A dual-monitor desk workspace, representing a choice between two AI agent platforms

Tasklet vs Lindy: General Agent or Inbox EA? (2026)

Tasklet and Lindy are both AI agents that do work for you, but they aim at different jobs. Tasklet is an autonomy-first cloud agent: from the Firebase co-creator Andrew Lee’s YC-backed team, you describe a task in plain English and an always-on agent figures out which tools to use and executes it across thousands of integrations, with a sandboxed browser and command line so it can act where there’s no API. Lindy is an AI executive assistant: repositioned in early 2026 from an agent-builder into an inbox-centric EA that triages email, drafts replies in your voice, schedules meetings, and takes meeting notes, organized around one or more connected inboxes. The core split is scope: Tasklet is a general agent for arbitrary knowledge work, while Lindy is a structured assistant for the email-and-calendar job. Name which one is actually your problem and the choice gets easy. (If you land on Lindy, our Lindy vs Gumloop piece covers the agent-vs-canvas angle; if you land on Tasklet, see the Tasklet alternatives roundup.)


The One-Sentence Answer

Use Tasklet when you want to describe any task and let an autonomous cloud agent own it end to end; use Lindy when you want a structured executive assistant that lives in your inbox and calendar.


Side-by-Side Comparison

TaskletLindy
What it isAutonomy-first cloud agent for general knowledge workInbox-centric AI executive assistant
How you use itDescribe a task in plain English; the agent owns the executionConnect an inbox; the assistant triages, drafts, schedules
Primary scopeArbitrary tasks across tools, web, and a sandboxed CLIEmail, calendar, meeting notes, follow-ups
Backing / lineageYC (Andrew Lee, Firebase co-creator); $20M raise, 2026Established AI-agent company, repositioned to EA in early 2026
Billing unitCredits, metered per runCredits, metered; priced per inbox
Price (2026)Free (300 bonus credits/day); Starter $25; Pro $100; Custom from $250Plus $49.99; Pro $99.99; Max $199.99; no free plan
Agents & integrationsUnlimited agents and integrations on all plans, including freeUp to 2 / 3 / 5 inboxes by tier; 100+ integrations
Computer useSandboxed browser and command line on all agentsBrowser “Computer Use” on Pro and Max tiers
Best fitPeople with open-ended, varied tasks who want one agent to handle themPeople who want their inbox and calendar run for them

When to Use Tasklet

  • Your tasks are open-ended and varied — research, data pulls, one-off automations — rather than one repeated shape
  • You want to describe the goal and let the agent decide how to reach it, including driving a website or command line when there’s no API
  • You want to spin up many agents without a per-agent or per-integration charge, even on the free or $25 tier
  • You’re comfortable with a young, fast-moving product (YC Spring 2026 batch, $5M ARR range) rather than a mature suite
  • You’d rather start free and scale credits as you go

Tasklet’s strength is breadth and autonomy: it’s a general-purpose agent OS, so it isn’t confined to email — it’ll do the arbitrary task you hand it and try to finish it on its own. The trade-off is that it’s a chat surface you go to and type into, and, like any credit-metered agent, heavier automation runs against your credit balance, so model a real month before you lean on it.


When to Use Lindy

  • The work you want off your plate is mostly email and calendar — triage, replies, scheduling, meeting notes
  • You want an assistant that drafts in your voice and organizes around your inbox rather than an open chat you brief each time
  • You want structured EA features — meeting prep, follow-up tracking, iMessage/SMS alerts — out of the box
  • You manage one to a few inboxes and the per-inbox pricing works for you
  • You’re fine reviewing and approving what it drafts before it goes out

Lindy’s strength is focus: it’s purpose-built for the executive-assistant job, so the inbox, calendar, and meeting workflows are polished and ready. The trade-offs are scope and cost — it’s centered on email rather than arbitrary tasks, it starts at $49.99/month with no free plan and prices per inbox, and it typically drafts and waits for your approval on the steps that matter.


The Distinction That Actually Decides It

The real fork is scope versus structure. Tasklet bets on generality: one autonomous agent that will take on whatever you describe, which is powerful when your work is varied and unpredictable and you don’t want to be boxed into one channel. Lindy bets on structure: a purpose-built EA that runs the email-and-calendar job well, which is powerful when that job is most of your load and you want it handled cleanly rather than improvised. Neither is objectively better — it’s a bet on whether you want a flexible generalist or a focused specialist. Both, though, share a limit: Tasklet is still a chat you go to and type into, and Lindy typically drafts and defers to your approval, so at the last step you’re usually the one who sends the reply, confirms the meeting, or updates the record.

If you’d rather delegate the finished outcome than type into a chat or approve drafts, an AI assistant like Carly sits in that third spot: its agents each have their own email address, so they reply to people, book meetings, send follow-ups, and update your CRM on their own across Gmail or Outlook and 200+ integrations, set up by describing what you want in plain English, starting at $35/month.


Quick Reference

Your situation…Pick…
”Handle this open-ended task for me, whatever tools it takes”Tasklet
”Run my inbox and calendar — triage, reply, schedule”Lindy
I want unlimited agents on a cheap or free tierTasklet
I want polished, ready-made EA workflowsLindy
I want to start free and scale creditsTasklet
I want the work finished on its own, not chatted or draftedNeither — see Carly

FAQ

Is Tasklet or Lindy cheaper? Tasklet starts lower: it has a free plan with daily bonus credits and a $25/month Starter tier, while Lindy starts at $49.99/month with no free plan and prices per inbox. But both meter by credits, so the sticker price isn’t the real cost — heavier, multi-step usage draws down credits on either. Estimate a month of actual runs on each before deciding.

Can Tasklet do inbox work like Lindy? It can act on email as one of many tasks, since it’s a general agent with integrations and a browser. But Lindy is purpose-built for the inbox — triage, drafting in your voice, scheduling, meeting notes — so its email and calendar workflows are more structured. Tasklet is broader; Lindy is deeper on that one job.

Does either one send emails and book meetings on its own? Both can take actions, but in practice Tasklet is a chat you drive and Lindy drafts and waits for your approval, so you’re usually the one clicking send or confirming the meeting. If you want an agent that finishes those steps itself — replying to people and booking from its own email address — an assistant like Carly is built around that, starting at $35/month.

Is Tasklet stable enough to rely on? It’s early — a YC Spring 2026 company that raised $20M in 2026 and is growing fast, but newer than Lindy’s established platform. If you need a settled, polished EA today, Lindy is more mature on the inbox job; if you want a flexible general agent and can tolerate a fast-moving product, Tasklet fits.


Related: Tasklet alternatives · Lindy alternatives · Lindy vs Gumloop · Best AI agent platforms

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