LazyApply vs Huntr - competitor comparison
LazyApply vs Huntr: which job-search tool fits your bottleneck?
Short answer
LazyApply is strongest for bulk application automation through a Chrome-extension workflow. Huntr is strongest for polished application tracking, contacts, notes, and resume workflow. Neither is the same as RoleWorth: RoleWorth sits upstream and asks whether the role deserves tailoring, tracking, autofill, automation, or manual effort at all.
Honest cuts · neither side gets the rosier framing
Choose Huntr if
job seekers who primarily need organization after choosing roles
Choose LazyApply if
applicants who explicitly want raw application volume
Choose neither if
Choose neither if your real bottleneck is deciding whether the job is worth applying to before using any resume, tracker, autofill, or automation workflow.
Product proof
See the product surface behind the claim.
Each page carries the matching RoleWorth surface in a glass-framed proof card: the radar, extension overlay, ATS matrix, review queue, dashboard, or package flow behind the promise.

The public promise, visible above the fold: score first, package second, approve before anything leaves.

The internal cockpit: today's radar, active runs, best opportunities, pipeline health, and audit history.
Decision matrix
Feature for feature — what each tool actually does.
| Decision criterion | LazyApply | Huntr |
|---|---|---|
| Core category | LazyApply: bulk auto-apply | Huntr: job tracker |
| Where it is strongest | bulk application automation through a Chrome-extension workflow | polished application tracking, contacts, notes, and resume workflow |
| Where it is weaker | quality control, per-role judgment, and review-first submission | preventing weak roles from entering the pipeline in the first place |
| Best-fit user | applicants who explicitly want raw application volume | job seekers who primarily need organization after choosing roles |
| RoleWorth decision layer | Use RoleWorth before LazyApply when the job needs worth scoring, ghost-risk checks, proof match, and an Apply / Maybe / Skip decision. | Use RoleWorth before Huntr when the job needs worth scoring, ghost-risk checks, proof match, and an Apply / Maybe / Skip decision. |
Where Huntr is stronger
- Huntr is the better fit when the user specifically wants polished application tracking, contacts, notes, and resume workflow.
- Huntr can be simpler when preventing weak roles from entering the pipeline in the first place is not a concern.
- Huntr belongs in the shortlist for job seekers who primarily need organization after choosing roles.
Where LazyApply is stronger
- LazyApply is the better fit when the user specifically wants bulk application automation through a Chrome-extension workflow.
- LazyApply can be simpler when quality control, per-role judgment, and review-first submission is not a concern.
- RoleWorth should be used before either tool when the costly question is whether a specific posting deserves effort.
Hidden cost
The wrong workflow can make bad targeting look productive.
Use LazyApply for bulk auto-apply. Use Huntr for job tracker. Use RoleWorth first when you need a job-worth decision before choosing either workflow.
| LazyApply's lane | Real-job signals, worth score, proof package, review queue, approved submit on Greenhouse · Lever · Ashby. |
|---|---|
| Huntr's lane | Resume formatting, keyword match, tracker rows, generic autofill, or raw volume — adjacent value, different problem. |
| Honest guardrail | Risk flags are evidence signals, not guarantees. Unsupported submit flows stop at manual review. |
Sources · Last updated May 13, 2026
Decision-first
Score before you tailor. Tailor before you submit. Submit only when it's worth your time.