If you’re considering moving off Attio, you’re usually a year or two in and hitting one of two walls: the integration ecosystem isn’t as deep as you assumed, or your team has scaled past what Attio’s still-young product roadmap covers. Attio remains the most credible AI-native CRM in 2026 — but it’s not the right fit for every team that adopted it. Here are the alternatives.
HubSpot
The pragmatic step “back” to a CRM with a deeper integration ecosystem and a marketing automation suite. HubSpot is less elegant than Attio but more complete: marketing automation, customer service, and a 1,500+ integration catalog that Attio is still building toward. For teams that need Marketing Hub-shaped capability, this is a real upgrade despite the UX trade-off.
Migrate from Attio to HubSpot when: you’ve hit Attio’s integration ceiling, you need real marketing automation rather than a sequencer, or your team has grown to a point where the broader HubSpot ecosystem matters more than UX elegance.
Don’t migrate when: the complaint is just that “we’re not using AI enough.” Adding HubSpot won’t fix that — bolt Claude or another AI layer onto Attio instead.
Salesforce
The full enterprise migration. This is rarely the right call for teams currently on Attio (the gap is huge), but for teams that adopted Attio early and are now hitting enterprise-shaped problems — multi-business-unit reporting, regulated-industry audit, complex territory management — Salesforce is the destination.
Migrate from Attio to Salesforce when: you’re past 100 reps, you have multiple business units, you’re regulated, or you need Apex-level customization. This is a proper enterprise migration with proper enterprise costs.
Don’t migrate when: any of those conditions are aspirational rather than current. Salesforce-before-you-need-it is a common, expensive mistake.
Stay on Attio when
Your team values UX and AI ergonomics, and the rep adoption is high
You’re a B2B SaaS team under 50 reps with a focused motion
You don’t need Marketing Hub-style automation — a sequencer is enough
The integration ecosystem covers your current stack and you’re tracking what’s coming
For these teams, fix the gap with adjacent tools (Claude on top, Clay for enrichment, Gong for conversations) rather than replacing the CRM.
Verdict
HubSpot is the right migration for ~50% of teams thinking about leaving Attio — the ones that hit a marketing or integration ceiling
Salesforce is right for ~10% — teams that genuinely scaled into enterprise complexity
Staying on Attio is the right answer for ~40% — teams whose complaints are gaps that adjacent tools can fill
The single mistake to avoid: migrating off Attio because of a board member who’s never seen the product. The “is it real” question is settled in 2026.
If you’re considering moving off Attio, you’re usually a year or two in and hitting one of two walls: the integration ecosystem isn’t as deep as you assumed, or your team has scaled past what Attio’s still-young product roadmap covers. Attio remains the most credible AI-native CRM in 2026 — but it’s not the right fit for every team that adopted it. Here are the alternatives.
HubSpot
The pragmatic step “back” to a CRM with a deeper integration ecosystem and a marketing automation suite. HubSpot is less elegant than Attio but more complete: marketing automation, customer service, and a 1,500+ integration catalog that Attio is still building toward. For teams that need Marketing Hub-shaped capability, this is a real upgrade despite the UX trade-off.
Migrate from Attio to HubSpot when: you’ve hit Attio’s integration ceiling, you need real marketing automation rather than a sequencer, or your team has grown to a point where the broader HubSpot ecosystem matters more than UX elegance.
Don’t migrate when: the complaint is just that “we’re not using AI enough.” Adding HubSpot won’t fix that — bolt Claude or another AI layer onto Attio instead.
Salesforce
The full enterprise migration. This is rarely the right call for teams currently on Attio (the gap is huge), but for teams that adopted Attio early and are now hitting enterprise-shaped problems — multi-business-unit reporting, regulated-industry audit, complex territory management — Salesforce is the destination.
Migrate from Attio to Salesforce when: you’re past 100 reps, you have multiple business units, you’re regulated, or you need Apex-level customization. This is a proper enterprise migration with proper enterprise costs.
Don’t migrate when: any of those conditions are aspirational rather than current. Salesforce-before-you-need-it is a common, expensive mistake.
Stay on Attio when
For these teams, fix the gap with adjacent tools (Claude on top, Clay for enrichment, Gong for conversations) rather than replacing the CRM.
Verdict
The single mistake to avoid: migrating off Attio because of a board member who’s never seen the product. The “is it real” question is settled in 2026.