JusTalk - Video Chat & Calls

JusTalk gets a lot right for casual face-to-face calls between friends and family, but the experience hits walls fast. Group calls cap at 50 people, work meetings feel out of place in an app built around emoji reactions and stickers, and the “private messenger” pitch holds up less well once you read the fine print on what actually stays encrypted. The seven JusTalk alternatives below cover the three reasons most people switch: better privacy, better meetings, or better community video.

This list is for anyone who likes the simple call-someone idea of JusTalk but needs more than what a personal video chat app can do. Some picks are stricter on privacy. Others scale to hundreds of participants. A couple are built for friends who want to hang out for hours, not just say hi.

Quick comparison

AppBest forFree planPaid starting priceStandout feature
SignalPrivate one-to-one and small group callsFully freeNoneAudited end-to-end encryption on every call
WhatsAppReaching the most contacts alreadyFully freeNoneTwo billion users, no account hunting needed
TelegramBig group video roomsFully freeAbout $5/mo for PremiumUp to 1,000 viewers in a group video call
Jitsi MeetOpen-source meetings without accountsFully freeSelf-host for freeShare a link, no sign-up for anyone
Google MeetMeetings tied to a calendar60-minute group cap$7.99/mo with Workspace IndividualLive captions in 30+ languages
ZoomWebinars and structured calls40-minute group cap$13.33/mo ProBreakout rooms and polls built in
DiscordLong hangouts with friends and small communitiesFully free$9.99/mo NitroPersistent voice rooms with screen share

Why people switch away from JusTalk

JusTalk earns its high rating from the casual-call audience, but three complaints come up again and again on Reddit and in Play Store reviews.

The first is the privacy gap. JusTalk Standard, the free version, advertises encryption but is not end-to-end encrypted by default in the way Signal or WhatsApp are. Sensitive conversations belong on an app where the encryption claim is audited, not marketed. The paid JusTalk 2nd Phone tier improves this, but free users do not get the same guarantee.

The second is the meeting ceiling. Group calls cap at 50 participants. That’s fine for family reunions, but a school PTA, a small church, or a remote team standup quickly grows past the limit. JusTalk has no breakout rooms, no scheduled meetings, no waiting room moderation.

The third is ads. The free tier shows ads, and several long-time users say the ad load has grown over the past year. For an app marketed as “free messaging for the family,” that interruption keeps surfacing in reviews.

The alternatives

Signal — Best for genuinely private calls

Signal is the privacy default. Every voice call, video call, and message uses end-to-end encryption with the Signal Protocol, which has been independently audited and is the same protocol WhatsApp licenses for its own encryption. Group video calls support up to 50 participants, the same cap as JusTalk, but the protocol guarantees are real and verifiable.

Where it falls short: No big-room meeting features, no webinar mode, no breakout rooms. Group call quality holds up well for under a dozen, but Signal is not the right tool for a 40-person standup.

Pricing:

Migrating from JusTalk: Signal can import device contacts, the same way JusTalk does. There is no chat history import from JusTalk. You will need to rebuild groups, and only contacts who also install Signal will appear as callable.

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Bottom line: Pick Signal if private calls are the only thing you care about and you are happy capping at 50 people.

WhatsApp — Best for reaching contacts who don’t install new apps

WhatsApp is the default messaging app in most countries outside the US, which means the friction of “everyone needs to install this” already vanished a decade ago. Group video supports up to 32 people, and one-to-one video runs over the same Signal-licensed encryption Signal itself uses. Quality on weak connections is some of the best in the category.

Where it falls short: Meta owns it. Even with encrypted message contents, the metadata about who you talk to and when is visible to the company. Group sizes also lag Signal and Telegram for video.

Pricing:

Migrating from JusTalk: No chat import path from JusTalk exists. Contacts that already use WhatsApp appear automatically once you grant the permission. Plan on rebuilding group chats by hand.

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Bottom line: Pick WhatsApp if your contacts already use it and you want decent encryption without convincing anyone to install something new.

Telegram — Best for big group video rooms

Telegram group video calls scale to 1,000 viewers with up to 30 active video streams at once, which beats almost every other consumer app. The voice-chat-with-video setup works well for a community livestream, a class, or a meetup. Stickers and reactions feel similar to JusTalk’s playful side, but the room sizes are an order of magnitude larger.

Where it falls short: Default chats are not end-to-end encrypted, only Secret Chats are, and Secret Chats do not support group video. If end-to-end encryption is your reason for leaving JusTalk, Telegram is not the upgrade.

Pricing:

Migrating from JusTalk: No data import. Telegram syncs from your phone contacts list. Building a 1,000-person community will take effort, but the room itself spins up in seconds.

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Bottom line: Pick Telegram for the giant group, but not for the encryption.

Jitsi Meet — Best open-source pick that needs no account

Jitsi Meet is the open-source meeting tool the privacy crowd quietly relies on. Anyone can start a call by sharing a link, no sign-up, no account, no app required if the other side joins on the web. Meetings are end-to-end encrypted when every participant uses a supported client. The Android app uses the same code as the desktop and web versions.

Where it falls short: The free hosted version (meet.jit.si) shares infrastructure with everyone else, so peak-hour call quality varies. Serious users self-host on a $5/month VPS, which works but is not for everyone.

Pricing:

Migrating from JusTalk: Jitsi has no contact list. Calls happen by URL, so the migration is closer to “send people the link” than a traditional app switch.

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Bottom line: Pick Jitsi Meet if you want a free, open-source video tool and don’t mind sending links instead of dialing contacts.

Google Meet — Best for calls that need to live on a calendar

Google Meet is the right answer when a meeting needs a calendar invite, a recording, captions, and a one-click join from a notification. The Android app supports live captions in over 30 languages, hand-raising, breakout rooms (on paid plans), and joining by dial-in for participants without internet. Tight Gmail and Calendar integration is the real draw.

Where it falls short: The free tier limits group calls to 60 minutes, which is fine for a quick standup but not for a workshop. Many privacy-focused alternatives feel less corporate.

Pricing:

Migrating from JusTalk: Meet pulls contacts from a Google account. There is no JusTalk import. Calendar invites become the new “call list.”

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Bottom line: Pick Google Meet if your calls live next to a Google Calendar, and ignore it otherwise.

Zoom — Best for structured meetings, webinars and workshops

Zoom still owns the structured-meeting space. Breakout rooms, polls, registration, recording, transcripts, virtual backgrounds, and webinar mode all work the way meeting organizers expect. The Android app is a competent client on its own, not the afterthought it once was.

Where it falls short: The 40-minute cap on free group calls is the constant pinch point. Free users on long calls have to drop and re-join, which kills the rhythm. Zoom also still gets flagged for past security stumbles, though the platform has improved since 2020.

Pricing:

Migrating from JusTalk: No data import. Schedule a recurring meeting once and share the link with the people who used to call you on JusTalk.

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Bottom line: Pick Zoom for serious meetings and webinars. Skip it for casual calls with the people you’d otherwise text.

Discord — Best for long hangouts and small communities

Discord treats voice and video as a hangout, not a meeting. Persistent voice rooms sit inside a server, friends drop in and out, and video plus screen share work in the same room. Stage channels handle audio events with up to 1,000 listeners. For a friend group that wants to play games and chat for an evening, Discord beats every traditional video calling app.

Where it falls short: Setting up the first server feels like configuring software, not opening a contacts list. Calls go through Discord’s servers and are not end-to-end encrypted, so the privacy story is weaker than Signal or WhatsApp.

Pricing:

Migrating from JusTalk: No import path. The pattern is “create a server, invite the people,” which lands closer to a chat platform than a phone book.

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Bottom line: Pick Discord if your calls last hours and you want a hangout, not a meeting.

How to choose

Three quick decisions sort most of this list.

Pick Signal if private calls are the actual reason you’re leaving JusTalk. Nothing else on this list matches its audited encryption story for the free tier.

Pick WhatsApp if convincing people to install another app is the real obstacle. Two billion users means most contacts already have it.

Pick Telegram if the group needs to be larger than 50 people and you don’t need end-to-end encryption.

Pick Jitsi Meet if you want open-source, no-account meetings and don’t mind variable quality on the free hosted server.

Pick Google Meet or Zoom for work. Google Meet wins if your calendar lives in Google. Zoom wins if you run training sessions, panels, or anything that needs breakout rooms.

Pick Discord if your idea of a video call is a six-hour hangout with friends. None of the meeting apps will feel right for that.

Stay on JusTalk if your calling needs are a small family group, you like the playful sticker layer, and the ads on the free tier don’t bother you.

FAQ

Is Signal better than JusTalk for video calls?

For privacy, yes. Signal’s encryption is end-to-end on every call and has been independently audited. JusTalk’s free tier does not meet the same standard. For call quality and group features, the two are close at small sizes.

What is the best free JusTalk alternative?

For a like-for-like swap, Signal. For larger groups, Telegram. For no-account meetings, Jitsi Meet. All three are free with no participant time cap and no ads inside calls.

Can I import my JusTalk chat history into another app?

Not directly. None of the alternatives on this list offer a JusTalk import path. The closest workaround is exporting individual conversations as text from JusTalk and saving them outside the new app.

Why are JusTalk free calls limited?

JusTalk’s free tier funds itself through ads and through the paid 2nd Phone subscription. The 50-person group cap exists across all tiers and is a product decision, not a free-tier limit.

Is JusTalk safe and private?

Calls are encrypted in transit, but the free Standard version is not end-to-end encrypted in the way Signal or WhatsApp are. Anyone whose threat model rules out the service operator reading metadata or potentially keys should pick Signal instead.

What do people use instead of JusTalk for family video calls?

WhatsApp and Signal cover most of the family use case. WhatsApp wins on contact reach in most countries. Signal wins on privacy. Both are free with no ads.