Many companies evaluating customer or partner portals end up comparing HubSpot Portals and Salesforce Experience Cloud Experience Cloud as though they are direct competitors. In practice, they tend to work best for very different use cases.
We support both platforms and have found that the right choice usually depends less on “which platform is better” and more on what the business is actually trying to accomplish operationally.
Salesforce Experience Cloud: highly customizable external business applications
Salesforce Experience Cloud is extremely flexible and can support very large external user bases. We currently support an Experience Cloud implementation for approximately 300,000 external users for Independent Insurance Agents & Brokers of America.
The biggest advantage of Experience Cloud is customization.
Organizations can:
- fully customize branding and user experience
- build complex business processes using Lightning Web Components
- implement sophisticated permissions and sharing models
- support large-scale partner or customer ecosystems
- integrate external systems through SSO and custom APIs
We’ve implemented SSO integrations between Experience Cloud and systems including WordPress, Zoom and other custom applications.
In many ways, Experience Cloud becomes less of a “portal” and more of an external operational platform connected directly to Salesforce data and workflows.
That flexibility is incredibly powerful, especially when:
- external users need access to multiple related business processes
- permissions become complex
- custom workflows are required
- the portal itself becomes part of day-to-day operations
However, that flexibility also creates complexity.
Experience Cloud projects require:
- more planning
- more governance
- more technical oversight
- and typically more ongoing maintenance
Just because Salesforce allows you to build a highly sophisticated Experience Cloud site does not necessarily mean you should.
HubSpot Portals: simpler, faster customer access
HubSpot portals solve a different type of problem.
They are much less customizable than Experience Cloud, but they are also significantly faster to implement and easier for internal teams to manage without technical resources.
We’ve supported several HubSpot Knowledge Base and Support Portal rollouts focused on:
- customer self-service
- ticket submission
- ticket tracking
- knowledge article access
HubSpot portals work especially well for support organizations that want customers to:
- quickly find help documentation
- open support tickets
- monitor ticket progress
- access onboarding or training content
For many businesses, this level of functionality is exactly what is needed.
Another advantage is operational simplicity. Internal teams can often:
- manage branding
- create pages
- publish content
- and maintain the portal
without relying heavily on developers or CRM consultants.
The tradeoff is flexibility. While HubSpot portals are excellent for streamlined customer support and content access, they are not designed for the same level of complex workflow customization or external operational processes that Salesforce Experience Cloud supports.
Different platforms for different operational goals
In practice, these platforms are often solving completely different business problems.
HubSpot portals are purpose-built for relatively focused customer interactions such as support, onboarding and content access. Experience Cloud supports a much broader range of external operational workflows and highly customized user experiences.
Neither approach is universally “better.”
HubSpot often wins when:
- speed matters
- simplicity matters
- internal maintainability matters
- the use case is relatively focused
Salesforce Experience Cloud often wins when:
- customization matters
- permissions become complex
- external business processes are sophisticated
- scalability and integrations are critical
The important thing is understanding the operational requirements first before selecting the platform.
Because ultimately, the best portal is not the one with the most features — it’s the one that aligns best with how the business actually needs external users to interact with the organization.





