys and feedback (Hotjar only)
Hotjar’s free tier includes 1 active survey. this is useful if you want pop-up NPS surveys, feedback prompts, or exit-intent forms tied directly to session recordings.
Clarity has no surveys. you can use a separate tool like Tally, Typeform, or Google Forms. for survey tool comparison see best survey tools for market research 2026.
AI insights
Clarity has a built-in AI feature that summarizes sessions (“user struggled with checkout flow”, “user found pricing page confusing”). it is genuinely helpful for skipping through 50 recordings.
Hotjar’s equivalent (Highlights AI) is paid-tier only as of 2026.
integrations
both integrate with GA4 (you can jump from a GA4 report to the matching Hotjar/Clarity sessions for that user). both have major CMS plugins (WordPress, Shopify, etc.). both support Google Tag Manager.
Clarity has slightly tighter Microsoft ecosystem integration (PowerBI, Bing Webmaster Tools).
privacy and compliance
both tools are GDPR and CCPA capable but configuration matters.
- both auto-mask password and credit-card fields
- both support consent-mode integration
- Clarity is a Microsoft service; data stored in Microsoft Azure
- Hotjar is owned by Contentsquare; data stored across regions
for EU traffic, both require a cookie-consent layer. neither replaces a privacy policy.
pricing trajectories
if you stay free, this is moot.
if you grow past free:
| tier | Hotjar | Clarity |
|---|---|---|
| free tier | yes | yes |
| paid tier 1 | $32/month (Plus) | n/a, free always |
| typical small business cost | $32 to $80/month | $0 |
| enterprise | $171+/month | $0 |
Clarity is genuinely free with no upsell. Microsoft makes its money by Clarity feeding Bing’s AI training (data anonymized). some companies are uncomfortable with this. most solopreneurs are not.
Hotjar’s free tier feels increasingly like a trial. once you hit the 35-session cap or want surveys, you are pushed to paid quickly.
the workflow that actually produces decisions
both tools fail when you install them and start randomly watching recordings. the workflow that works:
step 1: have a specific question
bad: “I want to see how users use my site.”
good: “why is checkout abandonment 60 percent at the shipping step?”
step 2: filter to the relevant segment
both tools let you filter by URL, country, device, and time. narrow to the segment relevant to your question.
step 3: watch 5 to 10 sessions
not 50. you start to see patterns by session 5 to 10. write down the patterns.
step 4: hypothesize and ship a fix
based on what you saw, propose a change. ship it. measure whether the metric moves.
step 5: stop watching for a while
session-recording fatigue is real. once you have a hypothesis and a fix, stop watching until you have a new question.
most solopreneurs who do not get value from these tools fail at step 1 or step 5.
installation comparison
Hotjar setup
- sign up at hotjar.com.
- create a site, copy the tracking snippet.
- paste into the head of your site (or use the WordPress plugin / Shopify integration).
- wait 30 minutes for first sessions to appear.
Microsoft Clarity setup
- sign up at clarity.microsoft.com.
- create a project, copy the tracking snippet.
- paste into the head of your site (or use the WordPress plugin / Shopify integration).
- wait 30 minutes for first sessions.
functionally identical setup. both are 5-minute installs.
[SCREENSHOT: Microsoft Clarity dashboard showing session list with frustration signals]
[SCREENSHOT: Hotjar dashboard showing heatmap on a sample page]
comparison summary table
| dimension | Hotjar | Clarity |
|---|---|---|
| sessions cap (free) | 35/day | unlimited |
| recording retention (free) | 365 days | 30 days |
| heatmap quality | slightly better visuals | functional |
| session-replay quality | comparable | comparable |
| frustration filters | basic | strong |
| AI summaries (free) | no | yes |
| surveys | yes (1 free) | no |
| feedback widget | yes (free) | no |
| price beyond free | $32+/month | $0 always |
| best free pick? | low-traffic + needs surveys | everyone else |
the recommendation framework
answer 3 questions:
-
do you need surveys or feedback widgets in the same tool?
– yes: Hotjar
– no: Clarity -
do you have more than 35 sessions a day?
– yes: Clarity (Hotjar will sample, you’ll miss data)
– no: either -
are you ok with Microsoft anonymizing your data for Bing AI training?
– yes or neutral: Clarity
– no: Hotjar
three Clarity answers means Clarity is the obvious pick. one Hotjar answer (especially #1) tilts toward Hotjar.
for most solopreneurs in 2026, Clarity wins. if you specifically need surveys, run Clarity and a separate survey tool like Tally or Google Forms.
case studies: when each tool surfaced something the other could not
three real-world (anonymized) cases I have seen.
case 1: ecommerce checkout drop-off
site traffic was healthy, conversion was dropping for 3 weeks. analytics showed the issue at the shipping step but not why. Microsoft Clarity’s frustration filters surfaced 30 sessions with rage clicks on the shipping rate display. watching 5 of them showed the issue: the shipping rate jumped after entering address, and the layout shift caused users to misclick.
Hotjar with the 35-session cap on free tier might have missed these specific sessions in the noise.
case 2: mobile menu confusion
a SaaS site found mobile users were not engaging with secondary navigation. Hotjar’s heatmap (on a paid tier) showed clearly that users were tapping near the menu but not on it. the hit area was 12 pixels too small.
Clarity could have surfaced the same insight, but Hotjar’s heatmap interface made it clearer at a glance.
case 3: pricing page survey
a course business wanted to know why visitors abandoned the pricing page. Hotjar’s exit-intent survey (“what is making you hesitate?”) collected 80 responses in two weeks. the top answer: “I am not sure if this is right for my level”.
Clarity does not have surveys, so they would have needed Tally or Typeform to do the same.
what NOT to do with these tools
three failure modes I see regularly:
1. installing both, watching neither
both tools are most valuable when paired with a habit of asking specific questions. without the habit, they collect data nobody looks at.
2. treating session recordings as marketing decks
session recordings are research material. they are not “look how cool, the user clicked here” videos to share with stakeholders. resist the urge to use them as evidence in arguments without watching enough sessions to find patterns.
3. ignoring privacy implications
masking PII is on by default but there are edge cases (e.g., your own form labels containing customer info). check your masking rules quarterly. for B2B SaaS where session contents include client data, handle session recordings with the same care as any logged user data.
using both together
nothing stops you from running both. both are free. both fire client-side. installation is 5 minutes each.
reasons to run both:
– Clarity for exhaustive session capture and AI summaries
– Hotjar for surveys (which Clarity does not do)
the small downside is two tracking scripts on every page, which adds about 30 to 50 KB to load time. for most sites, fine.
connecting visual analytics to your wider stack
session recordings are most powerful when paired with quantitative data. for the broader stack:
- traffic and acquisition: GA4 for non-marketers 2026 guide
- product analytics (events, funnels, retention): Mixpanel free tier tutorial 2026 and amplitude vs mixpanel for solopreneurs 2026
- dashboards: Looker Studio complete tutorial 2026, how to build a business dashboard
- surveys: best survey tools for market research 2026
- AI for behavior analysis: best AI tools for data analysis 2026
a typical solopreneur stack: GA4 + Clarity + Mixpanel + Looker Studio. all four free at small scale.
working with developers and stakeholders
session recordings are persuasive evidence in design and engineering conversations. a screenshot or analytics chart can be argued with. a 30-second clip of a real user struggling with checkout cannot.
three patterns that work well:
1. ship a clip with every design proposal
if you propose a design change, attach a 30-second session clip showing the current problem. it short-circuits debate.
2. use heatmaps in onboarding for new team members
a new designer can absorb more about user behavior from 20 minutes with the heatmap tool than from a long brief.
3. clip and share specific moments, not full sessions
both Clarity and Hotjar let you share specific time-coded moments. always send the moment, not the full 8-minute session.
conclusion
Microsoft Clarity is the better default in 2026 for solopreneurs. it is genuinely free, captures every session, has AI summaries and frustration filters that Hotjar charges for, and supports unlimited sites. the only reason to choose Hotjar is if you need surveys or feedback widgets in the same tool.
if you go with Hotjar, accept that the 35-sessions-per-day cap means you will miss most of what your users do unless your site is very small. Hotjar paid tier ($32+/month) is reasonable for a serious business but not for solopreneurs who want a “free analytics” stack.
regardless of which you pick, the bigger lesson is workflow: installing the tool is 5 minutes; using it well is the discipline of having a specific question before you watch sessions and stopping when you have a hypothesis to ship. random session-watching is the most common time sink in this category.
install Microsoft Clarity this week. give it 7 days to collect data. then sit down with one specific question, watch 5 to 10 filtered sessions, and ship the fix. you will get more value from that 30-minute exercise than most teams get from a year of Hotjar recordings.