Coming soon

Schedule your Dev.to articles

Dev.to scheduling is coming to PostQued. Write your article in Markdown, set tags and a canonical URL, pick a publish time, and we'll push it live to the developer community automatically. Join the waitlist and we'll email you the moment it's live.

No spam — just one email when it launches.

Scheduling TikTok today? Our TikTok scheduler is already live.

What you'll be able to do

Built for how developers actually publish on Dev.to

Write in Markdown, schedule the post

Draft your article in the same Markdown and front matter Dev.to expects — code fences, embeds, and all — then pick when it goes live.

Queue a publishing calendar

Line up a week or a month of articles for the Dev.to community so your DEV profile stays active without daily logins.

Stagger a multi-part series

Set the series field and drip a tutorial out over days, keeping readers coming back for each new installment.

Cross-post with canonical_url

Syndicate articles from your own blog to Dev.to while preserving the canonical URL, so the SEO credit stays on your site.

Publish via API key

PostQued is API-first: trigger Dev.to publishes from CI, a docs pipeline, or a release script with a single static key.

AI agents & MCP

Let an agent turn changelogs or release notes into Dev.to articles and queue them through PostQued's MCP integration.

Why schedule Dev.to

Show up for the DEV community on a schedule

Tutorials, deep-dives, “TIL” notes, and launch posts perform best when they ship at the right moment — not whenever you happen to hit publish.

Stay consistent on DEV

The Dev.to algorithm and your followers reward a steady cadence. Batch-write when you have time, then let posts ship on schedule.

Reach developers when they read

Dev.to traffic skews toward weekday mornings in US/EU work hours. Schedule articles to land when engineers are browsing the feed.

Turn release notes into content

Pair each shipped feature with a Dev.to write-up. Queue the article alongside the release so dev marketing runs itself.

FAQ

Dev.to scheduling questions

Will PostQued let me schedule Dev.to articles?

Yes — that's exactly what we're building. You'll be able to write your article in Markdown, set front matter like tags and a canonical_url, pick a publish time, and PostQued will push it live on Dev.to automatically. It isn't available yet, so join the waitlist and we'll email you the day it ships.

Can I keep my Dev.to articles as drafts until the scheduled time?

That's the plan. The Dev.to API lets you create an article as a draft and flip published to true later. PostQued will hold your post as a Dev.to draft and publish it at your chosen time, so nothing goes out before you intend.

Will canonical_url and cross-posting from my own blog be supported?

Yes. Dev.to is a popular place to syndicate posts that originate on your own site, so PostQued will let you set canonical_url in the front matter when you schedule. That keeps the SEO credit on your primary domain while you reach the Dev.to developer community.

How does scheduling differ from publishing a series on Dev.to?

Dev.to lets you group related posts into a series via the series front-matter field. PostQued will let you queue several articles in the same series and stagger their publish dates, so a multi-part tutorial drips out over days or weeks without you logging in each time.

Is Dev.to scheduling live in PostQued today?

Not yet. Right now PostQued is live for TikTok scheduling, and Dev.to is coming soon. Join the waitlist to get notified the moment Dev.to publishing goes live.

How much will PostQued cost when Dev.to launches?

PostQued is a flat $20/month — unlimited accounts and unlimited scheduled posts, with no per-post or per-platform fees. When Dev.to lands, it's included at the same flat price.

Coming soon

Be first to schedule Dev.to with PostQued

Dev.to scheduling is on the way — Markdown articles, series, and cross-posting with canonical URLs, all at a flat $20/month. Join the waitlist and we'll email you the moment it goes live.

No spam — just one email when it launches.