The "Loom vs Zoom" question is a bit of a category error - it's like asking "email vs phone." They're both communication tools, but they serve fundamentally different modes of communication: asynchronous vs. synchronous.
That said, there's a real debate happening in remote teams right now about whether default-to-meeting culture is costing more than it saves. Let me give you the full breakdown so you can make the call for your situation.
Here's the telling question: how many of your Zoom calls last week required real-time back-and-forth the entire time? If the honest answer is "maybe half of them," Loom could reclaim 3-5 hours a week for everyone on your team.
| Feature | Loom | Zoom |
|---|---|---|
| Live video calls | ❌ Not the core use case | ✅ Core product |
| Screen recording | ✅ Excellent (with face cam) | ✅ Basic (via cloud recording) |
| Async video messaging | ✅ Purpose-built | Limited (Zoom Clips) |
| Viewer reactions | ✅ Emoji reactions + comments | ❌ Not for recordings |
| Video editing (AI) | ✅ Auto removes filler words, trim | ❌ No built-in editing |
| Transcripts | ✅ Auto-generated, searchable | ✅ Auto-generated (with AI plan) |
| Engagement analytics | ✅ Per-viewer watch data | ❌ Limited for recordings |
| Free plan | ✅ Up to 25 videos | ✅ 40-min meeting limit |
| Paid starting price | $12.50/mo (Starter) | $13.33/mo (Pro) |
| Best for | Async updates, walkthroughs | Live meetings, webinars |
If you're recording a screen walkthrough of what you built this week, a Loom is objectively better than a Zoom call: the viewer can pause, rewind, and watch at 1.5x speed. They don't need to be there live. A 5-minute Loom replaces a 20-minute status meeting.
Giving feedback on a design, a document, or code is genuinely better async. The creator can watch your face while you react to their work, hear your exact tone, and rewatch the specific 30 seconds where you said "I'd change this part" - all without scheduling a meeting.
Recording a walkthrough of a new feature, a customer onboarding tour, or a how-to explanation is Loom's strongest use case. The analytics tell you exactly where viewers drop off or rewatch - feedback that live sessions can't give you.
Agencies and freelancers love Loom for client updates. Instead of a client call to show a wireframe, record a 4-minute walkthrough. The client watches it at their convenience, shares it with their team, and watches it again when they've forgotten the details. Response time goes from "schedule a call" to "watch and reply via comment."
Any explanation that will be repeated more than once should be a Loom, not a meeting. The new employee can watch it before their first day, reference it again in week 3, and share it with the next hire. One recording does the work of infinite one-on-one onboarding calls.
When you need three people to reach a decision by end of day, live conversation is dramatically more efficient than async debate in Loom comments. The back-and-forth that takes 45 seconds in a Zoom call can take 3 hours via comments and replies.
Debugging a production issue, architecting a system, or workshopping a strategy all benefit from real-time whiteboarding and rapid iteration. The speed of live conversation matters when the problem is complex and you genuinely don't know the solution yet.
Regular one-on-ones, client relationship calls, and team social time are better live. The casual conversation, the pause, the "how are you actually doing" - these things matter for trust, and they don't happen in async video.
Board presentations, investor pitches, and anything where you need to read the room in real time belongs on Zoom. The feedback loop of "are they confused?" "should I slow down here?" is only available live.
| Plan | Loom | Zoom |
|---|---|---|
| Free | 25 videos, 5 min max, no editing | 40-min limit, 100 participants |
| Starter/Pro | $12.50/mo - unlimited videos, AI editing, analytics | $13.33/mo - unlimited meetings, 100 participants, cloud recording |
| Business | $22.50/mo - team features, custom branding | $18.33/mo - 300 participants, extras |
| Annual pricing | Required for the above rates (month-to-month is higher) | Required for the above rates (month-to-month is higher) |
Both cost roughly the same at the individual level. The ROI question is different: Loom's value is measured in meetings you didn't have to schedule. Zoom's value is measured in meetings you can actually have.
Loom has invested heavily in AI editing, which is now one of its strongest differentiators:
Zoom has AI features too (Zoom AI Companion), but they're mostly focused on meeting summaries and live transcription - useful for synchronous meetings, not for async video production.
Here's the honest context for why this comparison matters: the average knowledge worker spends 21 hours per week in meetings, and studies consistently show that 40-50% of those meetings could have been an email or an async video. That's 8-10 hours a week per person, per company, burning in meetings that don't need to be meetings.
The companies that have shifted to "async first" culture (Basecamp, GitLab, Doist, and others) report that the change has been transformational for focused work - not because meetings are bad, but because unnecessary meetings are expensive interruptions to the actual work.
Loom is the tool that enables that shift. Zoom is still essential - just for the 50% of meetings that genuinely require real-time conversation.
Before scheduling a Zoom call, ask:
If any of these point toward "doesn't need to be live," make it a Loom. You'll be surprised how often that's the honest answer.
Zoom for team meetings, client calls, and decisions. Loom for everything else. Budget for both - they're $13/month each. The productivity return justifies it immediately.
The free plan (25 videos, 5-minute max each) is plenty to test whether Loom changes your workflow. Start with one use case: replace your next status update email with a 2-minute Loom. Watch whether people engage more. If it works for you, upgrade to the $12.50/month plan - the unlimited videos and AI editing make it a very different product.
For Zoom, the free tier handles most individual needs. If you hit the 40-minute meeting limit repeatedly, the $13.33/month Pro plan removes it.
For some roles, yes - especially individual contributors who primarily share updates rather than run collaborative working sessions. For most teams, no. Zoom handles the live meeting layer that Loom can't replace.
Very well. Clients receive a link, click to watch, and can leave timestamped comments directly on the video. No account required for the viewer. It's often a more professional experience than a rushed Zoom call.
For most business communication, yes. Loom offers password protection, link expiry, and team-level permissions. For highly regulated industries (finance, healthcare), check Loom's compliance documentation against your specific requirements.
Use Loom for prospecting (personalized video messages convert better than cold emails) and Zoom for demos and close calls. The combination is currently the highest-performing sales outreach formula in many B2B sales teams.