Anonymeter vs Mentimeter
Mentimeter is the leader in live presentation polling — word clouds, quizzes, real-time audience interaction. Anonymeter is async anonymous feedback — long-running forms, two-way follow-up, structural anonymity. Different jobs entirely.
Choose Mentimeter for live audience interaction during presentations, classes, or events — where real-time visualization on a shared screen is the point. Choose Anonymeter for async feedback that's collected over time and where structural anonymity matters more than live engagement.
Feature-by-feature
| Feature | Anonymeter | Mentimeter |
|---|---|---|
| Primary use case | Async anonymous feedback | Live presentation polling |
| Free plan | 3 forms · unlimited responses | Limited (2 Q/presentation) |
| Entry paid plan | $9/mo | $11.99/presenter/mo (Basic) |
| Anonymity by default | ✓ Structural | ✓ Session-tracked |
| Async / persistent (collect over time) | ✓ Always-on link | ✕ Session-based only |
| Real-time live polling | ✕ | ✓ Core feature |
| Word clouds, quizzes, leaderboards | ✕ | ✓ |
| PowerPoint / Slides integration | ✕ | ✓ Native plugin |
| Anonymous follow-up (2-way) | ✓ Included | ✕ |
| Form templates | ✓ 30 anonymous-by-default | ✓ Few presentation templates |
| Per-form retention / auto-delete | ✓ | ✕ |
| Form password protection | ✓ | ✕ |
← Swipe the table sideways to see all columns → Based on publicly available pricing and feature documentation as of June 2026.
These tools don't really compete — but people pick between them
The honest framing first: Mentimeter and Anonymeter solve different problems, and most teams that need one don't need the other. Mentimeter is live, synchronous, real-time — for the moment when you're presenting and want the audience to participate. Anonymeter is async, persistent, collected-over-time — for when you want feedback that lands at any hour and gets aggregated over weeks or months.
But people frequently shop both because:
- Both have "anonymous" in their pitch
- Both collect responses from many people
- Conference organizers, teachers, and trainers often need both (live engagement during the session + post-session anonymous feedback)
Here's how to think about it: if everyone is in the same room (physical or Zoom) at the same time, and you want a shared visualization right now, you need Mentimeter. If you want a form that collects responses whenever respondents have time, with results visible only to you and aggregated over time, you need Anonymeter.
Many teams use both.
When Mentimeter is the right tool
Use Mentimeter when:
- Live presentation polling — you're on stage (or screen) and want the audience to vote, with results appearing on the shared screen in real time
- Classroom interaction — students respond to questions during a lecture; teacher sees aggregate answers immediately
- Conference sessions — workshop facilitators run real-time word clouds, multiple-choice polls, ranking exercises
- Live Q&A with upvoting — audience submits questions during a presentation; everyone sees the popular ones rise
- Quiz format with leaderboards — gamified learning where speed of correct answers matters
- PowerPoint/Google Slides integration — Mentimeter polls embed directly in your existing slides
Mentimeter is excellent at what it does. Anonymeter wouldn't replace it for any of these use cases.
When Anonymeter is the right choice
Use Anonymeter when:
- Async feedback collection — respondents fill the form on their own time, not during a presentation
- Long-running channels — ongoing suggestion box, monthly NPS, weekly employee pulse — surveys that live for months or years
- Post-event feedback — after the session ends, send the link; collect responses over the following 1-2 days
- Anonymous follow-up workflow — the form owner needs to ask clarifying questions to specific anonymous respondents, asynchronously
- Sensitive feedback — HR exit interviews, complaint forms, whistleblower reports — where structural anonymity matters and live participation isn't the point
- Long surveys — Mentimeter is designed for short live polls; Anonymeter handles 10-20+ question deep surveys comfortably
A common pattern: use Mentimeter during a conference session for live polls, then share an Anonymeter form for post-session detailed feedback. Both work; they cover different windows.
About Mentimeter's anonymity
Mentimeter is anonymous in the sense that the presenter doesn't see individual respondent identities. Aggregate results are shown on the shared screen; nothing identifies who voted what.
But Mentimeter does retain session-level tracking — IP addresses, browser fingerprint, device data — at the infrastructure level. For typical live presentation scenarios this is fine; nobody's reporting fraud about a word cloud from a conference session.
For sensitive contexts (post-event feedback about a controversial leader, anonymous classroom feedback about a teacher in a small program), the structural anonymity matters more. Anonymeter logs nothing — no IP, no cookie, no respondent ID. For higher-stakes async feedback, this is the right design.
If your live polling is uncontroversial (typical conference, training session, classroom check-in), Mentimeter's anonymity is sufficient and the live format is its core value. If your async feedback is sensitive, Anonymeter's structural anonymity is the right baseline.
Frequently asked
Can Anonymeter do live polling like Mentimeter?
Can Mentimeter collect feedback after a session?
Is one cheaper than the other?
Why does Anonymeter have anonymous follow-up but Mentimeter doesn't?
Can I use both?
What about Mentimeter's quizzes?
Other comparisons
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