Retrospective Tools

GoRetro vs RetroFlow

A side-by-side look at scores, pricing, features and integrations to help you pick the right retrospective tool.

GoRetro logo

GoRetro

5.8

Make every sprint impactful, efficient, and fun

GoRetro is a sprint-centric retro and estimation suite combining retrospectives, planning poker, capacity planning and a Jira-fed sprint monitor, with a generous free tier and per-team paid plans.

Full review →
RetroFlow logo

RetroFlow

3.7

Your team's favourite way to retro

RetroFlow is a free, no-signup retrospective board built by solo developer Prashant Meena, with colourful boards, real-time collaboration, 7 ready-made templates, anonymous feedback, dot voting and action items. Participants join a shared link in one click with no account; the whole product is free with no paid tiers or locked features.

Full review →

Summary

GoRetro scores 5.8 overall and is best for scrum teams that live in Jira and want a polished retro plus planning-poker bundle priced per team. It offers paid plans from $29/team/mo.

RetroFlow scores 3.7 overall and is best for small or ad-hoc teams who want a genuinely free, zero-friction retro board they can share with one link — no signup, no payment and no setup, accepting that there are no integrations, AI or enterprise controls. It offers a free tier.

GoRetro leads on ease of use, retro toolkit, fun factor, AI & insights, integrations and enterprise-grade. RetroFlow leads on value.

Across our seven scoring dimensions, GoRetro edges ahead with an overall score of 5.8. That said, the right pick depends on your team — see the dimension-by-dimension breakdown below.

Scores compared

GoRetro
Ease of Use8.5
Retro Toolkit6.5
Value6.0
Fun Factor6.5
AI & Insights3.0
Integrations4.0
Enterprise-grade6.0
RetroFlow
Ease of Use8.0
Retro Toolkit3.5
Value9.0
Fun Factor4.5
AI & Insights0.0
Integrations0.0
Enterprise-grade1.0
DetailGoRetroRetroFlow
CategoryRetrospectivesRetrospectives
Team sizeAnySmall
Free tierNoYes
Free limit30-day free trial of all paid features, no credit card requiredEverything is free — all 7 templates, real-time collaboration, anonymous feedback, dot voting and action items, with no account required to join a board
Starting price$29/team/moFree
Est. 3 teams × 8 people$87/mo (Premium, 3 teams, billed annually)Free (no paid tier)
EnterpriseYesNo
Founded2020
HQIsrael
Data residency
LanguagesEnglish onlyEnglish only
Features357
Integrations20

Feature & integration comparison

Side-by-side checklist across features, integrations and security. Hover a note for details.

CapabilityGoRetroRetroFlow
Features
AI Summariesnote
AI grouping/clustering
AI action items
Action tracking
Team Insightsnote
Polling
Action dashboard
Custom templatesnote
Anonymous inputnote
Independent voting
Async modenote
Agile Estimationsnote
Health Checksnote
Team Kudos
Whiteboard
Integrations
Asana
Azure DevOps
Basecamp
ClickUp
Confluence
GitHub
GitLab
Jira
Linear
Microsoft Teams
Monday.com
Notion
Shortcut
Slacknote
Trello
Security & Privacy
SOC 2
GDPR
SSO / SAMLnote
SCIM provisioning
ISO 27001
On-premises
Public API
Webhooks

GoRetro — pros

  • + Generous free tier with unlimited public boards and team members
  • + Polished, real-time facilitation UX with strong template library
  • + Bundles planning poker, capacity calculator and sprint monitor with retros
  • + Tight Jira Cloud integration for sprint-data-driven discussions
  • + SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001 and SAML SSO available on Organization tier

GoRetro — cons

  • Slack integration sits behind paid tiers; SAML SSO requires Organization tier
  • Integration breadth is narrow: no native MS Teams, Azure DevOps, GitHub, Linear, Confluence or Trello
  • AI story is thin: 'Joker cards' and meeting recap export rather than real AI clustering, summaries or sentiment
  • Async is just a multi-day feedback deadline, not a structured async flow; no whiteboard, no scheduling/recurring retros
  • Per-team pricing scales unevenly across many squads, and cross-team rollups are thin

RetroFlow — pros

  • + Genuinely free with no paid tiers, no paywalled features and no account required to join a board
  • + Anonymous feedback — participants contribute with no signup, email or PII collected
  • + Three-step setup — pick a template, share the link, run the retro; participants join with one click
  • + Seven ready-made retrospective formats covering the common reflection patterns
  • + Real-time collaboration with live notes, dot voting and shared action items
  • + Light personalisation — custom column names, 2-6 columns, 7 colour palettes and 48 emojis

RetroFlow — cons

  • No integrations at all — nothing pushes to Jira, Linear, Slack, Teams or any agile-stack tool
  • No AI features (clustering, summary, action extraction or sentiment)
  • No health checks, recurring retros, mood tracking or cross-team reporting
  • No enterprise security or compliance — no SOC 2, SSO, SCIM or audit logs; the privacy policy confirms only HTTPS and Vercel hosting with Google Analytics/PostHog analytics
  • Built and run by a solo developer (Prashant Meena) with no support team or SLA — fine for ad-hoc use, but unsuitable for enterprise procurement
  • Boards are private only by unguessable URL — there are no accounts, so no real access control, invite management or board history
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