# Best Social Media Tools for AI Agents (2026)

Scheduling, publishing, management

| # | Tool | Grade | Score | Biggest Friction |
|---|------|-------|-------|-----------------|
| 1 | Typefully | C+ | 5.6 | Absence of an official OpenAPI specification and public API documentation makes it difficult for agents to discover endpoints, understand request/response formats, and adapt to API changes without brittle hardcoding. |
| 2 | Hootsuite | C+ | 5.06 | Complete absence of an OpenAPI specification combined with no official MCP server or CLI tool makes it extremely difficult for agents to discover API capabilities, validate requests, and understand authentication/rate-limit requirements. |
| 3 | Postiz | C | 4.8 | Lack of publicly documented API specification (OpenAPI) and minimal discoverability signals (no llms.txt, agents.json, or agent-specific documentation) make it difficult for agents to understand and autonomously integrate with the platform. |
| 4 | Sprout Social | C | 4.68 | The absence of a public REST API or GraphQL endpoint with documented authentication, rate limits, and response schemas makes it nearly impossible for agents to autonomously integrate beyond the narrow MCP draft-posting capability. |
| 5 | Buffer | D | 3.86 | Buffer.com actively discourages agent access (robots.txt blocks agents) and provides no discoverable API documentation, OpenAPI spec, or developer resources on its homepage, making it nearly impossible for agents to autonomously discover and integrate with the service. |
| 6 | Tweet Hunter | F | 2.2 | Tweet Hunter has no documented API, making it inaccessible to agents except through brittle web scraping or manual UI automation. |
| 7 | Later | F | 1.34 | Later.com has no publicly documented API, SDK integrations, or programmatic access methods—it is a web-only social media scheduling platform requiring human browser interaction, making it unsuitable for autonomous agent use. |

Updated: 2026-04-09
Source: https://agenttool.sh/best/social-media
