TriCareerly vs Rezi
The builder versus the forge.
Rezi is good at the thing most people fear: the blank page. Give it your history and it will AI-draft a resume from nothing, on templates built to parse cleanly, with keyword targeting against the job you are chasing. If you do not have a resume at all, that is a genuinely useful place to start.
TriCareerly starts one step later — you have a resume; the problem is that the same resume is going to fifty different jobs. One pasted job description gets you the whole application tailored to that role: compatibility report, resume, cover letter, a screening-call script, interview prep and more, scored against a 6-component ATS model, with your LinkedIn data export decoded on the side and a club around you while you send. Different tool for a different job.
- Drafting from zero: the AI writer turns a work history into a presentable resume fast — the blank page is its home turf.
- ATS-minded templates built to parse cleanly, with keyword targeting against a job description.
- A free tier to start, and pricing that includes a lifetime option — ownership is part of the pitch.
- The application, not just the resume — up to 8 tailored deliverables per pasted job, including the cover letter, a screening-call script and interview prep, editable inline after generation.
- A 6-component ATS score that reads structure and alignment, not keyword counts — plus a tracker, batch mode and Chrome extension capture.
- LinkedIn Intelligence from your full data export — one-time, yours forever — and the club, the part every other tool skips.
WHAT EACH ONE DOES.
| Feature | TriCareerly | Rezi |
|---|---|---|
| The core job | Builds the full application from one pasted job description — up to 8 tailored deliverables across two stages, editable inline after generation. | Writes a resume (and cover letter) with AI — strongest when you are starting from nothing. |
| Resume work | Tailors your existing resume to each job description, scored on 6 ATS components, then editable inline. | AI-drafts from your history onto ATS-friendly templates, with keyword targeting per job. |
| Beyond the resume | Compatibility report, cover letter, screening-call script, interview prep, LinkedIn summary, outreach and keywords — per job. | Centred on the resume and cover letter; the rest of the application is yours to build. |
| Reads your full LinkedIn data export — recruiter-lens score, opportunities buried in your inbox, what the ad engine has inferred about you. Free teaser read first. | No LinkedIn-export intelligence. | |
| Community | A club of members applying together — the part every other tool skips. | A solo writing tool by design. |
| Pricing | Free tier. Member plans $14.99–$28.99/mo, or bring your own LLM key for unlimited generations from $9.99/mo. | Free tier; Pro from around $29/mo as of mid-2026, with lifetime deals often promoted. |
| What you own | LinkedIn Intelligence is a one-time purchase — $36 single packs, $69 for the full Dossier — yours forever. | The documents are yours; AI features run with the plan, unless you bought lifetime. |
Builds the full application from one pasted job description — up to 8 tailored deliverables across two stages, editable inline after generation.
Writes a resume (and cover letter) with AI — strongest when you are starting from nothing.
Tailors your existing resume to each job description, scored on 6 ATS components, then editable inline.
AI-drafts from your history onto ATS-friendly templates, with keyword targeting per job.
Compatibility report, cover letter, screening-call script, interview prep, LinkedIn summary, outreach and keywords — per job.
Centred on the resume and cover letter; the rest of the application is yours to build.
Reads your full LinkedIn data export — recruiter-lens score, opportunities buried in your inbox, what the ad engine has inferred about you. Free teaser read first.
No LinkedIn-export intelligence.
A club of members applying together — the part every other tool skips.
A solo writing tool by design.
Free tier. Member plans $14.99–$28.99/mo, or bring your own LLM key for unlimited generations from $9.99/mo.
Free tier; Pro from around $29/mo as of mid-2026, with lifetime deals often promoted.
LinkedIn Intelligence is a one-time purchase — $36 single packs, $69 for the full Dossier — yours forever.
The documents are yours; AI features run with the plan, unless you bought lifetime.
Competitor pricing and features as of mid-2026, from public pricing pages — phrased as “around” because plans change. Spot something out of date? Tell us and we'll fix it.
STRAIGHT ANSWERS.
Is Rezi good for writing a resume with AI?
Yes — if you are starting from a blank page, Rezi will get you to a clean, ATS-friendly draft faster than staring at a cursor will, and we won't pretend otherwise. The honest difference is what happens on application ten: a from-scratch builder gives you one resume; TriCareerly retailors yours for every job, with the rest of the application attached.
What does TriCareerly do differently with the resume itself?
We start from the resume you already have and rework it against one specific job description — what to surface, what to cut, how it survives a 6-component ATS read — then hand it to you editable, alongside the cover letter, screening-call script and interview prep that have to agree with it. The unit of work is the application, not the document.
How do the prices compare?
Rezi has a free tier, with Pro from around $29/mo as of mid-2026 and lifetime deals promoted fairly often. TriCareerly has a free tier, member plans at $14.99–$28.99/mo, and bring-your-own-key plans from $9.99/mo with unlimited generations — plus one-time LinkedIn Intelligence at $36 a pack or $69 for the full Dossier.
Can I use both?
Sure. Some members draft a first resume in a builder and bring it to TriCareerly for the per-job tailoring — the engine works on whatever resume you feed it. Start with the free tier and the free LinkedIn teaser read, and see which one you keep opening.
A RESUME IS A DRAFT. AN APPLICATION IS THE JOB.
Drafting from nothing was solved. Tailoring for this job, tonight, with people in your corner — that is the part that was missing.
