If you run a WordPress site, you have probably reached for Zapier at some point to push form submissions into your CRM, email tool, or a spreadsheet. It works. But the bill grows every time your traffic does, and every submission you send is counted, metered, and routed through a third party. For a lot of WordPress owners, that is a strange trade: you are paying a monthly subscription to move your own data off your own site.
This guide covers the best Zapier alternative for WordPress users specifically, why it fits the WordPress stack better than a general automation cloud, and exactly how to set up your first integration without writing any code or paying per task.
Why look for a Zapier alternative on WordPress?
Zapier and Make are excellent general-purpose tools. The friction shows up when your automation lives entirely inside WordPress and all you really want is “when this form is submitted, send the data to that app.” Three things tend to push WordPress owners to look elsewhere:
- Per-task billing. Zapier counts every submission as a task. The free plan caps you at 100 tasks a month, and paid plans start around $240 a year and climb as your volume grows. A busy contact form or store can blow through a tier quickly.
- Your data leaves your site. Every lead, order, and customer detail is routed through a third-party cloud before it reaches its destination. For privacy-conscious sites and anyone thinking about GDPR, that extra hop is worth avoiding.
- It is not built for WordPress. Connecting a specific form plugin or a WooCommerce order through a general automation tool usually means webhooks and workarounds, rather than native support for the plugins you already run.
The best Zapier alternative for WordPress: Advanced Form Integration
Advanced Form Integration (AFI) is a WordPress plugin that connects your forms and site events to more than 200 apps directly from your own site. There is no separate automation cloud in the middle, no task meter, and no monthly bill that scales with your traffic. It works with more than 70 form plugins out of the box, including Contact Form 7, WPForms, Gravity Forms, Elementor Pro Forms, Fluent Forms, and Ninja Forms, and it also triggers on WooCommerce orders, memberships, LMS enrolments, and bookings.
It is trusted by 17,000+ users and holds a 4.8 star rating on WordPress.org. Here is how it compares to the two best-known automation clouds for this specific job.
| Feature | Advanced Form Integration | Zapier | Make |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pricing | From $39.99/year, or $119.99 once for life | Around $240/year and up | Subscription |
| Submission limits | Unlimited, no task meter | Billed per task | Billed per operation |
| Where your data flows | Direct from your site to each app | Through the Zapier cloud | Through the Make cloud |
| WordPress form plugins | 70+ supported natively | Limited, via webhooks | Limited, via webhooks |
| WooCommerce, LMS & booking triggers | Native | Limited | Limited |
| Failed-run recovery | Activity log with one-click resend | Manual rebuild | Manual |
| Best suited for | WordPress sites that want to own their data | Cross-app SaaS automation | Complex multi-step workflows |
How to connect a WordPress form to your CRM without Zapier
Here is the full process, start to finish. We will use Contact Form 7 sending data to Google Sheets and to a CRM as the example, but the same steps apply to any of the supported forms and destinations. No code required.
Step 1: Install Advanced Form Integration
In your WordPress dashboard, go to Plugins, then Add New, search for “Advanced Form Integration,” install it, and activate. The free version connects to all 200+ platforms with core fields, so you can build a working integration before deciding whether you need any paid features.
Step 2: Create a new integration
Open Advanced Form Integration in the admin menu and click Add New Integration. You will pick a trigger (the thing that starts the automation) and an action (where the data goes).
Step 3: Choose your form as the trigger
Select your form plugin and the specific form, for example “Contact Form 7” and your “Contact Us” form. AFI reads the form’s fields automatically, so there is nothing to configure on the form itself.
Step 4: Choose your destination as the action
Pick where the data should go, such as Google Sheets, HubSpot, Mailchimp, or any of the 200+ supported apps. Authorize the account once. For OAuth apps like Google Sheets, this takes about thirty seconds.
Step 5: Map your fields
Match each form field to the destination field, for example the form’s Email field to the Mailchimp Email Address field, or to a column in your sheet. You can combine fields and mix in static text and dynamic tags like the submission date, the user’s IP, or UTM campaign values.
Step 6: Add conditional logic (optional)
If you only want to send certain submissions, add a rule. For example, send orders over a certain value to your CRM and everything else to your newsletter. This keeps junk out of your CRM without any code.
Step 7: Save and test
Save the integration and submit a test entry. The data appears in your destination in real time. Every API call is recorded in the activity log, so if something ever fails you can see exactly what happened, fix the data inline, and resend with one click. No need to ask anyone to re-submit the form.
What it costs
The free version handles unlimited integrations and unlimited submissions across every supported platform with core fields. There is no task meter, so a form that gets 100 submissions a month and a store that gets 100,000 cost the same: nothing.
The Pro license adds all form fields, per-platform custom fields and tags, inbound webhooks, and advanced platform actions. It starts at $39.99 per year for a single site, and a one-time lifetime license is available for $119.99. Put next to a Zapier subscription that starts around $240 a year and rises with volume, the math is straightforward for most WordPress sites.
When Zapier still makes sense
To be fair, AFI is not trying to be everything Zapier is. If your automation spans many cloud apps that have nothing to do with WordPress, or you need long multi-branch workflows across a dozen services, a general automation platform like Zapier or Make is the right tool. AFI’s strength is specific and deliberate: moving your WordPress form and site data into the apps you use, on your own server, without a per-task bill.
Frequently asked questions
Do I need any coding skills?
No. Everything is point and click with visual field mapping. If you can build a WordPress form, you can set up an integration.
Will this slow down my site?
No. Integrations run asynchronously in the background, so forms submit instantly and the data sync happens behind the scenes.
Is my data secure?
Integrations make direct API calls from your site to each platform. Your submission data does not pass through any third-party automation servers, and credentials are stored on your own site.
Does the free version really have no submission limit?
Correct. Submissions and integrations are unlimited on every plan, including the free one. Custom fields, inbound webhooks, and some advanced per-platform actions are the features reserved for Pro.
Get started
If you have been paying a monthly subscription to move your own form data, it is worth trying the alternative. Install Advanced Form Integration free from WordPress.org, connect your first form in a few minutes, and keep your data on your own site.