Why teams swap out Ticket Tool
Ticket Tool runs ticket panels in more than two million Discord servers, which is part of why staff teams hit its limits. The free tier covers the basics — a button-driven ticket panel that opens a private channel for a user — but five common things sit behind the Premium wall: custom branding, transcript downloads in HTML, panel multi-question forms, claim systems, and the panel count itself. Servers that handle more than a handful of support conversations a day usually feel the gate within their first month.
The seven Ticket Tool alternatives below cover the modern support-bot landscape. The two flavours of bot worth knowing about: panel-style bots (a user clicks a button or reacts to an embed, which opens a private support channel) and modmail-style bots (a user DMs the bot, which mirrors the conversation in a staff channel). Both patterns have their place, and a few servers run one of each.
We tested each for the free-tier ceiling, the staff workflow quality, the transcript output, and the slash-command response time. The picks span both panel and modmail styles.
Quick comparison
| Bot | Best for | Free plan | Paid plan | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Tickets | Free panel-style replacement | Yes | $4.99/month | Most generous free tier on this list |
| Modmail | DM-based support | Yes | None | Open-source modmail standard |
| Helper.gg | Full support suite | Yes | $5/month | Built-in canned responses and SLA tracking |
| ProBot | Tickets plus broader bot | Yes | $4.99/month | Tickets in a bot that also handles welcomes |
| ModMail Plus | Hosted modmail with features | Yes | $3/month | Modmail with priority and tags |
| TicketsBot.net | High-volume panel system | Yes | $6/month | Multi-panel, multi-team setups |
| Yet Another Ticket Bot | Lean panel replacement | Yes | None | Free forever with the basics |
What pushes servers off Ticket Tool
A few themes show up across staff-team threads when teams compare Ticket Tool alternatives:
- Panel count cap. Free tier limits the number of panels per server. Servers with multiple support categories (general, bug reports, partnerships) hit this within a week.
- Transcript export gating. HTML transcript downloads — useful for handing off conversations to staff or attaching to refund tickets — are Premium-only.
- Slow Premium-only branding. Server logos, custom button labels, and panel themes feel like basics that should be free.
- No claim system on free tier. Staff servers want one mod to claim a ticket so two people are not answering at once. Ticket Tool gates this behind Premium.
- Slash command latency during peak hours. Ticket Tool is one of the older support bots and its slash command response time lags Tickets and TicketsBot.net during EU evening peaks.
The Ticket Tool alternatives
1. Tickets, best free panel-style replacement
Tickets is the bot most servers move to after a Ticket Tool frustration. The free tier covers more than Ticket Tool’s free tier: unlimited panels, claim system, multi-question forms, HTML transcripts, and basic branding. The Premium tier exists for advanced features like SLA tracking and multi-team setups, but the free tier is enough for most communities.
The panel interface is clean, the slash commands respond fast, and the bot has been actively maintained since 2018.
Where it falls short: The dashboard is functional but plainer than TicketsBot.net’s. Advanced multi-team workflows with cross-staff visibility are gated behind Premium.
Pricing:
- Free: unlimited panels, claim system, transcripts, basic branding
- Premium: $4.99/month per server for SLA tracking, multi-team, advanced branding
- vs Ticket Tool: free where Ticket Tool gates the basics, paid for the advanced features
Migrating from Ticket Tool: Tickets ships an import for active panels (panel definitions only, not historical tickets). The migration is one command per panel.
Add to server: ticketsbot.net
Bottom line: Pick Tickets as the default Ticket Tool replacement. The free tier is the most generous on this list.
2. Modmail, best DM-based support bot
Modmail runs the open-source modmail standard. Users DM the bot, and the bot opens a private thread in your staff channel that mirrors the conversation. Staff reply through the bot, which forwards messages back as DMs. The user never sees your staff channel; staff never see the user’s other servers.
This workflow is especially good for sensitive support (appeals, abuse reports, account issues) where staff and user should not share a public server channel.
Where it falls short: Modmail is a self-hosted bot by default. Hosted instances exist, but the recommended setup is your own Modmail bot on a small VPS. Setup takes a few hours.
Pricing:
- Free codebase, free hosted instances on community servers
- Self-hosted: a small VPS ($5/month) and a Discord bot token
- vs Ticket Tool: completely different workflow (DM-based, no panel), free, more technical
Migrating from Ticket Tool: Different workflow. Most servers add Modmail alongside Ticket Tool’s replacement rather than migrate panels.
Add to server: modmail.dev
Bottom line: Pick Modmail for sensitive support where DM is the right channel. Pair it with a panel-style bot for everything else.
3. Helper.gg, best full support suite
Helper.gg treats Discord support as a real desk: tickets, canned responses, staff roles, SLA timers, ticket tagging, search across past tickets, and a dashboard built around staff workflow rather than ticket creation. For large communities or paid product Discord servers, this is the bot that most resembles a real helpdesk.
The bot also ships analytics on response times, ticket volume, and staff load. The Premium tier unlocks the deeper SLA and analytics features.
Where it falls short: Heavier than most servers need. The free tier is generous but the workflow scaffolding takes time to set up. Smaller communities find it overkill.
Pricing:
- Free: panels, claims, transcripts, basic canned responses
- Premium: $5/month per server for SLA, deeper analytics, staff load reports
- vs Ticket Tool: deeper for large support teams, equivalent to Ticket Tool’s Premium tier on most features
Migrating from Ticket Tool: Helper.gg has a Ticket Tool importer for panel definitions. Active ticket history is not imported; staff finish open tickets in Ticket Tool, then switch.
Add to server: helper.gg
Bottom line: Pick Helper.gg if support is a real workload and you want desk-style scaffolding around it.
4. ProBot, best tickets in a broader bot
ProBot is a welcome-and-moderation bot with a tickets module included. For servers that already use ProBot for welcomes, reaction roles, or automod, the tickets feature consolidates the bot stack.
The ticket workflow is panel-style, similar to Ticket Tool, and the Premium tier covers branding and multi-panel setups.
Where it falls short: Tickets are one feature in a larger bot, so the depth is less than Tickets or Helper.gg. SLA tracking and advanced staff workflow are not there.
Pricing:
- Free: basic ticket panel with branding limits
- Premium: $4.99/month per server for advanced ticket features, plus everything else ProBot offers
- vs Ticket Tool: tickets are lighter, but the rest of ProBot’s surface makes up for it
Migrating from Ticket Tool: Add ProBot, enable the tickets module in the dashboard, recreate panels. No import.
Add to server: probot.io
Bottom line: Pick ProBot if you already use it for other things and want one fewer bot in the role list.
5. ModMail Plus, best hosted modmail with extras
ModMail Plus is a hosted modmail bot for teams that want the modmail workflow without self-hosting. It adds tags, priority labels, scheduled responses, and a small set of analytics on top of the basic modmail loop.
For sensitive-support workflows where the team does not have someone comfortable with a VPS, ModMail Plus is the easier path than self-hosted Modmail.
Where it falls short: Hosted, so the data path is on the bot’s infrastructure. Less common in large servers than the open-source Modmail.
Pricing:
- Free: basic hosted modmail
- Premium: $3/month per server for tags, priority, analytics
- vs Ticket Tool: different workflow entirely, hosted alternative to Modmail
Migrating from Ticket Tool: Different workflow. Run alongside or replace panels with DM-based support if that fits the audience.
Add to server: modmail.plus (search top.gg if the link rotates)
Bottom line: Pick ModMail Plus if you want modmail workflow without managing your own bot host.
6. TicketsBot.net, best high-volume panel system
TicketsBot.net (a separate project from “Tickets”) is the bot that the largest Discord support communities run. It handles multi-panel, multi-team setups with cross-team visibility, ticket routing, and the workflows that emerge when more than 20 staff handle hundreds of tickets a day.
The bot ships SLA tracking, analytics, ticket auto-routing based on form responses, and a panel editor that beats the rest on configurability.
Where it falls short: Overkill for small servers. Premium price is the highest on this list, and the setup takes longer than the lighter bots.
Pricing:
- Free: full panel system, single team, basic transcripts
- Premium: $6/month per server for SLA, multi-team, auto-routing
- vs Ticket Tool: deeper for high-volume teams, lighter on broad utility, similar Premium price
Migrating from Ticket Tool: Panel definitions can be re-imported via the dashboard. Historical tickets stay in Ticket Tool until staff close them.
Add to server: ticketsbot.net (the higher-tier project)
Bottom line: Pick TicketsBot.net when your support team is large enough that ticket routing matters.
7. Yet Another Ticket Bot, best lean free panel bot
Yet Another Ticket Bot (YATB) is the smallest bot on the list and the answer to “we just need a ticket button without any of the rest.” Servers running a single panel for general support install YATB and never touch a dashboard.
The bot supports basic panels, claim, close, and transcript. That is the whole feature set. Nothing is gated.
Where it falls short: No advanced features, no Premium tier, no SLA tracking. Smaller community.
Pricing:
- Free: full feature set
- vs Ticket Tool: less polished, but free where Ticket Tool charges
Migrating from Ticket Tool: Re-create the panel manually. Takes about a minute.
Add to server: Search “Yet Another Ticket Bot” or “YATB” on top.gg
Bottom line: Pick YATB for a tiny server that wants tickets without any of the scaffolding.
How to choose
- You want the most generous free Ticket Tool replacement: Tickets.
- Your support is sensitive and DM is the right channel: Modmail.
- You run a real support workload and want a desk: Helper.gg.
- You already use ProBot and want tickets in it: ProBot’s ticket module.
- You want modmail without self-hosting: ModMail Plus.
- Your support team is 20+ staff and you need routing: TicketsBot.net.
- You want the simplest possible free panel: Yet Another Ticket Bot.
Stay on Ticket Tool only if you already pay for Premium and the workflow is what you want. The free tier is not the right place to stay, but the paid product is competitive with the rest of the panel-style bots on this list.
FAQ
What is the best free Ticket Tool alternative? Tickets has the most generous free tier among the panel-style bots and the closest workflow to Ticket Tool.
Should I use panels or modmail? Panels work for predictable support categories with a public-facing audience. Modmail works for sensitive issues where DM is the right channel. Many servers run one of each.
Can I migrate active Ticket Tool tickets to a new bot? Almost never. Migration tools import panel definitions but not open tickets. The usual workflow is: spin up the new bot, let existing tickets close in Ticket Tool, route new tickets to the replacement.
Why are some support bots free and others not? Hosting Discord bots and storing transcripts is a real cost. Free-forever bots like Modmail and YATB run on volunteer hosting or rely on Premium tiers for funding. Hosted commercial bots split a generous free tier from a paid premium.
Can two ticket bots run in one server? Yes. Many servers run a panel-style bot for general support and Modmail for sensitive cases. Keep the prefixes distinct so staff and users do not get confused.
Do these bots integrate with help-desk tools like Zendesk? Most do not. Helper.gg and TicketsBot.net have webhook exports that can hand off transcripts. Full bidirectional sync with a CRM is rare on Discord support bots and usually requires custom work.