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Google Forms vs. Jotform: Which should you use? [2024]

By Harry Guinness · November 10, 2023
Hero image with the logos of Google Forms and Jotform

Google Forms and Jotform are two of the biggest online form and survey makers, but they're pretty different tools.

Google Forms are simple and lightweight and allow you to collect basic responses to most types of questions you might want to ask. They're fast, free, and almost everyone is familiar with them. Jotform can be used to collect the same sort of information—but it can also do a whole lot more. That doesn't mean that Jotform is necessarily better for your needs, though. Both apps have their place.

I've been writing about tech and software for over a decade. I also have a BSc. in Psychology and an MSc. in Business and Management, both of which required me to create loads of forms and surveys. I'm well aware of how important and powerful these kinds of tools can be. I dove back into Google Forms and Jotform, spending time testing each app. Here's what I discovered—and how to decide which is right for your business.

Google Forms vs. Jotform at a glance

If you want a detailed breakdown of how Google Forms and Jotform are different, read on. But this summary will give you a quick overview.

Google Forms

Jotform

Ease of use

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ Simple and self-explanatory; if you've used any Google product, you know how to use Google Forms.

⭐⭐⭐⭐ While easy to get started with, the many options can be hard to find.

Power

⭐⭐⭐ While it's suitable for 99 percent of most people's form needs, you're limited to simple questions.

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐ There's basically nothing you can't ask or do with Jotform—whether you're creating a simple intake form or a complex market research survey.

Data handling

⭐⭐⭐⭐ With nice built-in reports and an automatic export to Google Sheets, Google Forms makes handling your collected data super easy.

⭐⭐⭐⭐ It's not as intuitive as Google Forms, but Jotform allows you to export your data to nearly anywhere.

Value for money

⭐⭐⭐⭐ Completely free

⭐⭐⭐ With a fairly limited free plan and the basic plan starting at $39/month, Jotform just doesn't offer the same value as Google Forms. Unless you need its extra features, in which case, it's worth the price.

Google Forms are simpler

Most online forms don't need to be complicated. If you're collecting swag orders, basic feedback, or submissions for the office suggestion box, you don't need any weird tools or special apps. You just need the ability to ask short and long questions, offer various dropdown menus, checkboxes, and rating scales, allow your responders to attach files and images, record the date and time, and take someone's email address. With that handful of basic options, you can create anything from a (barebones) wedding invite to a custom parts order form.

Creating a form in Google Forms

And these are the kinds of options that Google Forms brings to the table. It even has conditional logic, so later questions change based on the answers your responders select as they go through the form. With its basic but powerful set of tools, you can probably create 99 percent of the forms you'll ever need to make. And it's really easy to use, whether you start with a blank form or one of the 17 different templates. 

Google Forms templates

Of course, this simple approach does have a few downsides. While you can customize Google Forms, they all generally look pretty same-ish (and very purple, if you don't change the color scheme). If you've ever filled one out, you'll know exactly what I mean. It's the same look that a lot of Google products—and especially their help documents—have. It's not bad, but changing the font and background color, and adding a header image still doesn't really allow your forms to stand out or fully match your brand. 

Various design options in Google Forms

While there are ways to add some more advanced features, either by using Google Apps Script or hoping there's an add-on that gives you the functionality you need, Google Forms is at its best when it's at its simplest.

Jotform is more flexible

Jotform has all the same basic options as Google Forms, plus a ton of extra features. You can create a form that uses simple questions and dropdown menus, or one that has a countdown timer, a progress bar, a voice recorder, and a calorie calculator. Do you need all these different options? Probably not. But some of them are incredibly useful.

Take payments. Jotform integrates with Stripe, Apple Pay, Google Pay, Venmo, Paypal, and many other payment processors so that you can create a form that charges people at the end, say for a custom order or an appointment. Although there are ways to add payment support (as well as other options) to Google Forms with Google Workspace Marketplace add-ons, they aren't built in to the same degree. Not every form needs payments, but if yours does, then Jotform is clearly the better option. 

A Jotform form with a Tic-Tac-Toe captcha and payment methods option

Templates are a similar story. While Google Forms offers 17 different options, Jotform has more than 10,000. There's a lot of overlap (there are 74 bakery order form templates), but it still gives you a huge amount more starting points to play around with. 

Likewise, you can customize your forms significantly more. If you have the design chops, you can dive into the CSS and make every line look exactly how you want it, or you can use one of the hundreds of free and paid themes. If you want to use conditional logic, you can create incredibly advanced dynamic forms. You can even gather legally signed responses to your forms. 

Customizing a form in Jotform

And you can create different kinds of forms. Classic forms are your standard lists of questions, card forms show a single question per page, and—while these features fall beyond the scope of this discussion—Jotform can also be used to make basic apps and online stores.

For all that, Jotform's form builder is still easy and intuitive to use. The basic options are all presented up front, and you can dig into the weirder widgets as you need to. 

Jotform basically does everything Google Forms does, and then does more. Perhaps the most awkward part is figuring out what you can and can't do with the various extra tools. There's a Tic-Tac-Toe game you can use as a CAPTCHA, for example, but no Sudoku or chess puzzles—but it's impossible to really know this unless you scroll through the 300+ widgets on offer or happen upon an article that mentions there's a Tic-Tac-Toe game.

Both handle data really well

How form-building apps handle the data you collect is just as important as how they collect it. The good news is both Google Forms and Jotform do a really great job of making the data you gather easy to work with—and crucially, easy to export to other, more powerful tools.

Google Forms is, unsurprisingly, a little simpler. There are three default reports: you can see a summary of all the responses, a question-by-question breakdown, or see each response individually. If you need more options, you can send all the data to a Google Sheet to perform any calculations you need, or export it somewhere else, like your CRM, so you can put it to use.

Google Sheet reporting

With Jotform, it can be a little less intuitive to see all your data—but you can do more with it if you need to. All the information that Google Forms offers is split over a few different tools in Jotform. The Tables tool lays it out in a spreadsheet, the Inbox has individual responses, Report Builder allows you to create whatever reports you need, and Form Analytics gives you additional data about who's filling out your form. And, of course, you can download your data, so you can import it into any app you like.

But really, there's not a lot differentiating the two tools on this front. Both provide you with the data you've collected and enable you to do what you need to with it. Even if you use Jotform, there's a good chance you're exporting the data to a Google Sheet for analysis.

Price is a big factor (Google Forms is free)

Google Forms is a great form builder, it's suitable for almost every kind of form you need to build, and it has one huge advantage over Jotform: it's free. (Well, technically all your collected form data needs to fit into your 15 GB Google account limit, but unless you're conducting a census, that shouldn't be an issue. If you're a business user, it's included with Google Workspace, where you have even larger storage limits.)

Jotform is great. It's much more powerful than Google Forms, and if you want to collect payments, get forms legally signed, have deep conditional logic, or make use of any of the other advanced features, then it may be worth the monthly fees. But they are pretty steep. On its free plan, Jotform limits you to just 100 form submissions per month (though you can collect 10 payments per month and 10 monthly signed documents). Similarly, you're limited to five total forms and can only store data from 500 submissions. You're also limited to 100 fields per form and 1,000 monthly views of your forms. Even if you're just creating simple forms surveying employees, you could very easily bump up against one or other of these limits.

The Bronze plan, at $39/month, expands those limits to 25 forms, 250 fields per form, 1,000 monthly submissions, 10,000 stored submissions, 10,000 monthly form views, and 100 monthly payments and signed documents. If you're using all the advanced features, it makes sense; if not, it's a pretty steep price to pay.

Both apps integrate with Zapier

Jotform natively integrates with more than 100 apps, and Google Forms has about as many add-ons to increase its power. But both apps also integrate with Zapier, which means you can send form responses from Google Forms and Jotform to nearly any app you want. Learn more about how to automate Google Forms or how to automate Jotform, or get started with one of these pre-made workflows.

Create HubSpot contacts from new Google Forms responses

Create HubSpot contacts from new Google Forms responses
  • Google Forms logo
  • HubSpot logo
Google Forms + HubSpot

Create ActiveCampaign subscribers from new Google Forms responses

Create ActiveCampaign subscribers from new Google Forms responses
  • Google Forms logo
  • ActiveCampaign logo
Google Forms + ActiveCampaign

Save new JotForm responses as Google Sheets rows

Save new JotForm responses as Google Sheets rows
  • Jotform logo
  • Google Sheets logo
Jotform + Google Sheets

Add new Jotform submissions to a Mailchimp list

Add new Jotform submissions to a Mailchimp list
  • Jotform logo
  • Mailchimp logo
Jotform + Mailchimp

Zapier is a no-code automation tool that lets you connect your apps into automated workflows, so that every person and every business can move forward at growth speed. Learn more about how it works.

Jotform vs. Google Forms: Which should you use?

Google Forms is one of Google's best tools. It's simple, powerful, easy to use, and totally free. Unless you want to customize how your form looks, collect payments, or do more advanced survey-type stuff Jotform offers, you should probably start with Google Forms.

Jotform, on the other hand, does everything you could need for any type of form or survey. It can be customized to no end—in terms of both looks and functionality. If you're prepared to pay for a premium plan (or know you'll stay under the monthly free limits), it's definitely the better tool. And if you work at a big company where forms and surveys are a big part of your day-to-day, it's worth investing in.

Related reading:

  • The best survey apps

  • The best online form builder apps

  • SurveyMonkey vs. Google Forms: Which should you use?

  • Jotform vs. Typeform: Which is best?

This article was originally published in November 2022. The most recent update was in November 2023.

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