Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
Change tools
Cheat Layer
Best overallFor everyday users who need to automate repetitive browser tasks or build no-code automations, Cheat Layer is the more versatile but technically demanding choice. Spreads is the better pick if your main need is enriching spreadsheets with web data like leads or company info, thanks to its no-code interface and high accuracy. The single biggest difference: Cheat Layer automates actions (clicking, scraping, migrating data) while Spreads specializes in data enrichment (filling in missing info in your spreadsheets).
Cheat Layer
Spreads
Scores at a glance
Choose Cheat Layer if
Choose Spreads if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Cheat Layer | Spreads | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
It depends on your process. If you need to scrape LinkedIn profiles, verify emails, and enrich a spreadsheet, Spreads is better because it's built for that. If you need to automate the entire lead generation workflow (e.g., visiting sites, filling forms, and saving data), Cheat Layer is more powerful.
No. Neither tool has a mobile app, and both require a desktop browser or client to function. You cannot run automations or manage tasks from a phone.
Spreads is easier because it works directly with spreadsheets and has a no-code interface. Cheat Layer requires installing a browser extension and desktop client, and you'll need to understand concepts like semantic selectors and environment variables.
If you run multiple automations daily (like scraping competitor sites, migrating data, or filling forms), the $2/day starting price is reasonable. But if you only need occasional data enrichment, Spreads might be cheaper per task — though its pricing is not transparent.
No. Spreads is designed only for data enrichment and web scraping into spreadsheets. For form filling, data migration, or multi-step browser automation, you need Cheat Layer.
Cheat Layer wins for browser automation versatility; Spreads wins for simple, accurate spreadsheet enrichment — pick based on whether you need to do or just fill.
If you're comfortable with a bit of technical setup and need to automate multi-step browser tasks, go with Cheat Layer — it's more versatile despite the learning curve. If your main need is quickly filling in missing data in spreadsheets without writing code, Spreads is the simpler, more accurate choice. Either way, start with a trial batch to see if the tool fits your actual workflow before committing.
Detail pages: Cheat Layer · Spreads