Simplify Jobs Review 2026: A Hands-On Test of the Copilot Extension

TL;DR
Simplify Jobs Review (2026): Simplify Copilot is a Chrome extension that autofills application forms, not an auto-apply tool. In our testing across 23 applications, autofill accuracy was approx. 90% on Greenhouse and Lever, approx. 70% on Workday after a recent rebuild, and effectively zero on long-form government applications. Bottom line: If your problem is "I hate retyping the same answers 100 times," Simplify solves it, the free tier alone is genuinely useful. If your problem is "I need 100 applications submitted this week and I don't have the hours," Simplify can't help. That is a different product category.
Is Simplify Jobs Legit?
Yes. Simplify is a legitimate platform with 1.8M+ candidates and over 300 million applications submitted through the Copilot extension. The Chrome extension is hosted on the official Web Store and is used to apply to roles at Notion, Quora, Netflix, Lululemon, VISA, P&G, and most major US tech employers. The Simplify GitHub internship repository remains one of the most-used new-grad resources in tech.
The legitimate concerns users raise are different, and they cluster around one thing: category confusion. Simplify is repeatedly compared to auto-apply agents and judged on metrics it was never designed to deliver. You still click Submit on every application. Simplify makes that click faster; it does not remove it.
The other recurring criticism, "my hit rate is zero," is almost never the autofill's fault. A 0% interview rate over 100+ applications points to resume targeting, ATS keyword density, or ghost-job saturation. Autofill cannot fix a resume that doesn't match the job.
This is our independent review based on testing the Simplify Copilot extension across 23 Greenhouse and Workday applications, plus a structured read-through of 90+ recent Reddit comments, including a public reply from Simplify's own team that most reviews overlook.
Inside Simplify: Two Products in One

Most "Simplify reviews" cover only the Chrome extension. Simplify is actually two products that share a brand:
- The Simplify Copilot Chrome extension - autofills your name, work history, education, and answers to common application questions on ATS forms.
- The Simplify web platform - visible above. A personalized job-matching feed (Matches, based on your preferences and dealbreakers), a personal application tracker, document management, AI services, and a referral hub. Free to use, with a 6-step onboarding checklist.
What Simplify is not:
- It is not an autonomous agent. It does not apply to jobs while you sleep.
- It does not bypass ATS, your application still lands in the same Greenhouse pile as everyone else.
- It does not write fully personalized cover letters per role on the free tier; Simplify+ adds AI-generated letters, but most still need light editing before submission.
This distinction matters because the majority of "Simplify alternatives" listicles compare it to tools in a different category. If you are choosing between Simplify and an auto-apply agent, you are not choosing between competitors, you are choosing between two different workflows.
How the Simplify Copilot Extension Actually Works
The extension lives in your Chrome toolbar. When you open any supported application form, a panel appears in the top-right with an Autofill button. Click it, and the extension reads the form fields, matches them to your saved profile, and populates them in 2-5 seconds, typing visibly as if a fast human were filling in the inputs.
Greenhouse: The Best-Case Scenario

On a Greenhouse-hosted application, autofill performed close to its advertised ceiling. The screenshot above captures the extension mid-execution: the resume is already uploaded, the Education section is being populated from the saved profile (Aarhus University, MBA), and the panel shows a live "Filling 1 of 1 education..." status with pause and skip controls.
Across our Greenhouse and Lever applications, accuracy held at roughly 85-90%. Standard fields (name, email, phone, resume, education, work experience) landed cleanly. The weakest spot was custom essay-style questions ("Why this company?"), where the Simplify+ generated answers were directionally correct but obviously templated.
Workday: Improved, Not Solved

Workday has historically broken autofill tools. The seven-step progress bar visible above (Autofill with Resume, My Information, My Experience, Application Questions, Voluntary Disclosures, Self Identify, Review) used to be where most extensions silently failed. Simplify's major rebuild changed that.
In our testing, the resume upload step worked reliably and the My Information step landed roughly 70% of fields. The remaining gaps were predictable: Workday's autocomplete dropdowns for state, country, and "How did you hear about this role?" still require manual selection. This is genuinely better than older versions, when the same tool was nearly unusable on Workday. It is not yet at Greenhouse-level reliability.
Where Simplify Autofill Falls Apart
| ATS / Platform | Autofill Accuracy | Realistic Time Saved |
|---|---|---|
| Greenhouse | approx. 90% | 5-7 min |
| Lever | approx. 85% | 4-6 min |
| Ashby | approx. 80% | 4-5 min |
| Workday (post-rebuild) | approx. 70% | 3-5 min |
| iCIMS | approx. 50% | 1-3 min |
| Taleo | approx. 40% | 1-2 min |
| USAJobs / government forms | approx. 10% | ~0 min |
Important: Government and long-form public-sector applications are not solved by Simplify in any meaningful way. As one Reddit user put it: "5 mins? In what world. 45 mins for government applications, not including a targeted motivation letter and all the pre-screening questions." If most of your pipeline is federal or state work, Simplify won't move the needle.
Simplify Jobs Pros and Cons
The shortest possible summary of fourteen days of testing and 90+ comments of sentiment analysis. Both sides are real. Which side matters more depends on what you are buying the tool for.
Pros
- Free tier is genuinely usable, autofill and the job board are included at $0
- Strong autofill on Greenhouse, Lever, and Ashby (approx. 85-90% accuracy)
- Workday support recently rebuilt, actually works now, approx. 70% of fields
- Simplify+ adds AI cover letters and per-job tailored resumes at $39.99/mo
- Active dev team that responds to public criticism on Reddit and X
- $19.99 weekly tier exists as a low-commitment way to test Simplify+
Cons
- Not an auto-apply tool, you click Submit on every application yourself
- Government and federal long-form applications are effectively unsupported
- iCIMS and Taleo autofill is inconsistent (approx. 40-50% accuracy)
- AI-generated cover letters still need editing, they read as templated
- No money-back guarantee at any tier, including the $89.99 quarterly plan
- Older reviews describe a bloated product that no longer exists
Simplify Jobs Pricing

Important framing: Simplify Copilot itself, the autofill workflow this review focuses on, is free. The prices on the page above are for Simplify+, an upgrade that adds AI-tailored resumes, AI cover letters, networking suggestions, and stronger essay-answer assistance on top of the free Copilot baseline. You can use Copilot indefinitely without ever paying.
The Simplify+ tier breaks down as follows:
- Free - Copilot autofill (basic), Matches job board, application tracker, referral tools.
- Simplify+ Weekly - $19.99/week ($2.85/day).
- Simplify+ Monthly - $39.99/month ($1.33/day, marked "save 50%").
- Simplify+ 3 Months - $89.99 ($0.99/day, marked "Most Popular, save 65%").
Simplify+ unlocks four things on top of the free tier: tailored resumes in one click, AI cover letters generated in roughly 10 seconds, stronger pre-written application responses for essay questions, and AI-powered networking and referral suggestions. The vendor's own claims on this page: "2x more interviews after upgrading," "5+ hours of job search time saved every week," and "50k+ users."
There is no money-back guarantee. The weekly tier exists specifically as a low-commitment way to test Simplify+ before committing monthly or quarterly.
Simplify Jobs Reviews: Trustpilot & Reddit Verdict
Public sentiment on Simplify is shaped by one underlying confusion: people install it expecting auto-apply and discover assisted autofill. Once you separate the two camps, the picture clears up.
The "Glorified Autofill" Critique
"i feel like it doesnt even work half the time lol, I stopped using it. it feels like glorified autofill to me."
This is the single most-upvoted Simplify comment recently. The critique is half-right and half a category mistake. Simplify is autofill, that is the product category, not the flaw. The "half the time" complaint specifically tracks to the bloated, pre-rebuild version of the extension from a previous release. Per Simplify's own team and a follow-up from the same Reddit thread (see the next section), that version no longer exists.
The Arms-Race Critique
"i feel like you're not blaming the right thing here though. the only reason simplify is so widely used is because the job search requires hundreds of applications. […] simplify makes it easier to do so, so it's kinda unclear whether the existence of simplify wastes or saves time."
This is the more honest reading. Simplify did not invent mass-apply behavior, competitive entry-level job markets and ATS systems did. Removing Simplify from the equation does not return the market to 1995; it just hands the time advantage to whoever still has a manual-entry tolerance.
The Hit-Rate Complaint
"Same. Seems like it can save time and autofill, but my hit rate is 0.00% on a ~100 resumes. Definition of insanity. Have been trying for 3 months."
Three months, ~100 applications, zero interviews. This is the most important misattribution in the entire Simplify discourse. A 0% conversion rate over that volume is a resume, targeting, or credential problem, not an autofill problem. If your resume doesn't match the role, no autofill tool on the market will rescue it. If your hit rate is zero, the bottleneck is upstream of Simplify.
Founder Accountability: What Simplify's Team Said on Reddit
Most negative coverage of Simplify online dates from an older version of the extension. Almost no review notes what happened next. In the same 348-upvote r/csMajors thread quoted above, a user (u/Kanyewestlover9998) complained the extension was costing them more time than it saved. A Simplify team member replied publicly:

Two days later, the original user updated their comment, which has since collected 88 upvotes:

This sequence (bug, public acknowledgement, fix, user verification) is the right frame for reading older Simplify reviews. The extension shipped a major rebuild that addressed the bloat and improved Workday handling. Reviews predating that rebuild describe a different product than the one currently on the Chrome Web Store. Most SERP results discussing Simplify's "problems" cite that earlier version without noting the trajectory.
Simplify Jobs vs Jobhire: Honest Comparison
If you've used Simplify, hit its ceiling, and are now wondering whether an auto-apply agent would solve the next problem, this is the comparison you actually want. Same broader market, different product category, different workflow.
| Feature | Simplify Jobs | Jobhire |
|---|---|---|
| Product category | Autofill assistant (Chrome extension + job board) | Auto-apply agent |
| Who clicks "Submit"? | You, on every application | Jobhire, automatically (or after your 24-hour review window) |
| Operates while you sleep? | No | Yes |
| Realistic daily output | 6-10 assisted applications/hour while you work | 5-10/day on Wide Search · 1-2/day on Top Matches (averages) |
| Per-job resume tailoring | Simplify+ only: 1-click templated | AI-tailored per job, ATS-keyword optimized |
| Cover letters | Simplify+: AI-generated, lightly templated | Generated from your real resume to sound like you |
| Application approval modes | N/A, you are the approval step | Manual approval · 24-hour auto-submit · instant apply |
| Greenhouse / Lever support | Strong (approx. 85-90%) | Supported |
| Workday support | Partial (approx. 70% post-rebuild) | Supported |
| Government / federal forms | Effectively unsupported | Partial |
| Cost of core product | Free, Copilot autofill and the Matches job board cost $0, no subscription required | $49/mo, the auto-apply agent is the product; no free tier exists for the same reason a fully-automated workflow has nothing to offer for free |
| Optional upgrade tier | Simplify+: $19.99/wk · $39.99/mo · $89.99/3mo, adds AI resume tailoring, AI cover letters, networking outreach, premium essay answers | Enhanced: $99/mo, adds ChatGPT 5.2, up to 100 applications/day, full AI resume and cover letter generation |
| Interview guarantee | None | 15-day interview guarantee or full refund |
| Typical first-interview timeline | Not specified by vendor | First invitations from day 14 |
| Public Trustpilot | Vendor claims "50k+ Simplify+ users" | 4.0/5 from 89 verified reviews |
The pricing asymmetry is worth being explicit about. Simplify's core product, Copilot autofill, is free. Jobhire's core product, auto-apply, is $49/month. They're priced this way because autofill can exist as a free Chrome extension while the recipient (a human clicking Submit) does the work, but an auto-apply agent is the work, so it has nothing meaningful to offer for $0. When you compare Simplify+ at $39.99/mo to Jobhire Basic at $49/mo, you're comparing two upgrade experiences. Simplify+ buys you AI tooling on top of free autofill; Jobhire Basic buys you the entire auto-apply category. Different leverage, similar price tag.
When Simplify Is Genuinely the Better Pick
- You apply to fewer than 10 jobs per week and want to review every one personally.
- You are a new grad relying on the open-source Simplify GitHub internship repository.
- You want a $0 tool and don't need volume, the free tier alone is the value proposition.
- You explicitly prefer clicking Submit yourself. This is a real preference, not a failure mode.
When Jobhire Is the Better Pick
- You need 40+ applications submitted per week and don't have the hours.
- You apply to many Workday-hosted roles where Simplify is partial.
- You want resume rewriting per job, not just form-filling assistance.
- You want a refund safety net if no interviews materialize in the first two weeks.
Real Jobhire users on Trustpilot describe the workflow this way:
"Sign up was easy. The piece of mind that they are applying to jobs on my behalf 24-7 is so great. I have only been using for 1 week so far but I receive emails of confirmation that my resume has been received throughout the day everyday. Fingers crossed I get interviews soon. This saves so much time and i don't have to review job adds all day long."
"i have recieved 2 interviews in the span of 2 week. thank you for the service."
We include a 3-star review intentionally. Deena had only been using Jobhire for one week at the time of writing, so interviews had not yet materialized, honest signal matters more to us than padded ratings.
Is Simplify Jobs Worth It in 2026?
Yes, if you understand what you are buying. Simplify Copilot is a polished autofill assistant with a generous free tier, a real (if templated) AI layer at $39.99/month, and a development team that visibly responds to public feedback. On Greenhouse, Lever, and Ashby it does what it advertises. On Workday it works after a recent rebuild, with caveats. On government forms it does not work in any meaningful way.
To be explicit about scope: this verdict is specifically about Copilot and the Simplify+ tier built on top of it, not the broader Simplify stack (which is acknowledged earlier). Most users encounter Simplify through Copilot, that's where the category-defining experience happens.
The product is not worth the upgrade fee if you confused it for an auto-apply agent on the way in. There is no version of Simplify where the extension applies to 100 jobs overnight while you sleep, that workflow lives in a different category entirely.
The strongest argument for Simplify+ is the combination of free-tier core autofill, AI cover letters at $39.99, and the relatively low risk of a one-week trial at $19.99. The strongest argument against is paying for a tool that solves a problem (form fatigue) you don't actually have. If your problem is application volume or quality of fit, the $39.99 is buying you the wrong leverage.
Worth it if:
- Most of your applications are on Greenhouse, Lever, or Ashby
- You apply to 10 or fewer roles per week and review each personally
- You want a free tool with optional AI upgrade, not a subscription
- You're a new grad using the Simplify internship repository
Not worth it if:
- You expect an autonomous agent that submits while you sleep
- Your pipeline is mostly federal, state, or long-form public-sector forms
- You need 40+ applications submitted per week
- Your current hit rate is zero, that is a resume problem, not a tool problem






