tickin.pro
Comparison

Tickin vs Jibble

Tickin and Jibble both cover attendance and time tracking, but they start from different places. Jibble is a time and attendance app known for a free plan, kiosk clock-in, and facial-recognition and GPS attendance; attendance and time tracking are its focus. Tickin bundles time tracking and attendance together with leave and payroll, and lets teams clock in right from Slack or Microsoft Teams.

In short

Choose Jibble if you want an attendance-first app with kiosk and facial-recognition clock-in and a free plan. Choose Tickin if you want attendance plus leave and payroll in one place, driven from Slack or Teams.

TickinJibble
Best forTeams that want attendance, time tracking, leave, and payroll together, run from Slack or TeamsTeams focused on attendance and time tracking who want kiosk and facial-recognition clock-in
Clock in from Slack / Microsoft TeamsYes, native /hellorimo plus a Teams botVaries, check their site
Attendance: office hours, grace period, late alertsYesAttendance is a core focus; specifics vary, check their site
Leave management (requests & approvals)YesVaries, check their site
Built-in payroll & salary slipsYesVaries, check their site
Kiosk / facial-recognition clock-inNot offeredYes, a known feature
Free planFree plan for up to 10 employeesKnown for a free plan
Activity / screenshot monitoringOptional, off by default (opt-in)Varies, check their site

What Jibble is great at

Jibble is a time and attendance app with a strong reputation for a free plan. Its focus is attendance and time tracking, and it is known for kiosk clock-in, facial recognition, and GPS attendance. If your priority is capturing who is present and when, especially for shift, field, or shared-device settings where a shared kiosk or face check-in makes sense, an attendance-first tool like Jibble is a sensible, proven choice.

Where Tickin is different

Tickin covers attendance too, but extends it across the wider people workflow. Employees clock in and out from Slack, Microsoft Teams, the browser, or an optional desktop app, with attendance rules for office hours, daily working hours, grace periods, late-arrival alerts, and timezone handling. On top of that sit leave requests and approvals and payroll with salary slips and tax presets. Tickin does not offer kiosk or facial-recognition clock-in; instead it verifies location with optional GPS clock-in verification. The goal is fewer separate tools rather than the deepest possible attendance kiosk.

Attendance-first vs all-in-one HR

The core distinction is scope. Jibble concentrates on attendance and time tracking and pairs that with kiosk, facial-recognition, and GPS features and a free plan. Tickin is all-in-one: attendance, leave, and payroll are connected, so hours worked and leave taken feed into salary slips. If you would otherwise stitch together an attendance app, a leave tracker, and payroll, Tickin aims to be one system instead of several. If a shared kiosk or facial-recognition check-in is central to how your team clocks in, note that Tickin does not provide that.

Which should you choose

If attendance is your priority and kiosk, facial-recognition, or GPS clock-in with a free plan matters most, Jibble is a strong fit. If you want to run leave and payroll alongside attendance and time tracking, and you want your team to clock in without leaving Slack or Teams, Tickin is built for that. Tickin verifies location with optional GPS clock-in rather than facial recognition, and its screenshot and activity monitoring is an optional module that is off by default rather than a core, always-on focus, so if kiosk face check-in or continuous invasive monitoring is a requirement, check each product's own site to confirm what they offer.

Frequently asked questions

Is Tickin a direct replacement for Jibble?
It depends on what you need. Both handle attendance and time tracking. Tickin adds leave and payroll on top and lets teams clock in from Slack or Teams, so it can replace Jibble for teams that also want those workflows in one place. If you specifically rely on kiosk or facial-recognition clock-in, note that Tickin does not offer those, so review Jibble's site to compare.
Does Tickin offer kiosk or facial-recognition clock-in like Jibble?
No. Tickin does not offer kiosk or facial-recognition clock-in. Employees clock in from Slack, Microsoft Teams, the browser, or an optional desktop app, and Tickin offers optional GPS clock-in verification to confirm location. Jibble is known for kiosk and facial-recognition clock-in, so check their site if that is important to you.
Does Tickin have a free plan like Jibble?
Tickin offers a free plan for up to 10 employees. Jibble is known for a free plan as well. Because plan details change, check each product's site for the current terms.
Can my team clock in from Slack or Microsoft Teams with Tickin?
Yes. Tickin supports clocking in and out from Slack via the native /hellorimo command, from a Microsoft Teams bot, from the browser, or from an optional desktop app. For Jibble's integrations, check their site.
Does Tickin do screenshot or activity monitoring?
Yes, but it is optional and off by default. Screenshot and activity monitoring is not part of Tickin's core experience; it is an opt-in module an admin can enable per workspace, and it stays off unless you turn it on. Left off, the only activity signal is idle detection on the optional desktop app, alongside optional GPS clock-in verification. Review each product's own documentation for how their monitoring compares.

Competitor capabilities and pricing change often. This page reflects general, publicly known positioning as of July 2026 and Tickin's shipped features; it is not an exhaustive feature audit. Please check each product's own website for the most current details.

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