# 8 Lusha Alternatives Reddit Actually Recommends > Canonical: https://www.yalc.ai/blog/lusha-alternatives-reddit/ The eight Lusha alternatives that keep coming up in r/sales and r/coldemail threads, with rough pricing, what each is best for, and the sentiment operators actually post. Search "lusha alternatives reddit" and the names that surface most across r/sales and r/coldemail are Apollo, Cognism, RocketReach, Kaspr, ContactOut, Lead411, FullEnrich, and open-source yalc. The pattern in those threads is consistent. People leave Lusha over thin coverage at volume and credits burned on misses, then pick a replacement by geography, price, and whether they want an all-in-one or a data-only layer. On Reddit, most threads converge on Apollo as the default for US all-in-one, Cognism for verified EU and UK mobile coverage, Kaspr for LinkedIn-first European reveals, and a FullEnrich waterfall for anyone tired of paying for empty reveals. The recurring conclusion is that the fix for Lusha is rarely a bigger single database and usually a waterfall that only charges for verified data. Threads like [r/sales looking for alternatives to Lusha](https://www.reddit.com/r/sales/comments/191cwxo/looking_for_alternatives_to_lusha_for_generating/) and the older [r/sales alternatives to Lusha discussion](https://www.reddit.com/r/sales/comments/jbs474/alternatives_to_lusha/) show the same shape every time. Nobody argues Lusha is broken. They argue the browser-reveal model stops paying off once a sequencer needs thousands of verified contacts a week. The eight below are the names that survive that filter. ## Why Reddit tells people to leave Lusha Read enough r/sales threads and three complaints repeat. Coverage on a real ICP falls short of what sequences need, especially outside the US. Credits get spent on reveals that return nothing, so the effective cost per usable contact runs higher than the sticker price. And the Chrome-extension motion does not fit a team that wants an API call fired every morning against a fresh signal list. The head-to-head threads read the same way. In [r/marketing comparing ZoomInfo, Lusha, Hunter, and Apollo](https://www.reddit.com/r/marketing/comments/19a6afj/zoominfo_lusha_hunter_apollo_are_any_of_these/), operators land on picking by ICP and geography rather than crowning one database, and [r/sales asking for actually accurate email finders](https://www.reddit.com/r/sales/comments/udxevk/any_actually_accurate_email_finders/) turns into a case for stacking sources rather than trusting a single reveal. The same threads size up the incumbent too, and [the ZoomInfo alternatives Reddit recommends](/blog/zoominfo-alternatives-reddit/) applies the identical filter to the ten names that replace ZoomInfo. None of that means Lusha has no place. For a single rep doing a handful of manual lookups on LinkedIn profiles, the two-click reveal is still smooth. The case for moving is about operating model, not a broken product. Once you run volume, the math shifts, which is exactly why the same eight names keep surfacing. ## The 8 Lusha alternatives Reddit recommends Each of these shows up repeatedly across r/sales and r/coldemail. Prices below are entry-level public figures and move often, so check the live page before you budget. | Tool | Best for | Starting price | Reddit sentiment | |------|----------|----------------|------------------| | Apollo | All-in-one data plus sending | $59/seat/mo | Most recommended default, coverage strongest in US | | Cognism | EU and UK phone-heavy outbound | Custom, sales-led | Trusted for direct dials and GDPR, gated pricing frustrates | | RocketReach | Low-volume self-serve reveals | ~$39/mo | Reliable and cheap, hit rate ceiling is lower | | Kaspr | LinkedIn-first European reveals | ~$49/mo | Liked for EU mobiles and a usable free tier | | ContactOut | Email finding off LinkedIn | ~$79/mo | Praised for personal emails, weaker on phones | | Lead411 | US intent plus verified contacts | ~$99/mo | Underrated pick, strong US triggers | | FullEnrich | Waterfall email and mobile step | ~$55/mo for 1,000 credits | Loved for pay-only-for-verified waterfall | | yalc | Orchestrating the whole stack | Free, open source | The build-your-own answer power users land on | ### Apollo On Reddit, Apollo is the most upvoted Lusha replacement for US teams, praised as the cheapest credible all-in-one and knocked for thin EU data and basic deliverability tooling. Apollo is the name Reddit reaches for first, because it bundles a large contact database with sequencing and a dialer in one login. Multiple 2026 breakdowns put Basic around $59 per seat per month, Professional near $99, with a roughly 20 percent annual discount, per [Saleshandy's Lusha vs Apollo comparison](https://www.saleshandy.com/blog/lusha-vs-apollo/). What Reddit says: strongest US coverage of the cheap options and the obvious all-in-one, though threads warn its cold-email deliverability tooling is basic and EU data thins out. Best for teams that want data and sending under one bill. ### Cognism On Reddit, Cognism is the go-to r/sales recommendation for European phone outbound, trusted for verified direct dials and GDPR posture while operators grumble about the sales-led, gated pricing. Cognism is the pick r/sales points to for anyone selling into Europe who lives on the phone. Pricing is sales-led rather than public, which several threads grumble about, but the trade is verified EU and UK mobile coverage plus GDPR notification built into the product, per [Cognism's own Lusha alternative roundup](https://www.cognism.com/blog/lusha-alternative). What Reddit says: the phone numbers connect and the compliance story holds up, but you talk to a rep and pay enterprise money. Best for phone-heavy outbound into the UK and EU. ### RocketReach On Reddit, RocketReach gets recommended as the low-drama, no-sales-call option, with operators noting a hit-rate ceiling below a real waterfall so nobody treats it as a scale tool. RocketReach is the low-drama replacement Reddit recommends when someone wants predictable self-serve billing and no sales call. Essentials runs around $39 a month on monthly billing, less on annual, and the entry tier leans email with phones on higher plans. What Reddit says: reliable for what it is, easy to sign up, and the hit-rate ceiling sits below a proper waterfall so nobody treats it as a scale tool. Best for solo operators doing modest volume. ### Kaspr On Reddit, Kaspr earns steady goodwill in European threads for its usable free credits and tight LinkedIn workflow, which lets reps test mobile coverage before paying. Kaspr comes up often in European r/sales and r/coldemail threads as a LinkedIn-first reveal tool with a genuinely usable free tier. Paid plans start around $49 per user per month. What Reddit says: good European mobile coverage, tight LinkedIn workflow, and the free credits let people test before paying, which builds goodwill in the threads. Best for reps prospecting European accounts straight off LinkedIn. ### ContactOut On Reddit, ContactOut gets named for pulling personal emails off LinkedIn at scale, with operators flagging that it runs thin on direct dials so they pair it with a phone tool. ContactOut earns its Reddit mentions for finding personal emails off LinkedIn profiles at scale, with a large claimed profile base. Plans commonly start around $79 per month depending on the tier and reveal caps. What Reddit says: strong on personal and work emails, thinner on direct dials, so people pair it with a phone-focused tool rather than treating it as one-stop. Best for email-led motions built on LinkedIn sourcing. ### Lead411 On Reddit, Lead411 reads as the underrated pick, with US operators calling its buying-intent triggers a real edge over a plain contact database. Lead411 is the quieter pick that keeps surfacing when US teams want verified contacts plus buying intent in one tool. Pricing typically starts near $99 per month. What Reddit says: underrated, solid US accuracy, and the intent triggers get called a real edge over a plain database. Best for US outbound that wants a hiring or growth signal attached to the contact. ### FullEnrich On Reddit, FullEnrich is the fix operators name for Lusha's dead-reveal problem, since its pay-only-for-verified waterfall stops charging for empty lookups. [FullEnrich](/tools/fullenrich/) is the enrichment step Reddit points to when the complaint is credits wasted on misses. It runs a true waterfall across many vendors and charges only for verified results, with the Pro plan around 55 euros a month for 1,000 credits. What Reddit says: the pay-for-output model is the fix for Lusha's dead-reveal problem, and stacking it after a sourcing tool lifts email hit rate above any single source. The mechanics are worked through in [the waterfall enrichment breakdown](/blog/waterfall-enrichment/). Best for the verified email and mobile step, not sourcing. ### yalc On Reddit, [yalc](/blog/lead-enrichment/) is the answer the build-your-own crowd posts when someone shares their own stack, framed as wiring commodity APIs together instead of renting a vendor UI. It is open source and markdown configured, it runs on your machine, and it calls the same data providers, [Crustdata](/tools/crustdata/) for sourcing and FullEnrich for the waterfall, through their real APIs. What Reddit says, in the threads where someone posts their own stack, is that the tools are commodities and the orchestration is the work, so the win is wiring three best-in-category APIs together instead of paying one vendor for a UI. It runs that middle mile, the sourcing run, the waterfall, the reply classification, and logs each step into markdown the next run can read. The first mile and the last mile stay human. Best for operators who think in scripts and want to own the pipeline. ## How to pick a Lusha alternative Reddit threads end without a clean answer, so here is the decision rule the good comments circle around. If you want one login for data and sending and you sell mostly into the US, start with Apollo. It is the path of least resistance and the coverage matches the price. If you sell into the UK or EU and you cold call, pay for Cognism. The verified mobile coverage and GDPR posture are why phone teams keep recommending it despite the sales-led pricing. If you are a solo operator doing low volume, RocketReach or Kaspr covers it cheaply, with Kaspr the better call for European LinkedIn prospecting and its free tier. If your problem is wasted credits on empty reveals, the fix is not a bigger database. It is a waterfall like FullEnrich that pays only for verified data, sitting after a sourcing tool. And if you want to stop paying for vendor UIs entirely and run the motion yourself, yalc calls those same APIs and orchestrates the run. The comparison of single-source coverage against a waterfall is detailed in [the lead enrichment playbook](/blog/lead-enrichment/) and the wider field is mapped in [the best lead enrichment tools breakdown](/blog/best-lead-enrichment-tools-2026/). ## Frequently asked questions ### What is the best Lusha alternative according to Reddit? There is no single winner in the threads. Apollo is the most recommended default for US all-in-one, Cognism is the r/sales pick for EU phone-heavy outbound, and the build-your-own crowd points to a Crustdata plus FullEnrich waterfall they orchestrate themselves. The right answer depends on geography, volume, and whether you want a UI or an API. ### Is there a free Lusha alternative? Kaspr and Apollo both offer free tiers with a monthly credit allotment, and Reddit users treat the Kaspr free credits as a genuine way to test European mobile coverage before paying. An open-source orchestration runtime is also free to run yourself, though it is a layer you operate rather than a hosted database, so you still pay the data providers it calls. ### Why do people leave Lusha on Reddit? The repeated reasons are thin coverage on a real ICP at volume, credits spent on reveals that return nothing, and a browser-extension workflow that does not fit teams wanting an API call every morning. Nobody calls the product broken. They call the operating model a poor fit once you run real outbound. ### Is Apollo better than Lusha for cold email? For US teams that want data and sequencing in one place, Reddit generally favors Apollo because Lusha has no sending layer. The caveat that comes up is that Apollo's deliverability tooling is basic, so heavy cold-email senders still pair it with a dedicated sending and warmup setup. Compare the full field in [the Apollo alternatives breakdown](/blog/apollo-alternatives/). ### Which Lusha alternative is best for Europe? For European outbound, Reddit points to Cognism for verified direct dials and GDPR coverage, and to Kaspr for LinkedIn-first mobile reveals at a lower price. Teams selling across both the US and EU often run a waterfall so they are not betting the campaign on any single vendor's regional coverage.