A person working on a laptop on a park bench, representing a comparison of two AI agent tools

Tasklet vs Town: Which AI Agent in 2026?

People shortlist these two together because both promise an AI that does real work, but they solve different halves of the problem. Tasklet (tasklet.ai) is a cloud “agent OS” — you describe a job in plain English and a long-lived agent figures out which tools to use and executes it, with computer-use and unlimited agents and integrations even on lower tiers. Town (town.com) is an ambient “chief of staff” — a “Townie” with its own @town.com address that you reach over email, Slack, WhatsApp, Telegram, or desktop, and that learns how you work from your activity rather than making you configure it. The core split: Tasklet is a place you go to assign discrete jobs; Town is an assistant that anticipates work across your day. Name whether your problem is “I have specific tasks to hand off” or “I want something that quietly runs my day,” and the choice gets easy. For the wider field, see Tasklet alternatives and Town alternatives.


The One-Sentence Answer

Use Tasklet if you want to assign discrete, tool-spanning jobs to autonomous cloud agents you can spin up freely; use Town if you want an always-on personal assistant that learns your context and works across chat and desktop — as long as you’re on Google.


Side-by-Side Comparison

TaskletTown
What it isCloud “agent OS” for knowledge workAmbient AI “chief of staff” (Townie)
Core jobAssign a task in plain English; an agent owns and executes itProactive routines, briefings, research across your surfaces
How you reach itWeb app / chat; triggers and schedulesEmail, Slack, WhatsApp, Telegram, iOS, macOS, web
Working styleYou assign discrete jobs; agents run long-livedLearns from your activity; pre-built routines
Email & calendarVia integrations (Gmail, etc.); not an inbox managerGoogle only — no Outlook or Microsoft 365
Agents & integrationsUnlimited agents and integrations on all plans; computer-use, API, MCP~50+ connected tools; routines largely pre-defined
Pricing (2026)Free (300 daily bonus credits), Starter $25, Pro $100, Custom from $250/mo — credit-metered~$15–$199/month — credit-metered with pay-as-you-go overage
Best fitPeople with concrete jobs to delegate to autonomous agentsPeople who want an assistant that just picks things up

When to Use Tasklet

  • You have concrete, tool-spanning jobs to hand off — research, data pulls, multi-step automations — and want an agent to own each one
  • You want to spin up as many agents and integrations as you like without tier limits gating you
  • You value computer-use, direct API access, and MCP support to reach tools that lack a native connector
  • You’d rather describe a task once than build a visual workflow step by step
  • You want a low entry point (a free tier plus a $25/month starter) and can work within credit metering

Tasklet was built by Andrew Lee, a Firebase co-founder, and the team behind the Shortwave email client, and launched through Y Combinator in 2026 as a “cloud agent OS.” Its bet is autonomy: you describe the outcome and a long-lived agent decides how to execute across your tools. Every plan allows unlimited agents and integrations, but usage is credit-metered — heavier or more complex runs burn more credits, and higher “intelligence” levels cost more — so estimate your volume before committing.


When to Use Town

  • You’d rather an assistant learn your patterns than have to assign each job
  • You want to reach it everywhere — Slack, WhatsApp, Telegram, desktop, email
  • You’re on Google for email and calendar (Town has no Outlook support)
  • You like ready-made routines: morning briefings, contact research, digests
  • You want a personal “chief of staff” feel rather than a task console

Town exited beta in June 2026 alongside a $55M Series A from a16z and Forerunner. Its pitch is ambient help: forward it email or message it anywhere, and it works across 50+ connected tools while learning how you operate. The trade-offs are the Google-only limit for email and calendar and routines that are harder to customize when your workflow is off-menu. Pricing is credit-metered with pay-as-you-go overage once you pass your monthly allotment.


Assign-a-Job vs Learn-Your-Day: The Real Trade-off

Almost every Tasklet-vs-Town decision comes down to one question: do you want to assign work or have it anticipated? Tasklet is a console you go to and hand a defined job — it shines when you can name the task, and its unlimited agents and integrations let you stand up new ones without hitting a wall. Town runs the other direction: it’s ambient, learns your context, and offers routines and briefings without being asked, which is great when the value is in not having to think about what to delegate. Buying the wrong mode means either babysitting an assistant you wanted to be autonomous, or hunting through a chat console for help you wanted to just appear.

There’s a boundary worth naming on both. Tasklet runs jobs inside its own agent console; Town works from its own @town.com identity and its pre-built routines. If the work you care about lives on email threads with other people — clients, prospects, candidates — and you want an assistant that sits on those threads and replies as itself, that’s a different shape. Carly is an AI assistant whose agents each have their own email address, so you can CC one on a thread and it replies to the people on it, books the meeting, and updates your CRM on its own, working across Gmail or Outlook and 200+ integrations, set up by describing what you want in plain English.


Quick Reference

Your situation…Pick…
I have specific jobs to hand off to an agentTasklet
I want unlimited agents and integrations at a low priceTasklet
I want an assistant that learns me and works across chat/desktopTown
I’m on Google and want ambient routines and briefingsTown
I need Outlook / Microsoft 365 for my inboxNeither — Town is Google-only
I want an agent that sits on email threads and replies as itselfSee Carly

FAQ

Is Tasklet or Town better for automating a specific workflow? Tasklet. It’s built around assigning defined jobs — describe the workflow in plain English and an agent executes it, with computer-use and unlimited integrations to reach the tools involved. Town can run pre-built routines, but it’s designed to learn your patterns and act ambiently rather than to be a workflow console.

Does either one work with Outlook? Town does not — it’s Google-only for email and calendar, with no Outlook or Microsoft 365 support. Tasklet isn’t an inbox manager at all; it connects to Gmail and other tools through integrations to perform tasks, rather than running your mailbox. If managing an Outlook inbox is the point, neither is a native fit.

Are both credit-metered? Yes. Tasklet runs a free tier (300 daily bonus credits) plus Starter ($25), Pro ($100), and Custom (from $250) monthly plans, all credit-based, with heavier and higher-intelligence runs costing more. Town runs roughly $15–$199/month with pay-as-you-go overage past your allotment. On either, busier months cost more, so check current limits first.

What if I want the follow-ups and replies actually sent to other people, not just handled inside the app? Both Tasklet and Town do work for you — inside a console or from an ambient assistant. If the job is corresponding with clients or prospects directly, Carly’s agents each have their own email address and reply to people on the thread, book meetings, and follow up on their own, on Gmail or Outlook, starting at $35/month. See Tasklet alternatives and Town alternatives for the broader field.


Related: Tasklet alternatives · Town alternatives · Lindy vs Town · Town raises $55M Series A · Best AI agent platforms · Best AI personal assistants

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