If you schedule Tumblr posts, Pinterest, Instagram, and X posts, chances are you’re juggling tabs and rewriting captions just to keep up.
Tumblr needs one voice. Pinterest needs another. You tweak everything, but something still slips, usually Tumblr. It gets forgotten or posted late, buried under drafts.
Meanwhile, growth stalls. You’re putting in the work, but the right people aren’t finding you. Or they’re not sticking around.
It’s not that your content’s bad. It’s that your workflow’s broken.
That’s why we added Tumblr scheduling to Fedica. Now you can schedule Tumblr posts right alongside Pinterest and everything else, all from one calendar, with no extra hassle.
Schedule Tumblr Posts and Crosspost Across 12 Platforms!
This update brings Fedica to 12 supported platforms. That includes Tumblr, Pinterest, Instagram, X, LinkedIn, Bluesky, and more. And if you’re on the free plan, you still get access to 9 of them.
Whether you’re growing one account or managing many, Fedica gives you a single calendar to plan, schedule, and crosspost across the platforms that matter most to your community, like scheduling Bluesky posts at the same time.

Schedule Tumblr Posts with Pinterest Posts at the Same Time!
Anyone using Tumblr seriously knows, it’s not Instagram.
Maybe your Tumblr posts are longer. Maybe you’re using gifs, reblogs, or quoting yourself from three years ago. You’ve probably got moodboards or fan edits queued up with different tags than what you’d use on Pinterest.
Pinterest, on the other hand, might be clean graphics with links to blog posts or product pages. It’s evergreen. It’s polished. But it still takes time.
The real issue? Switching headspace every time you switch tabs.
That’s the part we wanted to eliminate.
With Fedica, you can sit down, plan a week of content, and make small tweaks for each platform without burning mental energy trying to remember who’s getting what.
Here’s What It Looks Like to Schedule to Tumblr and More
Drop your image into the Fedica calendar.
Write a quick caption for Tumblr, maybe something polished and search-friendly.
Clone the post. Tweak the caption for Pinterest. Maybe it’s looser, maybe it’s personal, maybe it’s just a vibe. Schedule it. Done.
You stay in flow. You stay on schedule. No forgetting, no context switching, no wondering where that draft went.
And yes, it’s free to use.

Tumblr, the Fediverse, and Where We’re Headed
Tumblr recently announced plans to support the Fediverse: a decentralized social network model built on open protocols. That’s a big shift in how platforms think about control and community.
We believe creators should be able to connect with their audience without being locked into one platform. That’s why Fedica supports Tumblr and why we’re building tools that work across both mainstream and emerging networks.
Crosspostability isn’t just convenient. It’s a step toward a more open, flexible social web.
Still Posting By Hand? We Used To Do That Too
A lot of creators still post manually, because they want things to feel personal. Or because they’ve been burned by tools that didn’t work the way they needed.
We get that. That’s where this came from.
Fedica was built by people who post, schedule, and analyze content across platforms. We needed something that handled Tumblr and Pinterest like first-class citizens, not leftovers.
This update is for people who actually use those platforms to build real communities, not just chase metrics.
Try Scheduling Tumblr Posts Any Time.
If you’ve been looking for a cleaner way to show up on Tumblr without adding another thing to your list, this is it.
Take your next post, drop it into the calendar, tweak it, and schedule it out.
Then walk away and get back to the part you actually enjoy, making things people want to see.
Tumblr FAQs: What You Can Do on Tumblr vs. Fedica Solutions
Can you schedule posts on Tumblr?
Yes, Tumblr has a built-in option for scheduling posts. When creating a post, you can choose “Schedule” (usually found near the “Post now” button) and set a date and time. It works for basic planning, but it’s limited especially if you want to schedule a lot at once or need more control. Fedica gives you more advanced tools like automated bulk scheduling, posting from RSS feeds, and data-informed timing, helping you post more efficiently and reach your audience when they’re most active.
How do you see scheduled posts on the Tumblr app?
In the Tumblr app, head to your blog, then check the “Queue” section. That’s where you’ll find all your scheduled posts. You can review, edit, or delete them from there. If you’re using Fedica, all your scheduled posts across platforms are managed from one central dashboard. It gives you more visibility and control, especially if you’re running several accounts or scheduling across different channels.
Can you organize posts on Tumblr?
Tumblr uses tags and custom pages to help you organize your posts. You can create pages that group content by tags for example, one page for your artwork, another for blog posts. You’ll find these options in the customization settings under the paint palette icon. While Fedica doesn’t organize posts inside Tumblr, use hashtag groups you can save ahead of time, or the media library to organize posts. There are content Pipeline queues in Fedica that organize your content types across your multi-platform calendar so you keep a good balance of themes and post types over time.
How do you edit a scheduled Tumblr post?
To change a scheduled post in Tumblr, go to your blog, open the “Queue,” and click the pencil icon next to the post. Make your edits and reschedule it to go live at the right time. Fedica also lets you edit scheduled posts straight from your dashboard. Just find the post in your queue, adjust the content or timing, and hit save. It’s a faster way to make changes, especially if you’re working with multiple posts or platforms.
Does Tumblr allow NSFW content?
Tumblr has restrictions on NSFW content. Most explicit adult content is banned, though some material like artistic nudity or mature topics can be posted if marked appropriately as “mature.” The platform uses filters and sometimes removes posts that break these rules. Fedica follows the rules of each platform it supports, so if Tumblr blocks certain content, that still applies when using Fedica to schedule posts. You’ll need to make sure your content follows Tumblr’s guidelines either way.