June 17, 2026 · 4 min read

Compare three options across tabs and pick one in seconds

Three plans, three products, three job offers, three Airbnbs. Open them in separate tabs or windows. Crade reads them all and tells you which one fits your situation best, and why.

Three tabs. One verdict.

Safari
11:14
Vercel Pricing
Netlify Pricing
Render Pricing
Pricing — side-by-side
Vercel Pro
$20/mo
  • ·1 TB bandwidth
  • ·Edge functions
  • ·Analytics
  • ·Stripe webhooks ✓
Overkill
Netlify Pro
$19/mo
  • ·400 GB bandwidth
  • ·Forms 1k/mo
  • ·Webhooks ⚠ 10/site
  • ·Branch deploys
Cap risk
Render Pro
$7/mo
  • ·100 GB bandwidth
  • ·Background workers
  • ·Webhooks unlimited
  • ·Postgres included
BEST FIT
New chat

Which of these plans fits me?

For your case (solo, ~5GB/mo, want Stripe webhooks): • Vercel Pro $20 — overkill, but fastest cold starts • Netlify Pro $19 — webhooks capped at 10/site • Render Pro $7 ⭐ — fits all your needs Pick Render unless 200ms cold-start matters. Saved comparison.md.

Ask anything...
Crade

Comparison decisions are draining because the cost of getting them wrong is real. The natural approach (open three tabs, read each, mentally hold a spreadsheet) sounds simple and fails immediately. By the time you get to tab three you have forgotten tab one. Crade reads multiple tabs or windows visible on your screen and gives you a structured comparison plus a recommendation tied to your situation.

What you put on your screen

  • Three SaaS pricing pages open in tabs (or in tiled windows)
  • Three Airbnb listings, three flights, three rental cars
  • Three job offers in PDF or email
  • Three competitor sites or three product pages
  • Three contracts or three proposals from different vendors

The trick is making sure all three are visible at the same moment. Use Mission Control on macOS, Snap Layouts on Windows, or open them as tiled windows. Crade reads what is on screen. If a tab is hidden behind another, Crade does not see it.

What you say to Crade

Compare these three and tell me which one fits my situation best.

Always mention your situation: "I am a solo freelancer in Estonia", "I am a 5-person team that mostly uses Figma", "I prioritise upfront cost over flexibility". Without context, Crade defaults to generic comparison; with context, the recommendation actually applies.

Step-by-step: how to do this in Crade

  1. Tile the three options

    Three tabs visible side by side, or three windows snapped into a grid. Each option needs to be readable, not just present as an icon.

  2. Click the Crade icon

    Expand Crade. Floats above the tiled windows.

  3. Ask for the comparison with context

    "Compare these three for a solo freelancer who needs offline access". The context steers the recommendation.

  4. Read the comparison

    Crade gives you a structured table or list: each option, its key strengths, its key weaknesses, the recommendation, and why.

  5. Ask for the tradeoff

    "What does picking option B cost me compared to option A?". Crade names the specific tradeoff.

  6. Decide and act

    Sign up, book the flight, accept the offer. The decision is yours; Crade gave you the structure to make it confidently.

What you get back

A structured comparison (table or bullets) covering the key dimensions for your decision: price, features, terms, fit. Plus a recommendation tied to the context you gave, with the reasoning explicit. "Option B because it has the offline mode you need, even though Option A is cheaper."

Tips for better comparisons

  • Give Crade the deciding criterion explicitly. "Cheapest wins", "Best for a team of 10", "Lowest commitment". Otherwise Crade has to guess what you value.
  • Tell Crade which dimensions matter and which to ignore. "Compare on price and features, ignore which one has the prettier website".
  • For close calls, ask for the tiebreaker. "What is the single biggest reason to pick A over B?".
  • If the options are very similar, ask Crade to find the hidden difference. "What is the catch with the cheaper one?".
  • Use Crade as a sanity check, not an oracle. If Crade picks the option you were not leaning toward, dig into why before accepting it.

Free vs Pro vs Premium

  • Free ($0): compares visible options, gives recommendations. Plenty for occasional purchase decisions.
  • Pro ($7.99/mo or $49.99/yr): higher daily usage, Agent mode. Right tier for procurement, ops, anyone making vendor decisions weekly.
  • Premium ($19.99/mo or $149.99/yr): 10x more daily usage. Right tier for consultants, analysts, and buyers comparing options at volume.

Frequently asked questions

Can Crade compare more than three things?

Yes, as many as fit on screen. The limit is screen real estate, not Crade. For more than four or five, scroll between them and ask Crade to keep adding. Crade tracks the running comparison in the chat.

What if one of the options has hidden fees Crade cannot see?

Crade reads what is visible. For pricing pages with fine print or hidden tiers, ask Crade to flag uncertainty: "What might I be missing?". Then verify directly with the vendor.

Does Crade have a bias toward one option?

Crade should follow your criteria. If the recommendation seems off, push back: "Why not the cheaper one?". Crade will explain the tradeoff or revise.

Can Crade compare things across tabs in different browsers?

Yes. Crade reads the screen, not the browser. Three tabs in three different browsers (Safari, Chrome, Firefox) work the same as three tabs in one browser, as long as they are all visible.

Should I trust Crade with high-stakes decisions like job offers?

Use Crade for structure, not for the final call. The recommendation is informed but it does not know your full situation (career goals, family, gut feeling about the team). Decision still yours.

The whole loop in one sentence

Three tabs on screen, one prompt with your context, structured comparison plus recommendation back. Decision in seconds instead of an hour of going back and forth between tabs.