
May 29, 2026

Written By Katja Orel
Lead Editor, UGC Marketing

Fact Checked By Sebastian Novin
Co-Founder & COO, Influee
Yotpo is a six-module DTC suite β Reviews, Visual UGC, Loyalty, SMS, Email, Subscriptions β built mostly for Shopify brands collapsing their post-purchase stack into one contract. Reviews and Loyalty are the engine. But they're not the modules a growth team thinks about when paid creative starts burning out and the Meta ad account is asking for the next three hooks by Friday.
Visual UGC is the module that question lands on. It's the aggregator inside the suite that pulls customer photos and Reels off Instagram and TikTok, runs an automated rights-request workflow, and routes the cleared set into shoppable galleries on the product page.
The Yotpo question for a growth team isn't whether the bundle is good. It's whether Visual UGC β the module closest to the ad account β can stand alone against a focused production tool.
Influee | Yotpo | |
|---|---|---|
Content source | Custom content by creators on your brief | Aggregated from social and reviews |
Revisions included | Unlimited | Not applicable (content already exists) |
Content usage rights | Belong to brand by default | Automated rights workflow, brand-specific terms |
Pricing model | Subscription + 10% marketplace fee | Reviews from $19/mo, modular suite, enterprise quote beyond entry tiers |


Yotpo started as a Reviews platform in 2011 and is now a six-module suite sold mostly into Shopify and Shopify Plus stores. The bundle pitch is procurement math: one vendor covers the post-purchase stack a DTC ops team would otherwise stitch together from four contracts. Reviews is the engine of that pitch β automated post-purchase emails and SMS pulling star ratings that publish to the product page, the gallery widget, and the Google rich snippet. The customer roster tilts US fashion, lifestyle, and home DTC.
Visual UGC is the aggregator surface inside that bundle. The module ingests Instagram and TikTok content via hashtag, mention, and direct customer upload, runs an automated rights-request workflow, and pushes cleared posts into shoppable galleries on Shopify product pages. Yotpo built it organically as the suite expanded out from reviews. Functionally, it works as a display layer the same way Flowbox or Taggbox does β sourced from existing customer posts, never briefed.
What Visual UGC isn't: a production line. No brief, no script approval, no shoot to ad specs, no vetted creators filming new video for the brand's Meta or TikTok account. The module clears existing posts for the on-site gallery. It doesn't commission new ones for the ad account.

UGC videos starting at $87

20.000+ Vetted Creators in USA

Influee is a creator marketplace. A growth team writes a brief, vetted creators apply within a day, and the chosen creator delivers finished video seven days later β licensed for paid Meta, TikTok, and Spark Ads from the moment it's uploaded to the brand dashboard.
Yotpo's strongest argument is bundle math. One contract instead of four; one analytics view instead of stitching reviews, loyalty, and gallery data across vendors. For a DTC ops team renewing on volume, that's a real win. The split with Influee starts where the bundle stops β none of the six modules produces a new video for the ad account.
The cost of bundling isn't the price tag; it's the depth you give up on the module that actually needs to compete with a focused tool. Visual UGC inside Yotpo competes with display aggregators on display ground. Against a production line β vetted creators filming new video to the brand's exact brief β it doesn't compete at all.
Influee | Yotpo | |
|---|---|---|
Content source | Vetted creators film new video to a posted brief | Aggregated from social posts and customer reviews |
Brand control | Brand sets script, hook, format, and licensing scope | Whatever customers chose to film for their own feeds |
Yotpo Visual UGC opens with collection. The module pulls Instagram and TikTok posts by hashtag, handle, or mention, sends an automated rights request to each original poster, and pushes the cleared set into a Shop the Look gallery widget on the product page. The Reviews module runs a parallel flow on text and photos β post-purchase email asks for a star rating, customer uploads a photo of the product in use, the gallery on the PDP carousels it next to the verified-buyer badge. Both modules amplify what shoppers already filmed and wrote for their own audiences. Neither one writes a brief.
Influee inverts the workflow. Step one is the brief β hook framing, script angle, deliverable format, on-screen claims, the placements the media buyer is filling, the rights scope the brand needs from day one. 100,000+ vetted creators across 23+ countries see the brief and apply; the brand picks the best fit for the product. Seven days later the creator delivers finished video β vertical 9:16 for Reels and TikTok, square 1:1 for in-feed, sized to whichever placement is on the media plan.
A protein bar brand turns on Yotpo Visual UGC and watches three months of customer Reels flow in. The gallery on the PDP fills up with shots of customers eating the bar mid-run, mid-workout, mid-commute β every one of them gushing about the taste. Cold Meta traffic for the same brand sees one of those Reels in-feed and tunes out. The audience the brand is trying to convert buys for macros, not flavor, and customers never knew that's the hook the brand wanted tested.
Aggregation can't pick the converting angle. The brief can.
Bottom line: Choose Yotpo if you want customer photos and reviews as social proof for warm audiences inside the buy flow.
Choose Influee if you want to control the message, the conversion, and where your audience goes next.
Influee | Yotpo | |
|---|---|---|
Default rights handling | Belong to brand by default | Automated rights workflow, scope per original poster |
Yotpo's automated rights-request workflow is better than the click-by-click negotiation a Flowbox or Squarelovin runs. The module sends a templated request to the original poster as soon as a moderator pulls the post into the queue, tracks the response, and routes cleared posts into the gallery library with the license terms attached. For on-site display β the gallery widget under the buy button, the homepage carousel β the workflow does its job and the paper trail is clean.
The trouble is what cleared scope actually covers. A fashion DTC running Yotpo Visual UGC on a Shopify Plus storefront finds a customer Reel that's drawing engagement on the PDP. They want the same Reel for next month's TikTok cold-traffic launch in two new EU markets. The automated request originally asked permission to "display on the brand's owned web properties." Paid social wasn't in scope. The brand goes back to the creator, the creator wants a fee, the legal review asks whether the consent extends to Spark Ads handle authorization, and the launch slips by ten days.
The fee isn't what stings β it's the dead air between identifying the winning clip and being allowed to spend money behind it. The creator may also decline the paid-social scope entirely. Now the brand has a hole in the launch calendar and no plan B.
Influee resolves the question at contract signing. A vetted creator who applies to a brief accepts the usage scope as part of the application β paid social, owned channels, creative testing windows, whitelisting on Meta or TikTok, whatever the brief specifies. The finished video is licensed for those placements the moment the creator uploads it. No second round of negotiation, no scope renegotiation, no dependence on whether a stranger checks their DMs.
Bottom line: Choose Yotpo if your rights scope ends at the on-site gallery, with templated consent on each aggregated post.
Choose Influee if every video must be cleared for paid Meta, TikTok, and Spark Ads before launch day.
Influee | Yotpo | |
|---|---|---|
Product shape | Single focused tool β creator production for paid media | Six-module suite β Reviews, UGC, Loyalty, SMS, Email, Subscriptions |
UGC depth | Vetted creators filming to ad brief, full revisions, paid-social rights | Display galleries from existing customer posts and reviews |
What it costs to skip the bundle | Reviews, loyalty, SMS handled by your existing vendors | One contract covers four ops jobs |
Yotpo's pitch is procurement math. A DTC ops team comparing renewals counts four contracts (reviews vendor, loyalty vendor, SMS vendor, gallery widget), four logins, four invoices, four analytics views. Yotpo collapses that to one. For the team running post-purchase as a system, the bundle isn't about UGC at all β it's about removing vendor sprawl on the modules the brand uses daily.
That math works right up to the line where one of those modules has to compete with a focused tool. Visual UGC inside Yotpo is the module that crosses the line. It's a display layer β galleries on the PDP, the homepage, the email β sourced from posts customers already chose to film. It's the kind of module that survives inside a bundle because nobody's measuring it against the next category up.
A beauty brand renews Yotpo for the Loyalty module β that's the part actually carrying weight on the renewal model. Visual UGC was already paid for inside the bundle, so the team starts using it for the on-site gallery rather than buying a separate aggregator. The PDP gallery looks fine. Reviews keep flowing. Loyalty members keep redeeming. Three months in, the Meta ad account is drying up: CPMs are climbing, the same three hooks are still running, the bundled UGC dashboard has nothing the media buyer can ship. Internally, every dashboard says the suite is performing. Externally, the ad account proves the gap.
Influee runs the other shape. One job, done deep. Vetted creators, briefed before they touch a camera, filming to the brand's exact ad specs with paid-social rights baked into the deliverable. The brand's reviews vendor stays where it is. The loyalty program stays where it is. The SMS workflow stays where it is. The UGC line β the one feeding the ad account β runs on a tool built for that one thing.
Bottom line: Choose Yotpo if collapsing four post-purchase vendors into one contract saves more than the depth you give up on UGC.
Choose Influee if your media plan budgets video as a unit cost, not a display-only gallery line item.

Yotpo's public pricing stops short of the bundle. Reviews has a Free tier and a Growth tier from $19 per month, and that's where transparent pricing ends. Visual UGC, Loyalty Silver and Gold, the Premium tier on Reviews, and any cross-module bundle all route to a sales call. SMS pricing scales with send volume and isn't published past the entry tier. A DTC brand on Reviews Growth pays $19 a month for the entry product; the same brand running Reviews Premium plus Visual UGC plus Loyalty Silver is in five-figure annual contract territory, negotiated. Influee publishes three tiers β Basic at β¬199, Advanced at β¬399, Pro at β¬749 per month β and adds a flat 10% marketplace fee on creator payments.
Influee | Yotpo | |
|---|---|---|
Pricing model | β¬199 / β¬399 / β¬749/mo + 10% marketplace fee | Reviews from $19/mo, bundle quote-only past entry tiers |
Scope | Per-creator content production | Reviews + Visual UGC + Loyalty + SMS + Email + Subscriptions |
Yotpo Reviews on the Growth tier is genuinely cheap β $19 a month for review collection and on-site widgets undercuts most standalone reviews vendors. Add Visual UGC, Loyalty Silver, and Premium reviews and the floor crosses into the same five-figure annual band where Influee Pro sits, except the output is fundamentally different. The two tools aren't priced for the same job. Yotpo is priced as a subscription to a post-purchase dashboard, and Influee is priced as a creative production line with unit economics per video.
Bottom line: Choose Yotpo if your spend on the bundle pays for itself in reviews-driven conversion and reduced vendor headcount.
Choose Influee if you want a unit cost per video on the media plan, not a fixed bundle subscription line.
If Yotpo isn't the right fit but you still need a reviews-and-UGC aggregator or DTC suite, here are four worth comparing.
Bazaarvoice is an enterprise reviews and UGC platform built for big retail and CPG brands, with retailer syndication that pushes review content into Walmart, Target, and category retailer PDPs. Pick Bazaarvoice over Yotpo when retail syndication is the job to be done β getting review content onto retailer product pages is something Yotpo can't match.
Pros
Cons
Pricing
Best fit: CPG and retail brands selling through Walmart, Target, Amazon, or major category retailers that need review content syndicated to retailer PDPs.
Flowbox is a UGC aggregator focused on shoppable galleries and product-page embeds, primarily for European fashion and retail. Pick Flowbox over Yotpo when you want a deeper shoppable widget with a built-in Media Rights Framework and you don't need the bundled reviews, loyalty, and SMS layers.
Pros
Cons
Pricing
Best fit: European fashion or retail brands that want customer photos driving conversion on product pages without buying into a bundled post-purchase suite.
Skeepers is a French-headquartered European suite that bundles reviews, influencer marketing, UGC video, and consumer activation in one stack. Pick Skeepers over Yotpo when your buyer is European and you want a localized vendor with EU data residency and native support across France, Italy, and Spain.
Pros
Cons
Pricing
Best fit: European retail and CPG brands that want reviews, influencer marketing, and UGC under one vendor with localized EU support and a multi-country rollout already in flight.
Taggbox is a mid-market UGC aggregator focused on shoppable galleries, social walls, and event displays. Pick Taggbox over Yotpo when you want a focused UGC aggregator without buying the reviews-and-loyalty bundle alongside it β the same gallery surface, none of the suite contract.
Pros
Cons
Pricing
Best fit: Brands that want the same shoppable-gallery aggregator surface Yotpo Visual UGC provides, without paying for the reviews, loyalty, and SMS modules wrapped around it.

UGC videos starting at $87

20.000+ Vetted Creators in USA
Yotpo is a DTC commerce suite built around six modules β Reviews, Visual UGC, Loyalty & Referrals, SMS, Email, and Subscriptions. Reviews collects post-purchase ratings and text via email and SMS, then surfaces them on-site and in Google rich snippets. Visual UGC ingests Instagram and TikTok posts plus customer photo uploads, runs an automated rights-request workflow, and displays cleared content in shoppable galleries on Shopify product pages. Loyalty, SMS, Email, and Subscriptions extend the bundle into the post-purchase stack.
No. Yotpo doesn't commission new content to a brief. Visual UGC aggregates posts customers already filmed for their own audiences, plus photos uploaded with reviews. There's no script approval, no shoot to ad specs, no vetted creators contracted to film a 9:16 hook for Meta or TikTok. For brands that need new creator video produced to a brief, a UGC platform like Influee is a different category of tool.
Yes β the overlap is small. Yotpo runs the on-site display layer, the reviews engine, and the post-purchase stack; on Influee, vetted creators film new video to brief for ads, launches, new markets, or any campaign that needs filming against a spec. Most brands pick one based on the dominant use case. Some run both when the storefront needs the gallery and the ad account needs the brief-driven line.
Visual UGC sends a templated rights request to the original poster as soon as a moderator pulls the post into the queue, tracks the consent and scope, and routes cleared content into the gallery library with the license terms attached. The scope is typically the surface the brand asked for at request time β on-site display, owned channels, or paid social. Expanding the cleared scope to paid Meta or TikTok after the fact often means a second conversation with the creator and a separate fee.
Yotpo publishes a Free Reviews tier and a Growth tier from $19 per month. Pricing past that β Reviews Premium, Visual UGC, Loyalty Silver and Gold, SMS volume tiers, Email, and Subscriptions β routes to a sales call. A DTC brand running the full bundle is in five-figure annual contract territory, negotiated.
Shopify and Shopify Plus DTC brands that need reviews first and want UGC galleries, loyalty, and SMS under the same contract. US fashion, lifestyle, and home DTC running on Shopify Plus. DTC ops teams collapsing four post-purchase vendors into one platform, one login, one invoice. Marketing teams whose KPI is on-site conversion lift from reviews and shoppable galleries, not paid-media CAC.
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