Booking-page card with a calendar grid, highlighted time slot, and confirm button, illustrating a scheduling link tool

Lunacal is a booking and scheduling platform positioned as a Calendly alternative. It connects Google, Outlook, and Apple calendars for two-way sync, offers highly customizable, landing-page-style booking links (logos, videos, testimonials, FAQs), round-robin and collective team scheduling, and built-in payments through Stripe and PayPal with no booking commission. It’s well-reviewed and aimed at people who want a polished, branded booking page.

The model itself is the thing worth questioning. Every booking-link tool — Lunacal included — still asks the other person to open your page, read a grid, and self-select a slot. That works, but it’s not the only way. If you want a different booking tool, or you’d rather skip the link entirely, here are five alternatives.


1. Carly

Carly approaches scheduling from the other direction. Instead of sending a booking page and asking people to pick a slot, you let your AI executive assistant handle the scheduling conversation over email — Carly reads the thread, proposes times that work, and books the meeting. For groups, it offers a free no-signup availability grid where everyone marks when they’re free and the overlap emerges.

What makes it different from Lunacal: Lunacal gives you a beautiful page to send; Carly removes the page and does the negotiating for you over email, on Outlook or Gmail. And it’s a full assistant — beyond scheduling, it manages your inbox, contacts/CRM, tasks, daily briefings, and meeting notes.

Best for: People who’d rather have scheduling handled conversationally than maintain and send a booking link.

Pricing: Starts at $35/month


2. Calendly

The category leader. Clean booking pages, deep calendar and video-conferencing integrations, round-robin, group events, workflows, and meeting polls. The default many people compare everything else against.

What makes it different from Lunacal: Calendly is more established with a larger integration ecosystem, though it’s less focused on the heavily branded, landing-page-style booking experience Lunacal emphasizes. See Calendly alternatives.

Best for: People who want the most mature, widely integrated booking tool.

Pricing: Free tier; paid plans available


3. TidyCal

A low-cost booking tool from AppSumo — booking pages, multiple meeting types, calendar integrations, and paid bookings, usually available as an inexpensive lifetime deal.

What makes it different from Lunacal: TidyCal competes on price and simplicity rather than the rich page customization and team features Lunacal offers. See TidyCal alternatives.

Best for: Solo users who want a cheap, no-frills booking page.

Pricing: Low-cost / one-time lifetime deal


4. SavvyCal

A booking tool known for a more considerate scheduling experience: recipients overlay their own calendar on yours to find a time, plus ranked availability, personalization, and team scheduling.

What makes it different from Lunacal: SavvyCal’s standout is the overlay booking flow that respects the recipient’s calendar, rather than Lunacal’s branded landing-page approach. See SavvyCal alternatives.

Best for: People who want a polite, recipient-friendly booking experience.

Pricing: Paid, with a trial


5. Cal.com

Open-source scheduling infrastructure with booking pages, round-robin, collective availability, team event types, a full API, and self-hosting. The most flexible and developer-friendly option here.

What makes it different from Lunacal: Cal.com is open-source and self-hostable with deep customization via its API, where Lunacal is a hosted, design-led product.

Best for: Teams and developers who want open-source, API-driven scheduling.

Pricing: Free tier; Teams plans available


Lunacal, Calendly, TidyCal, SavvyCal, and Cal.com all share one model: you publish a link, the other person opens it and picks a slot. It’s efficient when you book a lot of meetings with people who are happy to self-serve.

The other model is to not send a link at all. For 1:1 and small-group scheduling done by email, Carly handles the back-and-forth in the thread, and for groups its free availability grid collects everyone’s times without anyone creating an account. If your scheduling is mostly conversational rather than high-volume self-serve booking, that can be a better fit than another booking page.


FAQ

Does Lunacal take payments? Yes — it integrates with Stripe and PayPal and advertises zero booking commission. Calendly, TidyCal, and Cal.com also support paid bookings.

Which Lunacal alternative doesn’t use a booking link? Carly schedules conversationally over email and offers a free group-availability grid instead of a published booking page.

What’s the cheapest Lunacal alternative? TidyCal, typically sold as a low-cost lifetime deal. Cal.com is free and open-source if you self-host.


More on scheduling: Calendly alternatives · TidyCal alternatives · SavvyCal alternatives · Group scheduling tools

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See what people say

"Before Carly, I relied on a Calendly link, but the whole process felt impersonal and not very professional. Carly changed that by handling all the back-and-forth, so I'm no longer stuck in endless email threads trying to line up schedules.

Now Carly reaches out to candidates, shares my real-time availability, lets them pick a slot, then sends a Zoom link and drops it straight into my calendar. She sends reminders to both of us before each call, which has significantly reduced no-shows and last-minute confusion.

On top of scheduling, Carly acts like a full executive assistant, sending me my schedule the night before so I can prepare for each call. It reminds me of the old x.ai assistant, but Carly is noticeably smarter, faster, and better suited to my healthcare recruitment business."

Gus Ibrahim, Founder & Director, IHR