When Caliyo wins
- You don't want to run infrastructure.
- You want an AI assistant, not a scheduling primitive.
- You're a partner or operator, not a developer.
- You need focus protection out of the box.
- You want pre-meeting briefings, not just bookings.
- You value time saved over code ownership.
When Cal.com wins
- You need to self-host for compliance, sovereignty, or principle.
- You're embedding scheduling inside your own SaaS product (white-label).
- You want full API access and the right to fork.
- Your team has dev resources to deploy and maintain it.
- Predictable per-event pricing matters more than features.
Feature comparison
Where the two diverge.
Pricing
What each one actually costs.
C
Caliyo
One plan, everything included
Solo
$18/seat/mo
Most common
Teams
$24/seat/mo
Enterprise
Customfrom 50 seats
- Includes AI assistant, focus protection, Bridge QR, all integrations
- No per-feature add-ons
- Early access available through waitlist · no credit card
Cal.com
Free if self-hosted, tiered if hosted
Self-host
$0free, you run it
Cloud Free
$01 user
Cloud Teams
$12/user/mo
Enterprise
Customfrom $30k/yr
- Self-hosting is genuinely free — and genuinely your responsibility
- Cloud tiers comparable to Calendly per-seat
- White-label / API access on Enterprise
Three real scenarios
How each one handles your actual week.
A regulated firm needs to keep scheduling data on-premise.
EU-headquartered consultancy with strict GDPR + ISO 27001 internal policies.
C
Caliyo
Caliyo is a hosted service — encrypted at rest and in transit, but not self-hostable. For some firms that's a non-starter.
Cal.com
Cal.com's self-hosted version is exactly built for this. Deploy on your own VPC, all data stays in your control. This is their sweet spot.
A partner wants the calendar to actually defend her week.
Managing partner at a 14-person firm. Wants focus blocks held, conflicts resolved, briefings ready.
C
Caliyo
Caliyo holds Friday morning as Focus, drafts a polite decline for Vendor X, prepares a brief on Maya before the 1:1. Standard Tuesday.
Cal.com
Cal.com schedules meetings. It doesn't have a chat assistant, it doesn't defend blocks, it doesn't brief. That's not the product.
A SaaS company wants to embed scheduling in their own product.
B2B fintech needs white-label "book a demo" inside their dashboard. Branded as their product.
C
Caliyo
Caliyo isn't white-label. We solve the partner-time problem, not the embedded-scheduling problem.
Cal.com
Cal.com is one of the best tools in the world for this. Self-host, brand it as yours, ship in days. Exactly what they built.
Switching
Already using Cal.com? Here’s the honest cost of moving.
01
Keep Cal.com for embeds
If you embed scheduling in a product, keep Cal.com. We're not trying to replace that.
02
Connect your calendar
Caliyo reads from the same Google/MS/Apple calendar Cal.com writes to. No conflict.
03
Trial Caliyo for personal use
Most engineers who run Cal.com still need a personal calendar assistant. That's us.
04
Use both for what each does
Cal.com for product embeds and self-host. Caliyo for partner-time. Different jobs.
FAQ