6clicks Review 2026
6clicks is an AI-powered GRC platform built on a hub-and-spoke architecture designed for multi-entity organizations and consulting firms. Its Hailey AI engine automates control mapping, gap analysis, and risk assessment across a library of 100+ pre-built frameworks.
What 6clicks Does Well
Hub-and-spoke architecture is 6clicks' structural advantage. A central hub maintains standards, policies, and frameworks while individual spokes (business units, subsidiaries, or clients) manage their own compliance programs. Changes at the hub cascade to all spokes, ensuring consistency.
Hailey AI engine automates tedious compliance tasks. It can map your existing controls to new frameworks, identify gaps, and suggest remediation steps. The AI improves over time as it processes more data from your organization.
Framework library is comprehensive, with 100+ pre-built frameworks including Australian standards like Essential Eight that many US-focused platforms lack. This makes 6clicks particularly strong for APAC-region organizations.
Where 6clicks Falls Short
US market presence is still growing. While the platform supports major US frameworks, its roots in Australia mean the community, partner network, and integration ecosystem are more developed in the APAC region.
Automated evidence collection is less extensive than US-based leaders. The platform relies more on manual evidence upload and questionnaire-based assessment than on automated pulls from cloud infrastructure.
Enterprise scalability can become complex when managing many spokes. Organizations with dozens of entities may find the hub-and-spoke model adds administrative overhead.
Pricing
6clicks publishes pricing tiers on its website, starting around $10,000/year for smaller deployments. Enterprise and partner pricing is available for larger organizations and consulting firms.
The Verdict
6clicks is the platform to consider if you manage compliance across multiple entities or clients. The hub-and-spoke model and Hailey AI are genuine differentiators, though US-focused single-entity companies may find better options elsewhere.