
Overview

Product video
Open source customer engagement suite.
Chatwoot is an open-source, self-hosted customer engagement suite. Chatwoot lets you view and manage your customer data, communicate with them irrespective of which medium they use, and re-engage them based on their profile.
Features
Chatwoot supports the following conversation channels:
Website: Talk to your customers using our live chat widget and make use of our SDK to identify a user and provide contextual support. Facebook: Connect your Facebook pages and start replying to the direct messages to your page. Instagram: Connect your Instagram profile and start replying to the direct messages. Twitter: Connect your Twitter profiles and reply to direct messages or the tweets where you are mentioned. Telegram: Connect your Telegram bot and reply to your customers right from a single dashboard. WhatsApp: Connect your WhatsApp business account and manage the conversation in Chatwoot. Line: Connect your Line account and manage the conversations in Chatwoot. SMS: Connect your Twilio SMS account and reply to the SMS queries in Chatwoot. API Channel: Build custom communication channels using our API channel. Email: Forward all your email queries to Chatwoot and view them in our integrated dashboard.
And many more.
Other features include:
CRM: Save all your customer information right inside Chatwoot, use contact notes to log emails, phone calls, or meeting notes. Custom Attributes: Define custom attribute attributes to store information about a contact or a conversation and extend the product to match your workflow. Shared multi-brand inboxes: Manage multiple brands or pages using a shared inbox. Private notes: Use @mentions and private notes to communicate internally about a conversation. Canned responses (Saved replies): Improve the response rate by adding saved replies for frequently asked questions. Conversation Labels: Use conversation labels to create custom workflows. Auto assignment: Chatwoot intelligently assigns a ticket to the agents who have access to the inbox depending on their availability and load. Conversation continuity: If the user has provided an email address through the chat widget, Chatwoot will send an email to the customer under the agent name so that the user can continue the conversation over the email. Multi-lingual support: Chatwoot supports 10+ languages. Powerful API & Webhooks: Extend the capability of the software using Chatwoot's webhooks and APIs. Integrations: Chatwoot natively integrates with Slack right now. Manage your conversations in Slack without logging into the dashboard.
Highlights
- Omnichannel inbox that supports all the major instant messaging and social media platforms.
- CRM: Save all your customer information right inside Chatwoot, use contact notes to log emails, phone calls, or meeting notes.
- Powerful API & Webhooks: Extend the capability of the software using Chatwoot's webhooks and APIs.
Details
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Refund under pro-rata basis on termination period.
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Delivery details
64-bit (x86) Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
Amazon Machine Image (AMI)
An AMI is a virtual image that provides the information required to launch an instance. Amazon EC2 (Elastic Compute Cloud) instances are virtual servers on which you can run your applications and workloads, offering varying combinations of CPU, memory, storage, and networking resources. You can launch as many instances from as many different AMIs as you need.
Version release notes
Additional details
Usage instructions
This ami packages chatwoot version 4.14.0
The UI will be accessible at http://<your-external-ip>:3000.
Be sure to ssh into the server and
- Configure the necessary environment variables.
- Install a webserver like Nginx and setup SSL/TLS.
Starting with the v2.7.0 release, this ami also bundles the Chatwoot CLI. Try it out. https://www.chatwoot.com/docs/self-hosted/deployment/chatwoot-ctl
cwctl --helpref: https://www.chatwoot.com/docs/self-hosted/deployment/aws-marketplace#configuring-chatwoot
[1] https://www.chatwoot.com/docs/self-hosted/deployment/linux-vm#configuring-the-installation-domain [2] https://www.chatwoot.com/docs/self-hosted/configuration/environment-variables
Resources
Vendor resources
Support
Vendor support
Community support/Next business day email support according to the subscription plan. hello@chatwoot.com
AWS infrastructure support
AWS Support is a one-on-one, fast-response support channel that is staffed 24x7x365 with experienced and technical support engineers. The service helps customers of all sizes and technical abilities to successfully utilize the products and features provided by Amazon Web Services.
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Customer reviews
Chatwood : The Multi-Platform Social Media Manager for your Business
Because of this, I haven’t missed any leads, and I can actually schedule my time around it. Another feature I want to highlight is that I don’t have to keep track of individual responses on my own. The backstage chat lets me ask my sister directly things like, “Can we make this in 2 days?” and she can reply there, while the customer only sees a formal response when I send it.
The pricing is too cost effective for us, We pay 19$ per month, which is worth the functionalities.
Chatwoot Just Works: Easy Setup, Seamless Slack & Email Integration
Best tool for Customer Engagement
Product rating chatwoot
Best Intercom alternative
Self-hosting under the MIT license is the reason the tool is here at all, and it is worth being plain about why. The community edition runs on our own infrastructure with no seat cap, so adding a fourth or a fifth agent does not move what we pay. For a small support team that grows in fits and starts, that changes the whole calculation. We are paying for a server we already understand how to run rather than a line item that scales with headcount. The codebase being source-available matters in a quieter way too. When something behaves oddly I can read the actual code path instead of filing a ticket and waiting, and that has saved me more than once when a webhook was not firing the way I expected.
Internal collaboration is handled the way I wish more tools handled it. Private notes and @mentions let me pull a teammate into a thread without the customer ever seeing it, so a tricky billing question gets a second opinion inline rather than copied into Slack and back. Conversation labels are how we impose our own structure on the queue, tagging threads by product area or by whether they need engineering, and the auto assignment quietly hands new conversations to whoever has capacity instead of letting them pile up unowned. None of these are headline features. They are the small machinery that decides whether a busy queue stays sane, and Chatwoot got them right.
Canned responses are unglamorous and I use them constantly. We have a couple of dozen saved replies for the questions that come in every single day, and being able to drop one in and edit a line before sending is the difference between a two minute reply and a thirty second one. The chat widget SDK is in the same bucket of dependable rather than exciting. We pass in the logged-in user's details so an agent opens a conversation already knowing who they are talking to and what plan they are on, which means we are not asking people to repeat account information they already gave us at signup.
The API and webhooks are more capable than I expected from an open-source project, and they are where Chatwoot stopped being a support inbox and started being part of our stack. We fire webhooks on conversation events into our own internal tooling, and we push data the other way through the API to create contacts and attach custom attributes from our database. The custom attributes piece is the part I lean on most, because it lets me store the things our team actually needs to see on a contact, the account ID and the subscription state, rather than whatever a generic CRM decided was important. It took longer than I would like to admit to wire all of this up, honestly, but once it was in place it has run without me thinking about it.
Captain, the AI layer, I will give qualified credit to rather than a rave. The co-pilot that drafts replies and translates messages for agents is the part that has actually changed how a shift feels, because it gets a draft onto the screen that I edit down rather than starting from a blank box, and the translation has let us answer a few non-English customers we would otherwise have fumbled. The assistant that handles first-line questions off our help center is solid for the repetitive stuff and noticeably weaker on anything with nuance, which is roughly where I expected a feature this young to land. It is closing the gap with the more established AI agents in this space rather than matching them, and for what we pay that trade is fine.
The last thing worth naming is that the entry tier does not nickel and dime you on channels. Every messaging channel we care about, including WhatsApp and the social inboxes, is available without being pushed up into an expensive plan, which is the opposite of how most tools in this category gate things. Combined with pricing that is published in plain numbers rather than hidden behind a sales call, it makes the cost easy to reason about, and for a team that watches its software spend that predictability is its own feature.