Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
SPEQit is a specification and project scope management tool for software project teams. Rather than positioning itself as a traditional task board, it brings mockups, wireframes, design files, requirements, use cases, and user stories into a single online workspace, helping project managers, designers, solution architects, developers, and QA teams build a shared understanding of “what needs to be built.”
Based on the captured text, SPEQit’s core workflow is: teams create designs using the tools they already know, upload them to SPEQit, and then add annotations to provide context that images alone cannot convey. At the same time, they use specification elements such as requirements, use cases, and user stories to describe functional details. Team members can comment directly on designs, processes, user stories, and requirements, and the system sends email notifications to users within the service. It also highlights change impact assessment, helping teams evaluate how new requirements may affect workload and cost.
SPEQit offers a 14-day free trial, and all plans are said to include the full feature set. Pricing ranges from $9/month for SOLO to $199/month for COMPANY, mainly differentiated by the number of active projects, active users, and storage capacity. An Enterprise plan is also available by contacting the company. The text does not mention a long-term free plan, payment methods, API/SDK access, self-hosting, or private deployment, so it appears to be a standard commercial SaaS product.
Its main advantage is a clear focus: it addresses the problem of scattered software specifications and inconsistent understanding between design and development, making it especially suitable for design-driven requirements communication. Its role-based value proposition is also fairly complete: PMs can manage scope, developers can clarify what needs to be implemented, and QA can use the specifications to write tests. The drawbacks are equally clear: there is no visible information about third-party integrations, permission models, version history, export options, auditing, or security and compliance. The support page appears to still be under construction and mainly relies on email. There are also multiple spelling errors across the site, which reduces confidence in the product’s maturity.
SPEQit is better suited to small software teams, freelancers, and project groups in the United States or Canada that need to unify design specifications. One important caveat: its terms clearly state that users must be at least 18 years old and residents of the United States or Canada in order to register for and use the service. This is a substantial limitation for Chinese teams or cross-border teams. The available text does not make it possible to assess accessibility from China, and payment methods are not specified. For use in mainland China, more practical alternatives may include Confluence, Jira, Notion, Figma/FigJam, Miro, Azure DevOps, or localized project collaboration tools.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on speqit.com official site.
speqit.com is an United States Dev Tools provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach speqit.com directly.