Key Takeaways
Your help center is out of date the moment you finish writing it. A feature ships, the screenshots go stale, three tickets come in asking the same question, and nobody has time to write the article that would have deflected them. So you go shopping for a knowledge base tool, and the choice feels rigged from the start.
On one side sits Document360, powerful and expensive, where one reviewer warns you now have to "book a Zoom just to cancel." On the other sits HelpKit, cheap and pretty, where the pitch is "great tool, if you already live in Notion."
Both leave you doing the one thing you wanted to stop doing: writing every article yourself.
This comparison breaks down Document360 vs HelpKit vs Helply on real pricing, AI features, and what rusers report, so you can pick the right knowledge base software without sitting through a sales demo.
Each tool wins on something, and this guide is clear about where, and about where Helply pulls ahead of both.
Choose Document360 if you need enterprise governance, like version control, approval workflows, and SSO, and can accept hidden pricing and a heavier editor.
Choose HelpKit if your team already runs on Notion and wants a cheap, attractive help center it will maintain by hand.
Choose Helply if you want AI to write and maintain the docs on a free support platform, and turn the same tickets into revenue.
| Document360 | HelpKit | Helply | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best for | Enterprise teams needing governance | Notion users wanting a cheap help center | Teams that want AI to create and maintain docs |
| AI content creation | Writing assistant (you still drive) | None, answers only | Full: AI Recorder plus auto-drafts from tickets |
| Finds and fills knowledge gaps | No | No | Yes, automatic gap detection |
| Video tutorials | Screen capture add-on | No | Yes, from screen recordings |
| Requires Notion | No | Yes, hard requirement | No |
| Helpdesk built in | Integrations only | None, embeds chat | Yes, free |
| Starting price | Quote only, no free tier | $15/mo per site, plus $49/mo AI | Free helpdesk, pay per AI outcome |
Document360, built by Kovai.co, is a structured documentation platform aimed at mid-market and enterprise teams.
It is a dedicated system for building public and private knowledge bases, with the kind of versioning, permissions, and compliance that large organizations require.
If your buyer is an IT or CX leader in a regulated industry, this is the tool built for them.
Document360 no longer publishes prices. As of 2026, the Document360 pricing page is a quote-only configurator, there is no free tier (only a 14-day trial), and every quote scales by editors, projects, languages, SSO, and AI usage.
Several reviewers on legacy plans report renewals that "nearly doubled." Expect a sales conversation before you see a number.
Document360 holds 4.7 on G2 across 524 reviews and 4.7 on Capterra across 292, but only 2.2 on Trustpilot.
For a team that has outgrown a wiki, Document360 wins on almost everything HelpKit cannot touch.
It gives you real version control, approval workflows, and audit logs, so a compliance-minded team can prove who changed what and when.
It scales to 50-plus languages and multiple projects, where HelpKit tops out at low seat counts and a handful of languages. It has SSO, SCIM, and granular permissions, while HelpKit offers little more than password protection.
And it is a standalone system, so it does not fall over the day your Notion workspace has a bad sync. If governance is the deciding factor, Document360 is the safer tool.
Best for: large, regulated teams that need heavy governance and have the budget and patience for enterprise procurement.
Where Helply Beats Document360
Document360's whole case rests on two claims: enterprise structure, and AI that helps you write. Helply answers both, then goes past them.
Start with the AI. Document360's Eddy Writing Agent still waits for you to feed it a prompt, a video, or a topic. You decide what to write. Helply works the other direction. Its knowledge gap detection reads your support tickets and flags which articles are missing or stale.
It then drafts them for you, at $0.50 per gap identified and $2.99 per finished article. Helply builds the documentation from the questions your customers already asked, instead of waiting for you to write it.
Then the governance argument. Helply is SOC 2 Type II across the platform, and SSO, SAML, and SCIM ship on its Enterprise tier, so Document360's compliance is not a differentiator.
The pricing contrast is sharper. Document360 hides every number behind a quote, even the base plan, and makes cancellation a negotiation. Helply's support platform is free and transparent, and only its custom Enterprise tier involves a sales conversation.
The bigger gap is scope. Document360 is a documentation silo that connects to your support through integrations.
Helply is the support platform, so it mines the same tickets behind your docs for churn and upsell signals at $2.99 each, routed to the CSM or AE who owns the account. Document360 can make your help center smarter. It cannot turn support into pipeline.
See your support tickets turn into finished help articles.
HelpKit, built by solo founder Dominik Sobe, turns a Notion workspace into a hosted, branded help center. You write in Notion, and HelpKit publishes a fast, good-looking site with a custom domain.
For a small team already living in Notion, it removes the need to learn a new content system. That is the entire appeal, and for the right team it is a strong one.
HelpKit charges per site, billed annually:
The HelpKit AI chatbot is a separate $49 per month add-on. There is a seven-day trial and no free-forever tier, and running multiple knowledge bases requires custom pricing.
Note that older "$99 for 10 seats" figures floating around are stale; current seats are 1, 3, and 5 by tier.
Ratings are strong but thin. HelpKit holds 5.0 on G2 across 11 reviews and 5.0 on Product Hunt across 9. That is a small, self-selected sample, so read it as "loved by its early users," not as a broad verdict.
For a small team, HelpKit wins on the things Document360 makes painful. Pricing is public and cheap: you can start at $15 a month and know exactly what you owe, with no sales call and no surprise renewal.
Setup is measured in minutes, not an implementation project, because your team writes in Notion instead of learning a new editor.
There are no callout bugs or long-document lag to fight, and cancelling does not require a Zoom meeting.
For a startup that wants a clean help center this week, HelpKit is the simpler, cheaper choice.
Best for: Notion-native startups and small teams that want a cheap, elegant help center and are content to write and maintain every article themselves.
Where Helply Beats HelpKit
HelpKit's pitch is cheap, fast, and familiar. The catch is that all three depend on you doing the writing, forever, inside one tool you do not control.
HelpKit AI is a $49 per month chatbot layered over a knowledge base you still write yourself, article by article.
Helply inverts that. Its AI Recorder captures a screen walkthrough and produces a step-by-step article with screenshots and a video at $2.99, and Article Creation drafts new pieces from recurring tickets at the same price. HelpKit gives you a bot on top of manual docs. Helply writes the docs.
Then the Notion dependency, a single point of failure. When Notion has a bad sync or a teammate edits a property, the help center can break. Helply has its own block editor plus imports from Zendesk, Intercom, and Notion, so a Notion glitch cannot take your help center down.
Now the cost math, because "cheap" only holds until you need real support. HelpKit is documentation only, so a growing team bolts on Intercom or Crisp to talk to customers, which adds tools and spend.
Helply's full support platform is free across every channel from email to Slack, and you pay only for AI outcomes on top. The small, lean team HelpKit targets is the one that gains most from AI writing the articles and a free inbox to handle them. That same AI also resolves tickets.
Helply is an AI-native B2B support platform, and its knowledge base is one part of a larger system. That framing matters for this comparison.
Where Document360 and HelpKit are documentation tools, Helply treats every support conversation as fuel: the same AI that reads a ticket can resolve it, draft a reply, write the help article that prevents the next one, and flag a churn risk hiding in the message.
For a knowledge base buyer, that means you no longer hand-write the docs; they come out of the support work your team already does. The comparison is lopsided: Helply keeps its knowledge base current for you, while Document360 and HelpKit leave that work to you.
Helply's support platform is free forever, with unlimited seats, every channel, ticketing, and the knowledge base included at no cost.
You pay only when AI delivers an outcome, and each outcome is priced on its own.
For knowledge base work, that means;
On the support side;
Spending caps are built in, so costs stay predictable. See the full model on the outcome pricing page.
Helply is Best for
Technical B2B software teams, from upper-end SMB through mid-market, that want AI to build and maintain their help center, keep it connected to live support, and surface revenue signals from the same tickets.
The sweet spot is teams from $1M to $50M ARR running up to around 100 agents.
Once you strip away the feature lists, three questions decide this category.
Answer those three questions and the pick is clear.
For most B2B software teams, Helply is the strongest choice, because it does the work the other two hand back to you. It writes documentation from your tickets and recordings, repairs its own gaps, and runs on a free support platform that also turns those conversations into revenue signals.
Document360 remains the right call for large, regulated organizations that need deep governance and can navigate enterprise procurement.
HelpKit stays a smart, low-cost pick for Notion-native teams that only need a simple, attractive help center. The difference is who does the writing, and with Helply, the answer is the AI.
Stop writing help articles by hand and let AI build your knowledge base from tickets you have already answered.
No, Document360 discontinued its free tier and no longer publishes pricing, so you must request a quote before seeing any number.
Yes, HelpKit is fully dependent on Notion as its content source, so it is unusable without a Notion workspace.
Helply can. It drafts articles from your recurring tickets and turns a single screen recording into a finished guide, while Document360 and HelpKit still leave the writing to you.
Only Helply offers a real free tier, with a full helpdesk and knowledge base free forever and charges applied only when AI delivers an outcome.
HelpKit's AI chatbot is a $49 per month add-on that answers questions only from the articles in your Notion knowledge base.
Helply is the strongest fit for a small B2B team that wants its docs written and kept current automatically, while HelpKit fits a team already on Notion that only needs to publish.