An Honest Review of Pie (2026)
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An Honest Review of Pie (2026)

By Søren  ·  Published 2026

The first thing that caught my attention about Pie was the price: free. Not "free with a premium tier." Not "free trial." Actually, fully, no-catch free. In a space where every app wants $15-40/month, that's unusual enough to investigate.

I downloaded Pie in Chicago and went to my first event. Here's the full rundown.

Chicago skyline

How It Works

Pie shows you a feed of free, in-person events happening near you. DJ sets at coffee shops, art openings, park cleanups, happy hours, fitness classes. You browse, mark the ones you're interested in, and show up. There's no matching algorithm. The social discovery happens through a friend-of-friend graph that builds over time as you attend events and connect with people.

You can also host your own events. And everything is free.

What I Liked

Zero financial barrier

I cannot stress enough how different this feels. With Pie, I opened the app, found a free art show in Logan Square, and walked over. No subscription to justify. No "is this worth $15/month?" mental math. The zero cost means you try things you wouldn't otherwise bother with. I went to a ceramics open house because it was free and right there. It was great. I never would have paid for an app to find it.

The friend-of-friend graph is clever

Pie's social discovery works through a friend-of-friend graph that builds as you attend events and connect with people. It's like how you actually discover things in real life: a friend mentions a cool event, you tag along, you meet their friends. Pie replicates that loop digitally. I can see how after a few events, your feed would start feeling personalized in a way that's organic rather than algorithmic.

Hosting events is simple

You can post your own event in about two minutes. Pie handles the listing, RSVPs, and notifications. If you're the kind of person who likes organizing things, this feature alone makes the app worth downloading.

What I Didn't Like

Four cities is a tiny footprint

Chicago, Austin, Bay Area, and Columbus. That's it. If you're not in one of those four metro areas, Pie is useless to you right now. And because it's a Public Benefit Corporation, the expansion timeline is probably slower than a VC-backed rocket ship.

Event quality varies wildly

Browsing the listings, I could see the range. Some events looked polished and well-organized. Others were just someone posting "hanging out at the park, come through." There's no curation, so you have to use your own judgment about what's worth showing up to.

No matching means no guaranteed connections

Pie gets you to events. It doesn't guarantee you'll meet anyone. You still have to walk up to people and introduce yourself. If you're an introvert who finds that hard, the structured apps like Mesh or Timeleft where you're assigned a group are going to work better.

The Verdict

Pie is the most generous social app I've tried. Everything is free. The event discovery is solid. The friend-of-friend graph is smart. The limitation is geographic reach and the fact that it requires more initiative than structured apps. If you're in a supported city and you're the kind of person who will actually show up to things, Pie is a no-brainer download. It costs you nothing to find out.

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