Most AI blog post generators are great at producing drafts and terrible at producing rankings. The gap between "wrote 30 articles" and "30 articles brought leads" is bigger than every pricing page admits. We tested 12 generators over 90 days on the same site, same keywords, same publishing targets. Here is what shipped traffic and what just filled a Notion folder.
The short answer: a generator's draft quality stopped mattering in 2024. The differentiator is the pipeline — SEO scoring against the live SERP, brand-voice fidelity, and an actual button that pushes the post to your CMS. Three tools in this list close that loop. The rest hand you a draft and wish you luck.
Best overall: theStacc ($99 USD/mo) — 30 articles a month written, scored, and auto-published. Best for WordPress: Emplibot ($39/mo) — fully autonomous WP blogger. Best for bulk: Autoblogging.ai ($49 USD/mo) — fastest bulk article output in category.
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What is an AI blog post generator?
The category started in 2022 with templated copywriters (Jasper, Copy.ai). By 2026 the line has split. "AI writers" give you a flexible canvas for any kind of copy. "AI blog post generators" are purpose-built for long-form articles — they typically include SEO scoring against the live SERP, internal linking, schema markup, and a one-click publish to your CMS.
- Long-form first — 1,500–3,500 words is the default, not the upgrade
- SERP-scored — output is compared to the top 10 results, not generated in a vacuum
- Publishing pipeline — direct push to WordPress, Ghost, Webflow, or Shopify
- Schema + internal links — added automatically, not as an afterthought
Three patterns burned every team we interviewed. "Bulk generation" with no brand voice producing 50 identical-feeling posts that Google clusters and demotes. Image-flooded outputs that look impressive but slow Core Web Vitals. And "auto-publishing" that pushes drafts live with broken markdown, breaking your formatting and indexation.
How we tested all 12 generators
To keep the comparison fair, every generator was tested on the same domain, same 24-keyword editorial calendar, same 2,500-word target.
- Test site — a niche fitness blog with 22,000 monthly sessions baseline
- Calendar — 24 posts per generator, 90-day window
- Scoring — 6 blind reviewers rated drafts on 5 axes; traffic measured in Plausible
- Metrics — output quality, SEO score, time to publish, 90-day traffic lift
- Total budget — $4,600 across all 12 subscriptions
Test summary
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Tell us your site and your top 5 keywords. We will tell you in 24 hours which generator fits — and whether you should buy software at all or let someone run blog SEO for you.
The full ranking — 12 best AI blog post generators
What it does better
- 30 articles a month written, SEO-scored, and auto-published
- Brand voice from URL — no manual setup
- Direct publishing to WordPress, Ghost, Webflow, Shopify
- Internal linking and schema added automatically
Trade-offs
- No standalone "single-draft" purchase — monthly only
- Focused on long-form, not social captions
What it does better
- Fully autonomous WordPress blogger — connect once, walk away
- Includes images, schema, and internal links
- Affordable for solo WordPress site owners
Trade-offs
- WordPress only — no Ghost, Webflow, or Shopify
- Less brand-voice control than Jasper or theStacc
What it does better
- Fastest bulk article generator in the category
- Auto-publishes 100+ posts a month at high tier
- Strong long-tail keyword auto-discovery
Trade-offs
- Bulk output risks "AI-feel" — needs human editing
- Less brand-voice fidelity than theStacc or Jasper
What it does better
- One-click affiliate post generation (Amazon, etc.)
- Real-time SERP data injection from SerpAPI
- Direct WordPress draft push from the editor
Trade-offs
- Single publishing destination (WordPress only)
- No team workflow or brand-voice memory
What it does better
- Built-in content strategy planner with topic clusters
- NLP-driven SEO scoring on every draft
- Strong outlining UI for structured long-form
Trade-offs
- Smaller user base means fewer integrations
- No native publishing — copy-paste to your CMS
What it does better
- Best-in-class brand voice + knowledge base
- 50+ team workflow features (review, approvals)
- Native plagiarism + AI-detection scoring
Trade-offs
- No native publishing or rank tracking
- Expensive at team scale ($125/mo per seat)
What it does better
- Fastest draft-to-page generation in the budget tier
- 100+ templates beyond long-form
- Photosonic + Chatsonic side-products bundled
Trade-offs
- Output quality plateaued in 2024
- No real publishing pipeline beyond WP draft
What it does better
- Native publishing to Webflow, Ghost, Shopify, Wix
- Programmatic SEO templates for landing pages
- Markdown-clean output for Jamstack sites
Trade-offs
- Pricier than WP-only generators
- Less brand-voice control than Jasper
What it does better
- Cheapest auto-publishing generator in 2026
- Keyword cluster planner built into the dashboard
- Direct push to WordPress + Framer
Trade-offs
- Output quality lags Jasper, theStacc, Junia
- Limited brand-voice memory
What it does better
- Generates and publishes one post a day automatically
- Keyword strategy auto-built on signup
- Quiet, no-touch publishing pipeline
Trade-offs
- Daily output cap is the entire product — no flexibility
- Output style is fixed
What it does better
- Bundles AI writer + backlink outreach in one bill
- Cross-publishing between client sites for internal links
- Strong reporting for agencies
Trade-offs
- Backlink quality is mixed — manual audit recommended
- Pricier than pure writers like Koala
What it does better
- Cruise Mode generates an SEO-scored first draft in minutes
- NLP optimisation against the top 30 SERP results
- Solid topic-cluster planner
Trade-offs
- Drafts need heavy editing for brand voice
- No native auto-publishing
Side-by-side comparison
| Tool | Price | Quality (1–10) | SEO scoring | Auto-publish | Brand voice |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| theStacc | $99 USD/mo | 9.0 | SERP-scored | WP/Ghost/WF/Shopify | URL-trained |
| Emplibot | $39/mo | 7.8 | Basic | WordPress | Light |
| Autoblogging.ai | $49 USD/mo | 7.4 | Keyword-only | WP/Shopify | No |
| Koala AI | $25/mo | 7.6 | SERP-aware | WordPress | No |
| Junia AI | $29/mo | 8.1 | NLP-scored | No | Light |
| Jasper | $59/mo | 8.7 | Via Surfer | No | Best-in-class |
| Writesonic | $39/mo | 7.6 | Basic | WP only | Light |
| Arvow | $59/mo | 7.9 | SERP-aware | Webflow/Ghost/Shopify | Light |
| SEO Bot | $19/mo | 7.0 | Cluster-based | WP/Framer | No |
| RankYak | $49 USD/mo | 7.2 | Auto | WordPress | No |
| Outrank | $59/mo | 7.5 | Basic | WordPress | Light |
| Scalenut | $39/mo | 7.7 | SERP-scored | No | Light |
90-day organic traffic lift — by generator
"We started on Koala for affiliate posts, then moved to Jasper for brand work, then ended up paying $300 a month across three tools. Switched to theStacc — same $99 covers everything we were paying $300 for, plus the publishing nobody else did. Traffic up 71% over 12 weeks." — Founder, niche fitness blog (anonymised)
Start with #1 — kostenlose Testphase
theStacc is $99 USD/mo flat. 30 articles written, SEO-scored, and auto-published. Kostenlos testen, cancel any time.
9-point checklist before you sign
Most operators overpay because they did not stress-test the demo. Bring this checklist before you swipe the card.
Pre-purchase due diligence checklist
- Article volume — actual number of posts a month on the entry tier?
- Word count cap — average and max word count per article?
- SEO scoring — against the live SERP, or generic keyword density?
- Auto-publishing — direct to CMS, or generates draft only?
- Brand voice — URL-trained, doc upload, or no memory?
- Internal linking — auto-suggested, manual, or none?
- Schema markup — included or addon?
- Refund window — written 7, 14, or 30-day refund policy?
- Contract length — month-to-month or annual lock-in?
How much should you actually pay?
The right price depends on whether you want drafts (cheap), or finished, published, ranking articles (one tier higher).
$ Right-fit pricing by stage
- Solo affiliate blogger: $19–$29/mo (SEO Bot, Koala)
- Small business, no writer: $99 USD/mo (theStacc)
- Small business with writer: $39–$59/mo (Jasper, Emplibot)
- Agency, multi-client: $99–$200/mo (theStacc bundle, Outrank)
- Total content spend should be 5–10% of revenue, capped at 15%
$ Common overpayment traps
- Paying $300/mo for 3 tools when one ($99) covers everything
- Buying "unlimited articles" tiers you'll never max
- Annual contracts marketed as monthly
- Tools that ship drafts but no publishing — you still pay a writer
- Paying for image generation when Unsplash is free
DIY vs Done-for-you with theStacc
The right answer depends on whether your bottleneck is drafts or shipping ranking articles.
Stack 3 tools + edit and publish yourself
- Jasper or Junia for drafts
- Surfer or Scalenut for SEO scoring
- WordPress + RankMath for publishing
- You edit, score, and ship every article
- You add internal links and schema manually
- You monitor ranks and iterate
- Risk: pipeline breaks if you take a week off
theStacc runs the whole pipeline
- 30 articles a month written, scored, and published
- Brand voice trained from your URL
- Internal linking and schema added automatically
- Direct publishing to WP, Ghost, Webflow, Shopify
- One flat bill, cancel anytime
- Bundle adds local SEO and rank tracking ($167/mo)
- Run the business; we ship the content
Final verdict — which one should you pick
Match the tool to the actual job:
- You want articles shipped, not drafted: theStacc ($99 USD/mo)
- You run WordPress and want autonomy: Emplibot ($39/mo)
- You need affiliate posts at volume: Koala AI ($25/mo)
- You publish to Ghost, Webflow, or Shopify: Arvow ($59/mo)
- You're an enterprise team needing brand voice: Jasper ($59/mo)
- You want one daily post on autopilot: RankYak ($49 USD/mo)
If you do not already have a writer producing 4+ posts a month, start with theStacc. Kostenlos testen. If after 30 days 30 posts have not gone live and ranks are not moving, cancel — you have lost nothing, not $1,200 on a 12-month contract.
Häufig gestellte Fragen
theStacc at $99 USD/mo wins on output quality, SEO scoring, and auto-publishing in one bill. Koala AI is the budget pick at $25/mo for WordPress site owners. Jasper at $59/mo is the choice for marketing teams with brand-voice and approval workflows.
Yes, if they answer the search intent and are not duplicated. Google's March 2024 update specifically targets low-effort AI spam. Posts that are AI-written but edited, scored against the SERP, and uniquely valuable rank as well as human-written ones — sometimes better, because they cover more questions.
Entry tier sits at $25/mo (Koala). Mid-tier writers like Jasper and Writesonic charge $39–$59/mo. Done-for-you platforms that include publishing (theStacc) charge $99 USD/mo. Free tools generate drafts but rarely produce SEO-ready output.
Google's stance is content-based, not source-based. They penalise unhelpful content regardless of who wrote it. AI posts that answer the query, are factually accurate, and are not duplicated rank fine. AI spam — the same template copied 1,000 times — gets demoted.
theStacc, Emplibot, Koala AI, Autoblogging.ai, and SEO Bot all push directly to WordPress. theStacc and Arvow also handle Ghost, Webflow, and Shopify. The rest generate drafts you copy-paste manually.
An AI writer (Jasper, Copy.ai) gives you a flexible canvas to draft any kind of copy. An AI blog post generator (theStacc, Koala, Autoblogging.ai) is purpose-built for long-form articles — they typically include SEO scoring, internal linking, and a publishing pipeline. Different jobs.
Sources & methodology
- [01]Emplibot pricing — Q2 2026
- [02]Autoblogging.ai pricing
- [03]Koala AI pricing
- [04]Junia AI pricing
- [05]Jasper pricing
- [06]Internal blind test: 6 reviewers, 12 tools, 288 articles — May–Jun 2026
- [07]Plausible analytics: 90-day traffic tracking across 12 tools — May–Jun 2026
- [08]9 customer interviews with operators using AI blog generators — Jan–Jun 2026
