Two tools built for reunions.
Here is what sets them apart.
Reunacy is the closest thing to an apples-to-apples comparison. Both platforms were designed specifically for reunions. The difference is what exists after the event ends.
| Feature | Reunacy | Grove |
|---|---|---|
| Reunion-specific design | ✓ | ✓ |
| RSVP and payment collection | ✓ | ✓ |
| Event microsite for guests | ✓ | ✓ |
| Budget management | ✓ | ✓ |
| Task and planning tools | ✓ | ✓ |
| Between-event community | - | ✓ |
| Family tree and branch map | - | ✓ |
| Voice stories and elder archive | - | ✓ |
| Youth engagement and Cousin Zone | - | ✓ |
| Post-reunion capsule | - | ✓ |
| Handoff brief for next organizer | - | ✓ |
| Committee video calls with AI notes | - | ✓ |
| Multi-year compounding history | - | ✓ |
Side by side
What Reunacy gives you
- -You are running a one-time or infrequent reunion
- -Your family is not interested in a year-round community
- -You need a simple attendee-facing experience, nothing more
What Grove gives you
- ✓Your family reunites on a regular cycle
- ✓You want the family connected between reunions
- ✓Preserving stories and history matters to your family
- ✓You want the next organizer to have something to work with
- ✓The kids need a reason to care about the reunion
The second reunion is where it shows.
If you are planning a single reunion and need a straightforward tool, Reunacy will get you there. It handles the basics well and has been around longer.
If your family reunites every year or every two years, and you want the data, the stories, the family tree, and the community to carry forward, Grove is the platform that was built for that future. The first reunion is similar. The second reunion is where the difference becomes obvious.
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