Linora vs Simplify: autofill, or tailored applications
Simplify autofills your profile into forms. Linora tailors the resume first, then fills it. Here is the real difference.
If you are weighing Linora against Simplify, the question underneath is simple: do you want a fast way to autofill the same profile into every application, or do you want each application to carry a resume written for that job. Both tools cut the busywork. They cut different parts of it. Here is an honest comparison.
What Simplify is good at
Simplify is one of the best-known autofill tools, and the autofill is genuinely strong. From a single stored profile, its Copilot Chrome extension fills repetitive application fields across a huge range of sites, which removes a real chunk of the tedium. It also surfaces job matches from a large aggregated database, includes a tracker, and offers a resume builder. The free tier is generous: unlimited autofill and tracking at no cost. If your main pain is retyping the same details into form after form, Simplify handles that well.
Its paid plan, Simplify+, is reported around $39.99 per month as of June 2026 and adds AI resumes, cover letters, and tailoring.
Where Linora is different
Linora’s focus is the content of the application, not just the speed of filling it. It reads each job, scores it against your profile, and tailors a resume and cover letter to that posting. The extension then fills the application with that tailored version. You review and submit with one click.
The differences that matter:
- Tailoring depth. Simplify’s autofill pastes your saved profile and resume. Reviewers note its AI tailoring tends to be generic and needs editing. Linora regenerates the resume per job, mirroring the posting’s language, rather than reusing one base document.
- Sourcing. Simplify aggregates matches from job boards and databases. Linora pulls roles directly from company career pages and ranks them against your profile.
- What lands in the form. Both fill forms. Linora fills the tailored resume, so the document a recruiter sees is the one written for that role.
On price, Linora is free to use, with an optional Pro plan at $12 per month at the time of writing. Tailoring runs on Linora’s own system, and per the privacy policy, your resume and job-description text are not sent to a third-party language model for the per-job tailoring step.
Side by side
| Capability | Simplify | Linora |
|---|---|---|
| Autofill | Strong, flagship feature | Yes, fills the tailored version |
| Resume per application | The same saved resume | Tailored automatically to each posting |
| Tailoring | Paid, and reviews call it generic | Per job, mirrors the posting |
| Job sourcing | Aggregated from boards and databases | Pulled from company career pages, ranked |
| Free tier | Unlimited autofill and tracking | Autofill and tailoring for up to 50 jobs |
| Match score | Generic match | Deterministic and explainable |
| Paid price | Around $39.99 / month (Simplify+) | $12 / month (Pro); free tier available |
The prices above are each tool’s published rates as of June 2026 and may change over time, so confirm the latest before you commit.
Neither tool submits for you automatically today. Simplify has you click Submit, and Linora’s Auto Apply is in development, so you submit each application yourself for now.
Which to pick
Pick Simplify if your priority is the fastest possible autofill across the widest range of sites, you are comfortable sending the same resume everywhere, and a generous free tier matters most.
Pick Linora if you believe the resume in the form is what gets you the interview, and you want each application to carry a version tailored to that job without doing it by hand.
For the case behind tailoring over volume, see why applications get auto-rejected and one resume versus a tailored resume per job. When you want to try the tailored approach, build your profile and run it on your next application.
The fastest way to judge any of these is to try it on real roles.