What happened to Fewfeed?
Fewfeed (and its V2) built a following as a mostly-free toolkit for Facebook group marketers: bulk posting, scheduling, group scraping, auto-join. By 2026 the original tool is offline, and marketers who depended on it are looking for a replacement — you can find the threads asking for "a tool exactly like Fewfeed" on Reddit.
A caution before anything else: since the shutdown, domains reusing the Fewfeed name have appeared. We can't verify who operates them, and they are not the original product as users knew it. The classic pattern after a popular free tool dies is a lookalike that harvests Facebook logins or pushes an unverified extension. If a "Fewfeed" asks you to log in to Facebook through its site or to install something outside the Chrome Web Store, walk away.
The replacement map, feature by feature
| What Fewfeed did | Replaceable? | Where it lives now |
|---|---|---|
| Bulk post to joined groups | ✓ Yes | MultiGroupPoster — 100+ groups in one click, from your own session |
| Scheduling | ✓ Yes | Once / Daily / Weekly / Monthly scheduler with safe pacing |
| Content variation | ✓ Better | Spintax engine with live preview — unique version per group |
| Group list management | ✓ Yes | Auto-import all memberships, tag into reusable lists |
| Per-group results | ✓ Yes | Success / pending-approval / failed tracking per group |
| Auto-join groups | ✗ No honest tool | Join automation is a top flag trigger — here's why, and what to do instead |
| Friend/profile automation | ✗ Out of scope | Outside what a group-posting tool should touch in 2026 |
How to evaluate any Fewfeed replacement — a 6-point checklist
Whatever tool you land on (ours or not), these are the six questions that separate a safe replacement from the thing that gets your account restricted:
- Does it run inside your browser session? Anything that posts from a server — or asks you to log in to Facebook on the tool's own website — puts your credentials and your account history in someone else's hands. A Chrome extension acting in your logged-in session is the only architecture that's both working (post-April-2024) and credential-safe.
- Is it on the Chrome Web Store with real reviews? Sideloaded extensions ("download the .zip, enable developer mode") skip Google's review process entirely. After a tool dies, its name often comes back as exactly this kind of sideload — that's the Fewfeed-lookalike trap.
- Does it randomize pacing? Fixed delays (every 30 seconds exactly) are a bot signature. Look for randomized 30–60s delays and a daily cap you can set.
- Can it vary content per group? Identical text across 20+ groups trips Facebook's duplicate-content heuristic regardless of speed. Spintax (or AI variants you paste in) is non-negotiable for daily posting.
- Does it show per-group results? Without success/pending/failed tracking you can't tell a moderation queue from a real failure — and you'll re-post into groups that already have your post waiting for approval.
- Is the pricing and refund policy public? A visible price page and a stated refund window are basic accountability. Be suspicious of "contact us for access" tools in this niche.
Fewfeed-replacement options at a glance
| Tool | Engine | Free tier | Starting price | Scheduling | Per-group results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| MultiGroupPoster | Direct API | 6 posts (one-time) | $8.99/mo | Once / Daily / Weekly / Monthly | ✓ Full |
| Group Posting PRO | DOM | Trial | $15–30/mo | ✓ Visual calendar | Lighter |
| PilotPoster | DOM | Trial | $25–50/mo | ✓ | Limited |
| SimplePoster | DOM | 7-day trial | ~$3.99/mo | ✓ Basic | Basic |
Competitor details from each vendor's public site/listing, as listed June 2026 — verify current terms directly. We make MultiGroupPoster; treat this as a vendor's comparison.
Migrating from Fewfeed in 3 steps
- Install the extension from the Chrome Web Store (free, no credit card).
- Auto-import your groups. The extension scans the groups you're a member of — for typical accounts (50–500 group memberships) this takes 5–15 seconds. No export file needed.
- Rebuild your lists with tags ("Real Estate — Florida", "Tech Recruiting — US"), compose with Spintax, and run your first campaign. The free trial covers 6 posts to test the full flow.
From there, the 10-step tutorial walks every screen, and the multi-group posting guide covers safe pacing in depth (50–100 posts/day for established accounts, randomized 30–60s delays).
Three migration mistakes to avoid
- Blasting your full Fewfeed volume on day one. A new tool means a new behavioral pattern on your account. Warm up: 10–20 posts/day for the first few days, then ramp to your normal 50–100. (New accounts: stay under 40/day regardless.)
- Reusing one identical post across every group. If you exported your old copy, add Spintax variants before the first run — duplicate text across groups is the #1 avoidable flag.
- Hunting for an auto-join replacement. The tools still promising it are the riskiest in the niche. Join groups manually at a human rate; let automation handle the posting, not the joining.
Other tools Fewfeed users consider
We make MultiGroupPoster, so read this section as a vendor's honest shortlist (verified against each vendor's public site, June 2026):
- Group Posting PRO ($15–30/mo) — polished UI, built-in AI composer and visual calendar; DOM-based engine, paid from day one.
- PilotPoster ($25–50/mo) — the longest-running name in the niche; DOM-based, priciest of the three.
- SimplePoster (budget option) — clean safety-first UX with a visual risk meter; lighter on lists and analytics.
All three (and MultiGroupPoster) are Chrome extensions — because that's the only architecture that still works for groups. If a tool claims to post to Facebook groups "from the cloud," it's either outdated or doing something risky with your session.
Frequently asked questions
Is Fewfeed coming back?
There is no sign of it. The original tool is offline, and the developer has not announced a relaunch. Marketers who relied on it for bulk group posting have moved to Chrome extensions that post from their own session, like MultiGroupPoster.
Is fewfeed.org the original Fewfeed?
We can't verify who operates domains using the Fewfeed name today — they are not the original product as users knew it. Be extremely cautious with any lookalike site that asks for your Facebook login or pushes an unverified extension; that pattern is how accounts get stolen.
What is the closest free replacement for Fewfeed?
For the core job — posting one piece of content to many groups you joined — MultiGroupPoster covers it with a free 6-post trial (one-time, no credit card), then $8.99/month for unlimited. Fully-free unlimited tools in this niche tend to monetize your data or break without maintenance.
Can I import my Fewfeed group lists?
There's no direct file import, but you won't need one: MultiGroupPoster auto-imports every Facebook group you're a member of in seconds, and you rebuild your lists with tags (e.g. "Real Estate — Florida") in a few minutes.
Does MultiGroupPoster auto-join groups like Fewfeed did?
No — deliberately. A wave of automated join requests is one of the loudest spam signals Facebook tracks, and tools that promise it either get accounts restricted or quietly don't work. Find groups manually and let the extension handle the posting.