Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
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Linguise
Best overallFor everyday users who need to translate a website for global reach, GTranslate wins on SEO power and zero speed impact, while Linguise wins on instant setup and visual editing ease. The single biggest difference is that GTranslate's free version hides SEO indexing behind a paywall, whereas Linguise offers a 30-day free trial with full features from day one.
GTranslate
Linguise
Scores at a glance
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Key differences
Facts side by side
| GTranslate | Linguise | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
Yes, GTranslate is slightly better for SEO because its proxy architecture ensures translated pages load fast and are fully indexed. But Linguise also does a great job with automatic hreflang tags and sitemaps — the difference matters most for very large e-commerce sites.
No, neither tool has a mobile app. You manage translations through a web dashboard on your computer. However, the translated website will work perfectly on mobile phones for your visitors.
Linguise is easier. You sign up, add your domain, install a plugin (if using WordPress) or paste a script, and you're done in minutes. GTranslate may require DNS changes for the subdomain approach, which can be intimidating.
Only as a test. The free version translates your site but Google won't index the translated pages, so you won't get any SEO benefit. For a personal blog with no need for search traffic, it's fine. For any business, you'll need the paid plan.
Linguise is likely cheaper for a small blog because its pricing scales with word count. If your blog has under 10,000 words, Linguise's lowest tier will cost less than GTranslate's monthly subscription. GTranslate charges a flat fee regardless of content size.
No. Both tools are designed for non-developers. Linguise is slightly more beginner-friendly because it has a one-click WordPress plugin. GTranslate also has plugins but may require a DNS change if you want the SEO-friendly subdomain setup.
Linguise is easier to set up and friendlier for small sites; GTranslate is the SEO powerhouse for serious global e-commerce.
If you're a non-technical person who just wants to add a few languages to your website without headaches, start with Linguise's 30-day free trial — it's the easiest path. If you run an online store and SEO rankings in other countries are your top priority, GTranslate's paid plan is worth the investment. Both are solid, but Linguise wins on simplicity for everyday users.
Detail pages: GTranslate · Linguise