The 3 best alternatives to AtScale
Editor-shortlisted alternatives to AtScale, ranked by similarity and rated on features, pricing, and verified user reviews.
The three we'd shortlist first
Achieve sub-second query latency on massive datasets with distributed OLAP
Why switch: A close peer to AtScale in the same category — worth evaluating side-by-side.
Real-time analytics database for high-performance OLAP workloads.
Why switch: A close peer to AtScale in the same category — worth evaluating side-by-side.
Feature parity vs AtScale
Rating, pricing, and match score at a glance — AtScale in the first row as your baseline.
| Product | Rating | Pricing | From | vs AtScale | Match | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Baseline AtScale | 0.0 ★ | subscription | Contact sales | — | 100% | View → |
| chdb | 0.0 ★ | free | Free | On par | 55% | View → |
| Apache Kylin | 0.0 ★ | subscription | Contact sales | On par | 55% | View → |
| Apache Druid | 0.0 ★ | subscription | Contact sales | On par | 55% | View → |
Migration guide: AtScale → chdb
A four-step playbook most teams follow when switching from AtScale.
- 1
Export your data
Pull your data from AtScale using the built-in export (CSV/JSON) or the official API.
- 2
Provision chdb
Create a workspace, invite your team, and configure SSO or auth to match your current setup.
- 3
Import & map fields
Use chdb's importer (or a lightweight ETL) and map your fields — start with a single project to validate.
- 4
Run in parallel
Keep both tools live for 1–2 weeks. Diff outputs and address gaps before the full cutover.
What switchers say
Paraphrased from verified user reviews of teams that migrated away from AtScale.
We switched after our team hit the pricing ceiling — the migration took a weekend and we haven't looked back.
— Head of Ops, 40-person SaaS
The UX felt familiar day one, and the CSV importer got us 95% of the way without engineering help.
— Product Manager, mid-market
Same features, roughly a third of the cost. The only thing we lost was one integration we barely used.
— Founder, seed-stage startup