ManyChat Alternatives for Malaysian Businesses
The right chatbot platform for a Malaysian business depends on three things: which channel your customers use most, how much technical work your team can handle, and whether you want to build and run the bot yourself or have it done for you.
This guide covers six platforms, what each does well, and who each suits. ManyChat is the baseline most people compare against.
What ManyChat does
ManyChat is a no-code flow builder with a strong record in Instagram and Facebook Messenger marketing automation. You drag and drop conversation blocks, set triggers, and the bot runs those flows automatically.
WhatsApp is supported through the WhatsApp Business API, so a Petaling Jaya retailer who already uses Meta channels can add WhatsApp to the same account. The free tier dropped to 25 contacts in early 2026 (source: manychat.com/pricing), which is practically a trial account for any active business. Paid plans scale by contact count and are billed in USD, which adds currency exposure for RM-based businesses.
ManyChat suits marketers who enjoy building automation flows themselves and whose audience is mainly on Instagram or Messenger.
What are the main alternatives?
Botpress
Botpress is an open-source chatbot framework built for developers. You can self-host it, connect it to any channel, and write custom logic in code. That flexibility is real. A developer can build exactly what a business needs, including integrations with internal systems.
The trade-off is that it requires a developer to set it up and maintain it. For a solo clinic owner or a small retail shop without a tech hire, Botpress is the wrong fit. For a startup with a technical co-founder who wants full control, it is worth serious consideration.
Respond.io
Respond.io is less of a chatbot builder and more of a multi-channel team inbox with automation layered on top. The core product is about managing customer conversations across WhatsApp, Instagram, Telegram, email, and other channels from one place, and routing those conversations to the right human agent.
It suits teams that already have customer service agents and need a system to organise the volume across channels. A distributor handling 300 inbound messages a day across five sales reps would get clear value from it. For a solo owner who wants the bot to answer questions without human involvement, it is more tool than needed.
Tidio
Tidio is built around website live chat. The core experience is a chat widget on your site, with a bot that can handle common questions before routing to a live agent. There is WhatsApp integration, but the product was designed for web-first interactions.
For a Malaysian e-commerce store where customers browse the site and ask questions mid-checkout, Tidio fits that pattern well. For a business where most customer contact happens on WhatsApp and the website is mainly a brochure, Tidio is solving the wrong problem.
Chatfuel
Chatfuel has a similar origin to ManyChat: it grew up on Facebook Messenger and has since added Instagram and WhatsApp. The interface is a visual flow builder, and the positioning is DIY automation for marketers.
It is a solid option if you prefer Chatfuel’s interface or pricing over ManyChat’s. Both platforms sit in the same category. For a Kuala Lumpur F&B brand running Messenger and Instagram campaigns, either can work. The choice between them often comes down to which flow editor feels more intuitive to the person building it.
Polaris
Polaris is built specifically for Malaysian SMEs that want a WhatsApp-first AI chatbot without building or maintaining it themselves. The setup involves adding your business information to a RAG knowledge base, connecting your WhatsApp number, and Polaris handles the rest. No flow design, no developer needed.
The bot answers questions from the knowledge base, captures leads, books appointments where applicable, and passes complex cases to a human agent. Everything is billed in RM, which removes the USD exchange rate variable. For a Johor salon owner who is mid-haircut when a customer asks about pricing, the bot answers at any hour while the owner focuses on the service.
To understand how Polaris compares directly to ManyChat on cost and capability, see the ManyChat vs Polaris Malaysia breakdown. For a broader look at chatbot pricing in Malaysia, the WhatsApp chatbot Malaysia pricing guide covers the main options.
Side-by-side comparison
| Platform | DIY or managed | Primary channel | Technical skill needed | Who it suits |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ManyChat | DIY | Instagram, Messenger, WhatsApp | Low | Marketers who build their own flows |
| Botpress | DIY | Any (developer-configured) | High | Teams with a developer |
| Respond.io | Assisted | Multi-channel team inbox | Low to medium | Teams managing agents across channels |
| Tidio | DIY | Website live chat | Low | E-commerce with web-first traffic |
| Chatfuel | DIY | Messenger, Instagram, WhatsApp | Low | Marketers, similar niche to ManyChat |
| Polaris | Managed | WhatsApp (Malaysia-first) | None | Owners who want it run for them |
How to choose
Start with your primary channel. If most of your customers contact you on WhatsApp, pick a platform built for WhatsApp. If they arrive through your website, live chat tools like Tidio are more relevant.
Then consider who will run it. If you have a marketer who enjoys building automation, ManyChat or Chatfuel give them a visual editor. If you have a developer, Botpress gives them full control. If you have neither and you just want the bot to work, a managed option removes that dependency entirely.
Finally, think about whether you need human agent routing. If your volume is high enough that agents need to collaborate on incoming messages, Respond.io is designed for that workflow. If you are a small business where one or two people handle everything, a simpler setup is faster and cheaper.
For a practical primer on how AI chatbots work in the Malaysian market before you commit to a platform, the AI chatbot guide for Malaysian businesses is a useful starting point.