TL;DR
Geotargetly sells nine geo-products — redirects, banners, content swapping, geo-pricing, and more. That breadth is its strength and its weakness: most teams arrive needing exactly one thing (usually redirects), and end up evaluating a suite. Here are the realistic alternatives in 2026, compared honestly.
The comparison
| Tool | Best for | Setup | Price | Main limitation |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Easy Redirects | HubSpot Content Hub | ~5 min, one script tag | Free / from $19 | Only does redirects — by design |
| Geotargetly | Any website | ~30 min, script + dashboard | From $9 (pageview quotas) | Nine products; pay for the suite |
| GeotargetingWP | WordPress only | ~15 min, WP plugin | From ~$9 | Useless outside WordPress |
| Cloudflare Redirect Rules | Sites behind Cloudflare | Hours; needs DNS + IT | Free–$20 | Requires moving DNS to Cloudflare |
| DIY script + geo API | Anything | Days of dev work | API costs + maintenance | You own uptime, accuracy, edge cases |
1. Easy Redirects — for HubSpot Content Hub
Purpose-built for HubSpot-hosted websites: one script tag pasted into Site header HTML covers every page, landing page, and blog post. Country-level rules with EU/Nordics/DACH presets, path matching, UTM preservation, loop protection, and per-client workspaces for agencies. Pricing is per successful redirect, not per pageview — sites with lots of traffic but few redirects aren't penalized. The trade-off is deliberate narrowness: no banners, no geo-pricing, no content swapping.
2. Geotargetly — for multi-product needs
The incumbent, and the right choice if you genuinely need several geo products (say, redirects and location-based banners and currency switching) on a non-HubSpot stack. Pricing scales with pageviews across all products. Setup is more involved, and the dashboard reflects the breadth.
3. GeotargetingWP — for WordPress
A WordPress plugin family with redirects, geo-content shortcodes, and menus. If your site runs WordPress, it's well-integrated and affordable. It has no answer for HubSpot, Webflow, or any other platform.
4. Cloudflare Redirect Rules — for engineering teams
If your DNS already runs through Cloudflare, geo-based redirect rules are included even on free plans and execute at the CDN — the fastest possible approach. The catch: it requires DNS control, rule syntax, and someone comfortable owning infrastructure. Marketing teams on hosted platforms like HubSpot usually can't (or shouldn't) touch this layer, and HubSpot-proxied domains complicate it further.
5. DIY script + geolocation API
Wiring up ipapi, MaxMind, or ipinfo to a hand-rolled redirect script looks cheap until you build session handling, loop protection, query preservation, bot handling, and an interface your marketing team can edit. As a one-off for a single rule it's fine; as a system, you've built a worse version of the tools above.
How to choose in 10 seconds
HubSpot site → Easy Redirects. WordPress → GeotargetingWP. Have engineers + Cloudflare → Redirect Rules. Need banners/pricing/content swapping too → Geotargetly.Geo-redirects on your HubSpot site in 5 minutes
One script tag, no code, no DNS changes. Free plan included.
Start freeFrequently asked questions
Is Geotargetly bad? Why look for an alternative?
Geotargetly is a capable general-purpose suite. People switch mainly for three reasons: they only need redirects (and don't want to pay for nine products), they want a tool built for their specific CMS, or they want simpler pageview-independent pricing.
What's the cheapest way to do geo-redirects?
If you have engineering resources and CDN access, Cloudflare Redirect Rules are effectively free. If you don't — which is the case for most marketing teams on hosted CMS platforms — a focused SaaS tool from $0–19/month is cheaper than developer time.
Which alternative is best for HubSpot users?
Easy Redirects is the only option on this list purpose-built for HubSpot Content Hub: the install path, defaults, and docs all assume HubSpot, and setup takes about five minutes without IT involvement.