Strength & Hypertrophy · Comparison

LiftPilot vs Hevy (2026): Which Should You Use?

Last updated 19 June 2026 · Pilot Performance

Hevy is one of the best-loved workout loggers around. LiftPilot takes a different path — offline, private, one-time price, and it programs your progression for you. Here's how to choose.

Choose Hevy for a polished cloud logger with a great free tier and a social community. Choose LiftPilot if you want the app to program your progressive overload and to run 100% offline with no account, no data collection and a one-time price instead of a subscription.

At a glance

Details below are accurate as of June 2026 and link to primary sources; verify current pricing before buying.

FeatureLiftPilotHevy
Runs 100% offline, no accountYesNo (account/cloud)
Pricing modelOne-time Pro, no subscriptionFree tier + Pro subscription
Free tierYesYes (limited)
Automatic progressive overloadYes, built-inLogging + progress charts
RIR-based deload detectionYesNo
MEV/MRV volume landmarksYesNo
Social communityNoYes
Data stored only on deviceYesCloud account
PlatformsAndroidiOS, Android, Web

Where Hevy shines

Hevy is a genuinely excellent logger: fast set entry, clean progress charts, and a social layer for following friends and sharing workouts that keeps a lot of people consistent. Its free tier is generous, and Pro is among the more affordable in the category (listed around $2.99/month, $23.99/year or $74.99 lifetime as of June 2026, with free-tier limits such as 4 routines and 3 months of history per Hevy's help docs). If you want cross-device web sync and a community, Hevy is hard to beat.

Where LiftPilot is different

LiftPilot isn't trying to be a social cloud logger. It's built to do your programming: it calculates your next set with automatic progressive overload, watches your RIR to push or hold, recommends deloads when fatigue builds, and keeps weekly sets inside MEV/MRV volume landmarks. And it does it all offline, with no account, collecting no data (privacy policy), for a one-time Pro purchase.

Is LiftPilot a good Hevy alternative?

Yes — specifically if you value offline reliability, on-device privacy and one-time pricing, and you want the app to drive progression rather than just record it. If your priority is a social feed, web access or iOS, stick with Hevy (LiftPilot is currently Android-only).

LiftPilot icon

Try LiftPilot free

Auto progressive overload, RIR deloads and MEV/MRV volume tracking. 100% offline. One-time Pro, no subscription.

Get on Google Play

FAQ

Is LiftPilot a good alternative to Hevy?

Yes, if you want offline use, on-device privacy, one-time pricing and automatic programming. Hevy is a great cloud logger with social features and a generous free tier, but it requires an account and syncs to the cloud. LiftPilot runs fully offline, collects no data, charges once, and programs your progressive overload, deloads and volume.

Is Hevy or LiftPilot cheaper?

Both have a free tier. Hevy's full features are a subscription (around $2.99/month or $23.99/year as of June 2026, with a lifetime option); LiftPilot unlocks Pro with a one-time purchase and no subscription. Over time a one-time purchase is usually cheaper. Verify current prices on each listing.

Does Hevy work offline?

Hevy is an account-based, cloud-synced app. LiftPilot is the offline-first option here: it needs no account and stores everything on your device, so it works without any connection.

Pilot Performance is the independent developer of LiftPilot and WODPilot and is not affiliated with, endorsed by, or sponsored by any other app or company named here. Trademarks belong to their respective owners and are referenced only for factual comparison (nominative use). "CrossFit" is a registered trademark of CrossFit, LLC; WODPilot is not a CrossFit product. Competitor details are accurate to the best of our knowledge as of June 2026 and link to primary sources where possible; features and pricing change, so please verify on each app’s official listing.