Why people leave WhatsApp Business
- Broadcast list is capped at 256 contacts. Small businesses that grow past that number need to split lists, schedule sends, or move to the paid API tier just to send a single product update.
- Automation is thin. Quick replies and away messages cover the basics, but there is no flow builder, no FAQ tree, no order tracking step without paying for a third-party platform that connects to the WhatsApp Cloud API.
- Catalogs and payments are uneven. Catalog limits and the rollout of in-chat payments still vary by country, so a feature that works for a shop in one market can be missing in another.
- Multi-agent inboxes are not built in. A two-person team that wants to share the same customer queue ends up either passing the phone around or paying a partner platform to bolt a shared inbox on top.
- Meta Verified upsell. Trust badges, premium support, and account protection sit behind a recurring subscription that adds to the cost of running a small storefront.
If any of those nudge you to compare, here are 7 WhatsApp Business alternatives worth testing.
Which app should you choose?
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Telegram if you want unlimited broadcasts, channels, and free bots for FAQs and order flows.
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Signal if client conversations need to stay private and you do not need marketing features.
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Microsoft Teams if you already run Microsoft 365 and want shared inboxes plus customer chat in one place.
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Viber if your customers are in Eastern Europe or Southeast Asia and you want Communities for broadcasts.
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LINE if your customers are in Japan, Taiwan, or Thailand and you want a LINE Official Account for support.
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Slack if your operation is mostly internal coordination with a few external channels for partners and big clients.
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Discord if your business has a community angle, like a creator shop, course, or club.
Stay on the WhatsApp Business app if your customers already chat with you on WhatsApp and your volume fits inside the broadcast cap. Switching messengers means asking customers to come with you, which is the friction every alternative on this list has to clear.
Comparison table
| App | Best for | Free plan | Broadcast | End-to-end encryption | Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Telegram | Broadcast and bots | Yes, unlimited | Channels, no cap | Secret chats only | 4.0 |
| Signal | Private consultations | Yes, no paid tier | Groups up to 1,000 | Yes, on every chat | 4.5 |
| Microsoft Teams | Microsoft 365 teams | Yes, free tier | Shared channels | In-transit, not E2EE | 4.5 |
| Viber | Eastern Europe + SEA | Yes, ad-supported | Communities, no cap | Yes, on 1:1 chats | 4.4 |
| LINE | Japan, Taiwan, Thailand | Yes, ad-supported | Official Account | Yes, Letter Sealing | 4.4 |
| Slack | Internal teams | Yes, 90-day history | Slack Connect | In-transit | 4.5 |
| Discord | Community businesses | Yes, full features | Server announcements | In-transit | 4.3 |
1. Telegram — broadcast without a cap and bots that do the work
Telegram is the closest free swap for the parts of WhatsApp Business that small storefronts use most. Channels broadcast to an unlimited number of subscribers, bots handle FAQ replies, order taking, and payments without a paid platform behind them, and groups stretch to 200,000 members for community building. The cloud-first design also means messages, photos, and files sync across phone, tablet, and desktop without scanning a QR code each time.
Telegram vs WhatsApp Business is mostly a tradeoff on reach. WhatsApp has the bigger consumer footprint in most countries; Telegram has the better tooling for the next 1,000 customers once a broadcast list outgrows the cap.
Advantages:
- Unlimited subscribers on a broadcast channel
- Free bots for FAQs, orders, and payments
- Cloud sync across phone, tablet, and desktop
- Groups up to 200,000 for community support
Disadvantages:
- End-to-end encryption only on Secret Chats
- Smaller user base in some Western markets
- Customers may not already have it installed
Pricing: Free. Telegram Premium is an optional consumer upgrade and not required for business use.
Bottom line: Pick Telegram if your storefront has outgrown a 256-contact broadcast list or you want a free bot to handle order updates.
2. Signal — private chats for client work that has to stay confidential
Signal is the simplest pick for solo operators whose conversations carry sensitive information, like therapists, lawyers, accountants, and tutors. Every chat is end-to-end encrypted by default, group calls cover up to 50 participants, and the nonprofit model means there is no advertising layer pulling on the metadata. Signal is light on business affordances on purpose, which keeps the experience focused on the message itself.
Signal vs WhatsApp Business is a deliberate trade. WhatsApp Business has catalogs, broadcast tools, and labels; Signal has none of that. What Signal offers is a chat experience that stays private without configuration.
Advantages:
- End-to-end encryption on every conversation
- Disappearing messages with per-chat timers
- No ads, no profiling, nonprofit funded
- Group video calls up to 50 people
Disadvantages:
- No catalog, no labels, no business profile
- Smaller share of consumer traffic in most countries
- Requires customers to install Signal first
Pricing: Free. Donations fund development.
Bottom line: Pick Signal when client confidentiality is the product and you do not need broadcast or catalog tools.
3. Microsoft Teams — shared inbox and customer chat for Microsoft 365 shops
Microsoft Teams folds team chat, video meetings, and customer messaging into a single app, with a free tier that fits a small business. External access lets a customer email open a chat thread without an Office 365 account, shared channels keep multiple staff in the same conversation with a client, and the integration with Word, Excel, and Outlook makes file handover trivial. Teams becomes the inbox where invoices, support questions, and internal coordination live in the same place.
Teams vs WhatsApp Business is a different model. Teams is built around shared channels and accounts; WhatsApp Business is built around a single phone number. For an operator with two or three staff who already use Microsoft 365, Teams covers the missing shared inbox.
Advantages:
- Free tier with chat, video, and file sharing
- Shared channels for multi-agent customer conversations
- Tight integration with Microsoft 365 documents
- Available on phone, tablet, desktop, and web
Disadvantages:
- Customers need a Teams account or guest link
- Heavier interface than a consumer messenger
- End-to-end encryption only on selected one-to-one calls
Pricing: Free tier with chat, calls, and 5 GB cloud storage. Paid tiers start at a modest per-user monthly fee.
Bottom line: Pick Teams if your shop already uses Microsoft 365 and you want a real shared inbox without a third-party platform.
4. Viber — broadcast Communities and Business Messages where Viber leads
Viber is the everyday messenger across much of Eastern Europe, the Balkans, parts of Southeast Asia, and Greek-speaking markets. Viber Communities scale broadcast lists past WhatsApp Business limits, Viber Business Messages add verified branding for outbound transactional notifications, and one-to-one chats are end-to-end encrypted. For a shop whose customers are already on Viber, the install friction is gone.
Viber vs WhatsApp Business comes down to where your customers chat. The two apps cover similar ground; the deciding factor is which network already reaches your audience.
Advantages:
- Communities with no broadcast cap
- End-to-end encrypted one-to-one chats
- Strong footprint in CEE, Greece, and parts of SEA
- Verified business profile with brand colour and logo
Disadvantages:
- Smaller reach in the UK, US, and Western Europe
- Sticker market and mini-apps add visual noise
- Business Messages is a paid sender programme
Pricing: Free for personal and Communities. Business Messages priced per outbound message through a partner.
Bottom line: Pick Viber if your customers already use it and you want broadcast Communities without a 256-contact cap.
5. LINE — the default support channel in Japan, Taiwan, and Thailand
LINE is the dominant messenger across Japan, Taiwan, and Thailand and a serious player in Indonesia. LINE Official Account gives a small business a verified profile, broadcast messages, automated replies, and a coupon system, all from inside the same app the customer uses to chat with friends. LINE Pay handles in-chat payments where it is available, and LINE Stickers offer a visual brand cue that resonates locally.
LINE vs WhatsApp Business is a regional choice. In LINE’s strong markets, customer expectations are set by LINE; in markets where WhatsApp dominates, LINE adds friction. Pick by where the customers are.
Advantages:
- Verified Official Account with broadcast and auto-reply
- Native sticker library for brand expression
- LINE Pay integration in supported regions
- Trusted default in Japan, Taiwan, and Thailand
Disadvantages:
- Limited adoption outside East and Southeast Asia
- Free message tier is capped, paid plans scale by volume
- Setup steps differ by country
Pricing: Free Official Account with a monthly cap on outbound messages. Paid tiers scale by sender volume.
Bottom line: Pick LINE if your customer base is concentrated in markets where LINE is the local default.
6. Slack — internal coordination with Slack Connect for partner channels
Slack is built for the team chat side of running a small business, and Slack Connect extends that into shared channels with outside partners, suppliers, or larger clients. Conversations stay organised by channel rather than per phone number, search across history is fast, and integrations let booking systems, payment notifications, and shipping updates land in the same room your team already watches.
Slack vs WhatsApp Business splits the workload. WhatsApp Business is the customer-facing front desk; Slack is the back office where the team triages it. Many small operations use both.
Advantages:
- Channels for organised team and partner conversations
- Slack Connect for external accounts on shared channels
- Strong integration ecosystem for orders, billing, and CRM
- Search across history is fast and reliable
Disadvantages:
- Free plan limits visible message history to 90 days
- Customers expect chat, not a Slack invite
- Notifications need careful tuning to avoid noise
Pricing: Free with 90-day history. Paid tiers start at a modest per-user monthly fee.
Bottom line: Pick Slack for the internal side and let WhatsApp or another consumer messenger sit at the front for customers.
7. Discord — community-led businesses where the audience already hangs out
Discord works for businesses whose value is built around a community: creators with paid memberships, online courses, gaming guilds, hobby shops, indie game studios. Servers organise topics into channels, voice and video rooms run alongside text, and roles let paying members access content non-members do not see. The consumer-grade polish keeps engagement high without the heavy interface of a workspace tool.
Discord vs WhatsApp Business is two different jobs. WhatsApp Business is one-to-one customer support; Discord is many-to-many community. Pick Discord when the audience is the product.
Advantages:
- Servers with channels, roles, and permissions
- Voice and video rooms always available
- Bots for moderation, drops, and announcements
- Strong fit for creators, courses, and clubs
Disadvantages:
- Wrong tool for transactional support
- Newcomers need an account and onboarding step
- Moderation requires real attention as the server grows
Pricing: Free with full server features. Discord Nitro is an optional consumer upgrade.
Bottom line: Pick Discord when the business is a community first and customer support is a subset of that.
How to choose
Pick Telegram when broadcast reach matters more than encryption defaults and you want free bots for the FAQ work.
Pick Signal for confidential client work where the chat itself is the product.
Pick Microsoft Teams when the operation already runs on Microsoft 365 and you need a real shared inbox.
Pick Viber if your customer base is already using Viber, especially across Eastern Europe and Greek-speaking markets.
Pick LINE for markets where LINE is the local default, like Japan, Taiwan, and Thailand.
Pick Slack for the internal coordination side and let it handle partner channels through Slack Connect.
Pick Discord when the business is community-driven and the audience is part of the product.
Stay on the WhatsApp Business app when your customers already reach you on WhatsApp and your volume fits inside the broadcast cap. The single biggest reason to keep it is the install base; the day that stops being true, one of the apps above will fit better.
FAQ
What is the best free WhatsApp Business alternative?
For broadcast and automation, Telegram. For privacy, Signal. For team-first operations, the free tier of Microsoft Teams or Slack. The right pick depends on whether you are sending more outbound messages, taking confidential conversations, or coordinating internal staff.
Can my customers reach me without installing a new app?
WhatsApp Business assumes the customer already has WhatsApp installed. The same is true for every alternative on this list. The deciding factor is which messenger your customers already use, which usually maps to the country they live in.
Is WhatsApp Business better than Telegram for small business?
WhatsApp Business has wider consumer reach in most markets. Telegram has better tooling once a broadcast list passes the WhatsApp cap of 256 contacts and gives free access to bots for FAQs and order flows. Many small shops use both.
Do these apps offer end-to-end encryption?
Signal uses end-to-end encryption on every conversation. Viber uses it on one-to-one chats. WhatsApp Business uses it on personal-style chats and rolls it through to many of the business chats too. Telegram offers it only on Secret Chats. Slack, Microsoft Teams, and Discord protect data in transit but are not end-to-end encrypted by default.
How do I move customers from WhatsApp Business to another messenger?
Send a single broadcast on WhatsApp announcing the new channel and the reason for the move. Pin a link to the new channel in your WhatsApp profile and bio so customers find it after the announcement. Keep WhatsApp Business installed for at least a few weeks during the transition so late-arriving messages still land.
Which app is best for a one-person business?
Telegram for outbound and bots, Signal for confidential client chats, or LINE and Viber where they are the regional default. A solo operator usually does not need the shared-inbox features that make Slack or Microsoft Teams worth the setup.