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Australia edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-24

Top 10 ETL Software in Australia for 2026

Independent Australia ETL ranking, AUD pricing, Big 4 bank reality, APRA CPS 234 fit, and Sydney + Melbourne data-residency notes.

Australia verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-24

Australian ETL is shaped by the Big 4 banks (CBA, Westpac, ANZ, NAB) plus Telstra, Woolworths, Coles, REA Group, and ASX 100 mid-market. Fivetran has established Sydney sales and is the default at modern Australian data stacks (Atlassian, Canva, Linktree-tier). Airbyte open-source is widely used at Australian cost-sensitive scale-ups. Matillion runs at AWS Sydney native Australian enterprises. Informatica IICS holds Australian banking and telecom legacy migrations. APRA CPS 234 and CPS 230 set the data-handling floor for regulated entities. AWS Sydney, Azure Australia East, and GCP Sydney all host Snowflake, Databricks, and BigQuery destinations that drive ETL choice.

Picks for Australia

  • Australian modern data stack (Snowflake or Databricks, 100-2,000 employees): fivetran Default at Atlassian, Canva, Linktree-tier modern Australian SaaS. Established Sydney sales team. Strong Snowflake AWS Sydney destination support. Transparent USD pricing convertible at billing.
  • Australian cost-sensitive scale-up with engineering capacity: airbyte Open-source self-hosted option for Australian companies wanting predictable cost and full data control. Strong fit for Australian fintech, healthtech, and scale-ups concerned about CPS 234 third-party risk.
  • Australian AWS-native enterprise wanting transformation depth: matillion Matillion runs in AWS Sydney, native Snowflake AWS Sydney destination. Strong for Australian enterprises wanting SQL-first transformation. Used at Australian telecom and retail.
  • Big 4 bank or large insurer with legacy mainframe ETL: informatica-iics Informatica IICS is the default at CBA, Westpac, ANZ, NAB for legacy mainframe and Oracle ETL migration to cloud. Deep on-prem to cloud hybrid execution.
  • Australian mid-market wanting low-code ETL: hevo Hevo Data offers strong low-code Australian mid-market fit at lower TCO than Fivetran. Good for 50-500 employee Australian SaaS or services firms.
  • Australian SMB analytics warehouse: stitch Stitch (Talend-owned) covers Australian SMB analytics warehouse use cases at lower entry pricing. Reasonable choice for Australian 25-100 employee firms loading SaaS sources to BigQuery or Snowflake.
Market context

How the etl / elt software market looks in Australia

Australian ETL buying is anchored on the Big 4 banks (CBA, Westpac, ANZ, NAB) and the broader ASX 100 enterprise estate (Telstra, Optus, Woolworths, Coles, BHP, Rio Tinto, Macquarie, AMP). At enterprise scale, Informatica IICS has historically owned the legacy mainframe-to-cloud and Oracle-to-cloud migration motion, with deep Australian banking and telecom installs. As these banks modernise toward Snowflake, Databricks, and BigQuery destinations on AWS Sydney, Azure Australia East, and GCP Sydney, Fivetran and Matillion are gaining share.

The modern data stack tier (Atlassian, Canva, Linktree, SafetyCulture, Employment Hero, Deputy, Octopus Deploy, REA Group, Seek) is dominated by Fivetran, with strong Sydney sales presence. Airbyte open-source is the default among cost-sensitive Australian scale-ups, particularly those concerned about CPS 234 third-party risk or wanting to self-host on AWS Sydney for data residency. dbt Cloud sits alongside as the transformation layer (not ranked here as a pure ETL).

Compliance: APRA CPS 234 information security obligations apply to banks, credit unions, super funds, insurers, RSE licensees and drive vendor due diligence including SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, and incident reporting capability. CPS 230 from July 2025 adds operational risk management and supplier risk requirements. Privacy Act 1988 and APP 8 governs cross-border disclosure; many Australian ETL pipelines move PII to US-hosted Snowflake accounts, which is permissible under APP 8 with notice but increasingly under scrutiny. SOCI Act 2018 critical infrastructure obligations may apply to ETL serving energy, water, telecom workloads.

Compliance & local rules

Privacy Act 1988 and APP apply to data moved through ETL pipelines containing personal information. APP 8 governs cross-border disclosure; moving PII to US-hosted Snowflake, BigQuery, or Databricks is permissible under APP 8 with notice but requires reasonable steps to ensure the overseas recipient handles data consistent with APP. APRA CPS 234 information security obligations for regulated entities mandate vendor due diligence including SOC 2 Type II, ISO 27001, encryption in transit and at rest, and incident notification within 72 hours. CPS 230 from July 2025 adds operational risk management, business continuity, and supplier risk assessment. SOCI Act 2018 critical infrastructure obligations cover energy, water, telecom, healthcare, financial market infrastructure, food and grocery, defence, transport; ETL serving these workloads has additional cyber-incident reporting obligations via the Cyber and Infrastructure Security Centre. ISM and ASD Essential Eight Maturity Level 2 or 3 apply to Australian Government workloads; IRAP-assessed cloud required for PROTECTED. Data residency: Fivetran offers AWS Sydney region; Airbyte self-hosted on Australia; Matillion runs in AWS Sydney; Informatica IICS available in Australia East; Snowflake, Databricks, BigQuery all have Australia regions.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Australia

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Fivetran
Mid-market through global enterprise
$0 $0 4.2 Global
2 Airbyte
Engineering-led mid-market and enterprise
$0 $0 4.5 Global
3 Matillion
Mid-market through enterprise, strong UK / EU presence
$0 $0 4.4 Global; strongest in UK, EU, US
7 Informatica IICS
Enterprise and global enterprise
$0 $0 4.4 Global
4 Hevo Data
Mid-market with strong APAC presence
$0 $0 4.4 Global; strongest in India, SEA, Middle East, US
5 Stitch
Mid-market renewals and existing Talend customers
$100 $100 4.2 Global; primarily US and EU
6 Talend
Mid-enterprise through global enterprise, strongest EMEA
Quote - 4.0 Global; strongest in EMEA, US
8 StreamSets
Enterprise inside IBM installed base
Quote - 4.3 Global; strongest in IBM enterprise footprint
9 Estuary Flow
Engineering-led teams needing real-time CDC
$0 $0 4.7 Global; strongest in US, EU
10 Portable
Any size, complementary to primary ELT
$200 $200 4.7 Global; strongest in US, EU

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in Australia actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in AUD. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (AUD) Sample Notes
Fivetran 50-200 employees (10-50 connectors) A$84,000 64 Fivetran Starter/Standard; AUD via Sydney sales
Fivetran 200-1,000 employees (50+ connectors, 100M+ MAR) A$360,000 38 Fivetran Enterprise; AUD
Airbyte 50-200 employees self-hosted A$18,000 41 Self-hosted on AWS Sydney; primarily infrastructure cost
Airbyte 50-200 employees cloud A$60,000 22 Airbyte Cloud; AUD
Matillion 100-500 employees A$156,000 18 Matillion + AWS Sydney; AUD via partner
Informatica IICS Big 4 bank or large telco A$1,200,000 9 Informatica IICS Enterprise + AU professional services; AUD
Hevo Data 50-200 employees A$36,000 14 Hevo Business; AUD via reseller
Stitch 25-100 employees A$14,400 18 Stitch Advanced; AUD via Talend
Local challengers

Australia-built or Australia-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Australia buyers and worth a shortlist.

Mantel Group Data Engineering

Visit ↗

Melbourne-based data consultancy with strong Australian data engineering practice. Builds custom Airbyte, dbt, Fivetran pipelines for Australian enterprises (Telstra, CBA, REA Group adjacent). Not a software vendor; the dominant Australian data-stack delivery partner.

Servian (Cognizant)

Visit ↗

Sydney-based data and analytics consultancy (now Cognizant Servian). Long-running Australian data engineering practice with Fivetran, Matillion, Informatica delivery depth.

Eliiza

Visit ↗

Melbourne-based data and AI consultancy with Australian data-stack practice. Strong AWS Sydney native deployments.

Excluded for Australia

Global picks that don't fit here

  • StreamSets
    StreamSets has limited Australian footprint and AWS Sydney is not the default deployment. Australian banks and telecoms typically prefer Informatica IICS or Fivetran for similar streaming capability.
  • Portable
    Portable.io is narrow on long-tail connectors and has minimal Australian deployment. Australian buyers should evaluate Fivetran or Airbyte first for breadth.
The Australia ranking

All 10, ranked for Australia

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Australia market.

#1

Fivetran

Managed ELT share leader with the broadest connector reliability and the loudest pricing complaints.

Founded 2012 · Oakland, CA · private · 200-10,000+ employees
G2 4.2 (540)
Capterra 4.3
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Fivetran

Fivetran is the managed ELT market leader, founded 2012, last priced at a $5.6B post-money valuation in the September 2021 Series D. The product covers 500+ pre-built connectors, automated schema drift handling, and tight push-down transformation via dbt Core integration. Strengths: highest connector reliability in the category, shortest time-to-first-row, mature governance (SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA, GDPR posture). Trade-offs: MAR (Modified Active Rows) consumption pricing is the single most consistent buyer complaint we tracked across 2025 and 2026, bills can spike unexpectedly when upstream sources mutate row patterns, and the gap between list pricing and verified enterprise deal pricing is wide. Customer support quality is strong on Business Critical tier but uneven below it.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise data teams (200 to 10,000+ employees) that want hands-off managed ELT, value connector reliability above predictable monthly billing, and have governance over upstream sources to manage MAR volatility.

Worst for

Cost-sensitive mid-market priced out by MAR volatility (Hevo or Airbyte fit better), engineering-led teams that want self-host (Airbyte better), or teams with high-mutation upstream systems where MAR billing is structurally punitive.

Strengths

  • 500+ pre-built connectors with the highest reliability scores in category
  • Automated schema drift handling that does not require pipeline rewrites
  • Native dbt Core integration for push-down transformation
  • Strong governance: SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA, GDPR, ISO 27001
  • Hybrid Deployment option for connectors that need to stay in-VPC
  • Mature partner ecosystem with Snowflake, Databricks, BigQuery

Weaknesses

  • MAR-based consumption pricing produces unexpected bill spikes
  • Wide gap between list pricing and verified enterprise deal pricing
  • Support quality uneven below Business Critical tier
  • Custom connector SDK still feels like a second-class citizen
  • Long-tail SaaS sources less covered than Portable or Airbyte community connectors

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Free
    Up to 500K MAR; basic connectors
    $0 /mo
  • Starter
    MAR-tiered; estimator shows $1 to $2 per 10K MAR at low volume
    $0 /mo
  • Standard
    MAR-tiered with team features; typical mid-market spend $50K to $200K annually
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Volume discounts, RBAC, audit logs; typical $200K to $1.5M annually
    Quote
  • Business Critical
    HIPAA, customer-managed keys, premium support; typical $400K+
    Quote
Watch for
  • · MAR spikes from upstream schema or row mutation patterns
  • · Hybrid Deployment connectors billed separately
  • · Annual increases of 7 to 12 percent at renewal
  • · Premium support tiers required for sub-1-hour SLA

Key features

  • +500+ pre-built connectors
  • +Automated schema drift handling
  • +Push-down dbt Core integration
  • +Hybrid Deployment (connectors stay in customer VPC)
  • +Log-based CDC where supported by source
  • +Column-level masking and PII detection
  • +Lineage and metadata API
  • +Custom Connector SDK
500+ integrations
SnowflakeDatabricksBigQueryRedshiftSalesforceHubSpotNetSuiteWorkdaySAPPostgreSQLMySQLMongoDBdbt
Geography
Global
#2

Airbyte

Open-core ELT challenger with the largest community connector catalog and self-host option.

Founded 2020 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-5,000 employees
G2 4.5 (320)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Airbyte

Airbyte is the credible open-core challenger to Fivetran, founded 2020, last priced at $1.5B post-money in the December 2021 Series B led by Altimeter and Coatue. The product ships in two flavors: Airbyte OSS (self-hosted, MIT plus ELv2 mix) and Airbyte Cloud (managed). Strengths: largest connector catalog in category counting community connectors (550+), self-host option for sovereign and regulated workloads, modern Connector Builder for custom sources, and aggressive product velocity. Trade-offs: community connector quality is uneven, the 2024 community discussion around a potential BSL license shift left a residue of trust questions even after Airbyte reaffirmed its dual-license model, and Airbyte Cloud pricing on credits (similar in spirit to MAR) shares some of the same volatility characteristics buyers complain about with Fivetran.

Best for

Engineering-led teams (50 to 5,000 employees) that want connector flexibility, self-host capability, or community-extensible source coverage, and that can absorb the operational burden of running OSS in production.

Worst for

Marketing-led or non-engineering buyers without platform team capacity (Fivetran or Hevo better), regulated enterprises requiring fully managed governance (Informatica IICS or Fivetran Business Critical better), or teams that need every connector to be vendor-certified.

Strengths

  • 550+ connectors counting maintained community sources (largest in category)
  • Self-host option (Airbyte OSS) for sovereign and regulated workloads
  • Connector Builder lowers the bar to ship custom sources
  • Aggressive product velocity post Series B
  • Open-core trust posture preserved (no BSL shift after 2024 discussion)
  • Native dbt integration for in-warehouse transformation

Weaknesses

  • Community connector quality is uneven, certified vs community gap is real
  • Airbyte Cloud credit pricing shares MAR-style volatility characteristics
  • 2024 BSL license discussion left a residue of community trust questions
  • Self-host operational burden is non-trivial below dedicated platform teams
  • Enterprise governance still maturing relative to Fivetran or Informatica

Pricing tiers

public
  • Airbyte OSS
    Self-hosted; free under dual-license (MIT plus ELv2)
    $0 /mo
  • Airbyte Cloud
    Credit-based consumption; estimator from $2.50 per credit
    $0 /mo
  • Cloud Teams
    Credit-based plus RBAC, SSO; typical mid-market $20K to $80K annually
    $0 /mo
  • Self-Managed Enterprise
    Self-hosted with enterprise support; typical $80K to $400K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Credit consumption spikes on high-mutation sources
  • · Community connector maintenance burden if used in production
  • · Self-host infra and observability cost not included
  • · Enterprise support tier required for SLA commitments

Key features

  • +550+ connectors (certified plus community)
  • +Connector Builder for low-code custom sources
  • +CDK (Connector Development Kit) for full custom sources
  • +Self-host (OSS) and managed (Cloud) options
  • +dbt Cloud and dbt Core integration
  • +PyAirbyte for in-Python ELT pipelines
  • +Column-level encryption and PII masking
  • +API and Terraform provider
550+ integrations
SnowflakeDatabricksBigQueryRedshiftPostgreSQLMySQLMongoDBSalesforceHubSpotStripeShopifydbt
Geography
Global
#3

Matillion

Transformation-heavy cloud ETL with visual pipelines that push down into the warehouse.

Founded 2011 · Manchester, UK · private · 200-5,000 employees
G2 4.4 (280)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Matillion

Matillion is the transformation-heavy cloud ETL leader, UK-headquartered, founded 2011, last priced at $1.5B post-money in the September 2021 Series E led by General Atlantic. The product is a visual pipeline builder that pushes transformation logic down into Snowflake, Databricks, Redshift, and BigQuery via native SQL. Strengths: best-in-class visual transformation UX, native push-down to cloud DWs, mature CDC support after the 2021 acquisition of Agile Data Engine technology, and a strong UK / EU enterprise presence. Trade-offs: visual-first UX is friction for engineering-led teams that prefer code (dbt + Airbyte is the common alternative), pricing is credit-based and shares the consumption volatility profile of Fivetran and Airbyte Cloud, and AI Productivity features shipped late in 2025 still feel additive rather than core.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise data teams (200 to 5,000 employees) where transformation logic dominates the workload and a visual pipeline UX accelerates a mixed-skill data team. Strong fit for UK and EU enterprises.

Worst for

Code-first engineering teams that prefer dbt + Airbyte / Fivetran (Matillion UX is friction), connector-breadth-driven buyers (Fivetran or Airbyte better), or teams with predictable monthly budget requirements.

Strengths

  • Best visual transformation UX in category
  • Native push-down to Snowflake, Databricks, Redshift, BigQuery
  • Mature CDC and database replication after 2021 capability buildout
  • Strong UK and EU enterprise installed base
  • Data Productivity Cloud unifies ETL, ELT, and reverse-ETL motions
  • Git integration and CI/CD for pipeline versioning

Weaknesses

  • Visual-first UX is friction for code-first engineering teams
  • Credit-based pricing carries consumption volatility
  • AI Productivity features shipped late in 2025 and still feel additive
  • Connector breadth narrower than Fivetran or Airbyte (~150 vs 500+)
  • Implementation services often required for complex transformations

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Basic
    Credit-based; entry tier from ~$2 per credit
    $0 /mo
  • Advanced
    Mid-tier with team collaboration; typical mid-market $30K to $120K annually
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise
    RBAC, audit logs, SSO; typical $120K to $600K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Credit consumption volatility on transformation-heavy workloads
  • · Implementation services for complex visual pipelines
  • · Annual contract escalators
  • · Premium support gating SLA commitments

Key features

  • +Visual transformation pipeline builder
  • +Native push-down SQL transformation
  • +150+ source connectors
  • +CDC and database replication
  • +Data Productivity Cloud (ETL + ELT + reverse-ETL)
  • +Git integration and CI/CD
  • +AI Productivity (Copilot in pipelines)
  • +Reusable transformation components
150+ integrations
SnowflakeDatabricksRedshiftBigQuerySalesforceNetSuiteSAPOraclePostgreSQLMySQLSQL ServerS3
Geography
Global; strongest in UK, EU, US
#7

Informatica IICS

Enterprise data integration leader under a 2025 acquisition uncertainty hangover.

Founded 1993 · Redwood City, CA · public · 1,000-500,000+ employees
G2 4.4 (540)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 /mo
○ Sales call required
Visit Informatica IICS

Informatica Intelligent Cloud Services (IICS) is the cloud-native successor to PowerCenter and the enterprise data integration leader by share. Informatica (NYSE: INFA) was rumored to be the subject of an $8B+ acquisition by Salesforce in March 2025, talks that were publicly abandoned in April 2025 leaving an uncertainty hangover that still shapes deal cycles in 2026. Strengths: deepest enterprise governance and metadata fabric (CLAIRE AI, Enterprise Data Catalog, IDMC), broadest connector catalog at the enterprise tier, and the only platform with the depth to credibly handle SAP, Oracle, Workday, and PeopleSoft as first-class sources. Trade-offs: pricing remains opaque and the most expensive in the category, the 2025 acquisition speculation created roadmap uncertainty that has not fully resolved, and the platform is overbuilt for mid-market buyers who do not need MDM, Data Quality, and metadata fabric together.

Best for

Large enterprises (5,000+ employees) with SAP, Oracle, or other complex on-prem source landscapes, regulated industries needing deep governance and lineage, and existing PowerCenter customers planning cloud migration.

Worst for

Mid-market buyers without governance complexity (Fivetran, Hevo, or Matillion better), engineering-led teams wanting modern UX (Airbyte better), or buyers needing pricing transparency for budget control.

Strengths

  • Deepest enterprise governance and metadata fabric (CLAIRE AI, EDC)
  • Broadest connector catalog at the enterprise tier
  • First-class handling of SAP, Oracle, Workday, PeopleSoft
  • IDMC (Intelligent Data Management Cloud) unifies integration, quality, MDM
  • Strong public-sector and regulated industry presence
  • PowerCenter migration paths well documented

Weaknesses

  • Pricing is the most opaque in the category, list-vs-quote gaps are wide
  • 2025 Salesforce acquisition speculation created roadmap uncertainty
  • Overbuilt for mid-market buyers who do not need full IDMC suite
  • Implementation services cost typically 2x to 4x license cost
  • UX still feels enterprise-heavy vs Fivetran or Airbyte simplicity

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • IDMC Free
    Limited IPUs; evaluation only
    $0 /mo
  • IDMC Cloud Data Integration
    IPU-based; typical mid-enterprise $120K to $480K annually
    Quote
  • IDMC Data Management Cloud
    Full IDMC suite; typical $480K to $2.4M annually
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Custom quote with PowerCenter migration credits; $2M to $20M+
    Quote
Watch for
  • · IPU consumption spikes on complex transformations
  • · Implementation services typically 2x to 4x license cost
  • · Per-module billing for MDM, Data Quality, Catalog
  • · Annual escalators 8 to 12 percent at renewal

Key features

  • +IDMC (Intelligent Data Management Cloud)
  • +CLAIRE AI for metadata, mapping, lineage
  • +Enterprise Data Catalog
  • +Data Quality and MDM
  • +500+ connectors including SAP, Oracle, Workday, PeopleSoft
  • +PowerCenter migration tooling
  • +CDC and bulk data movement
  • +API and B2B Data Exchange
500+ integrations
SnowflakeDatabricksRedshiftBigQuerySAPOracleWorkdayNetSuitePeopleSoftSalesforceServiceNow
Geography
Global
#4

Hevo Data

India-headquartered managed ELT with simpler pricing and a mid-market focus.

Founded 2017 · Bangalore, India · private · 50-1,000 employees
G2 4.4 (240)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Hevo Data

Hevo Data is a managed ELT platform headquartered in Bangalore, India, founded 2017, with a $30M Series B raised in June 2022 led by Sequoia Capital India. The product covers 150+ pre-built connectors with a focus on event-based pricing rather than MAR or credits. Strengths: simpler pricing model than Fivetran or Airbyte Cloud, strong mid-market positioning, responsive customer support relative to category peers, and a meaningful APAC reference base. Trade-offs: connector breadth and reliability still trail Fivetran for the top sources, enterprise governance features are present but not yet at Informatica or Fivetran Business Critical depth, and brand recognition outside India and SEA remains lower than the Western incumbents.

Best for

Mid-market data teams (50 to 1,000 employees), especially in India, SEA, and the Middle East, that want managed ELT with simpler pricing than Fivetran and are willing to accept slightly narrower connector breadth.

Worst for

Large enterprises with strict governance requirements (Fivetran Business Critical or Informatica IICS better), engineering-led teams wanting self-host (Airbyte better), or buyers needing the absolute longest tail of niche connectors (Portable or Airbyte community).

Strengths

  • Simpler event-based pricing than MAR or credit models
  • Responsive customer support relative to category peers
  • Strong mid-market and APAC reference base
  • Real-time CDC support for major databases
  • 150+ pre-built connectors covering most common SaaS and DB sources
  • In-flight transformation (Python and drag-and-drop)

Weaknesses

  • Connector breadth and reliability trail Fivetran on top-tier sources
  • Enterprise governance still maturing vs Informatica or Fivetran
  • Brand recognition outside India and SEA lower than Western incumbents
  • Documentation gaps on advanced CDC and edge cases
  • Long-tail SaaS source coverage lighter than Airbyte community catalog

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 1M events/month; basic connectors
    $0 /mo
  • Starter
    5M events/month; mid-market entry
    $239 /mo
  • Business
    Typical mid-market $12K to $48K annually
    Quote
  • Business Critical
    Premium SLA, VPC peering; typical $48K to $180K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Event overages on high-volume sources
  • · Annual escalators at renewal
  • · Premium support tier for sub-1-hour SLA
  • · Custom Python transformation services

Key features

  • +150+ pre-built connectors
  • +Real-time CDC for PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, SQL Server
  • +Event-based pricing model
  • +In-flight transformation (Python and visual)
  • +Auto schema mapping
  • +Pipeline alerting and monitoring
  • +Reverse-ETL (Hevo Activate)
150+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryRedshiftDatabricksPostgreSQLMySQLMongoDBSalesforceHubSpotStripeShopify
Geography
Global; strongest in India, SEA, Middle East, US
#5

Stitch

Legacy managed ELT now sitting under Qlik and Thoma Bravo, with orphaned-product concerns.

Founded 2016 · Philadelphia, PA · pe backed · 200-5,000 employees
G2 4.2 (290)
Capterra 4.3
From $100 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Stitch

Stitch was the original Singer-based managed ELT, founded by RJMetrics in 2016, acquired by Talend in November 2018 for $60M. Talend itself was then taken private by Thoma Bravo in 2021 for $2.4B, and the combined entity was acquired by Qlik (also Thoma Bravo controlled) in March 2023, bringing both Stitch and Talend under one PE-backed parent. The product still ships and still works for the ~140 sources it supports, but customer reviews across 2024 and 2025 consistently flag orphaned-product symptoms: connector maintenance lag, slow response on bugs, and unclear roadmap relative to Qlik Talend Cloud. Strengths: predictable row-based pricing, established mid-market reference base, and integration with the Talend Data Fabric for buyers already on that stack. Trade-offs: substantial post-acquisition customer-service complaints, connector coverage frozen relative to Fivetran and Airbyte, and the Qlik roadmap appears to favor Talend Cloud over Stitch.

Best for

Existing Stitch or Talend customers (200 to 5,000 employees) renewing existing pipelines where switching cost outweighs the orphaned-product risk, especially those who value predictable row-based pricing.

Worst for

Net-new buyers (Fivetran, Airbyte, or Hevo all better choices), teams needing modern connector breadth, or organizations sensitive to post-PE customer-service risk.

Strengths

  • Predictable row-based pricing (rare in this category)
  • Established mid-market reference base
  • Integration with Talend Data Fabric for existing customers
  • Singer-tap heritage means open extraction protocol underneath
  • SOC 2 Type II and GDPR posture intact

Weaknesses

  • Orphaned-product symptoms post Qlik / Thoma Bravo acquisition
  • Connector coverage frozen relative to Fivetran and Airbyte
  • Qlik roadmap appears to favor Talend Cloud over Stitch
  • Customer support response times reportedly degraded post-acquisition
  • Limited net-new buyer momentum, mostly renewals

Pricing tiers

public
  • Standard
    5M rows/month; basic connectors
    $100 /mo
  • Advanced
    100M rows/month; advanced connectors
    $1250 /mo
  • Premium
    1B rows/month; premium connectors and HIPAA
    $2500 /mo
Watch for
  • · Row overages billed per package above tier limit
  • · Annual contract escalators
  • · Integration with Talend Data Fabric requires separate Talend license

Key features

  • +~140 source connectors (Singer-tap based)
  • +Row-based predictable pricing
  • +Auto schema replication
  • +Incremental and full-table replication
  • +JSON unboxing
  • +Talend Data Fabric integration
  • +Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift, Postgres destinations
140+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryRedshiftPostgreSQLSalesforceHubSpotStripeShopifyNetSuiteJira
Geography
Global; primarily US and EU
#6

Talend

Legacy enterprise data integration platform now under Qlik and Thoma Bravo control.

Founded 2005 · Redwood City, CA · pe backed · 1,000-100,000+ employees
G2 4.0 (470)
Capterra 4.1
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Talend

Talend is the legacy enterprise data integration platform, founded 2005 in France, that helped pioneer the open-source ETL category. The company was taken private by Thoma Bravo in 2021 for $2.4B, then folded into Qlik in March 2023 (Qlik itself Thoma Bravo controlled, the deal valued the combined entity at $2.4B all-cash). Strengths: deep data quality and governance capabilities (Talend Data Fabric, Talend Data Catalog), strong EMEA enterprise presence, and integration with Qlik Sense and Qlik Cloud for the broader analytics motion. Trade-offs: post-acquisition customer-support neglect has been a consistent theme across 2024 and 2025, the on-prem Talend Studio (Open Studio) was end-of-lifed in 2024 forcing migrations, and roadmap commitments since the Qlik combination have been read as cloud-only with on-prem footprint deprioritized.

Best for

Existing Talend enterprise customers (1,000+ employees) renewing or migrating to Talend Cloud, especially those who value the Data Fabric governance stack and are already on Qlik analytics.

Worst for

Net-new buyers (Fivetran, Airbyte, Informatica IICS, or Matillion all better choices), buyers needing strong on-prem commitment, or organizations sensitive to post-PE customer-service risk.

Strengths

  • Deep data quality and governance (Data Fabric, Data Catalog)
  • Strong EMEA enterprise installed base and references
  • Integration with Qlik Sense and Qlik Cloud for analytics motion
  • Mature MDM, profiling, and lineage features
  • Cloud, hybrid, and on-prem deployment options (though on-prem deprioritized)

Weaknesses

  • Post-Qlik / Thoma Bravo customer-support neglect consistently flagged
  • Open Studio end-of-life in 2024 forced unplanned migrations
  • Roadmap perceived as cloud-only with on-prem deprioritized
  • Implementation services cost often exceeds license cost
  • Net-new buyer momentum minimal, mostly renewals and migrations

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Talend Cloud Starter
    Cloud-only; typical mid-market $48K to $120K annually
    Quote
  • Talend Cloud Standard
    Standard governance; typical $120K to $360K annually
    Quote
  • Talend Data Fabric
    Full governance and MDM; typical $360K to $1.5M+ annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation services often 1.5x to 3x license cost
  • · Per-user seat overages
  • · Data Catalog and MDM modules billed separately
  • · Annual escalators 8 to 12 percent at renewal

Key features

  • +Talend Data Fabric (integration + quality + governance)
  • +Talend Data Catalog
  • +Talend MDM
  • +Talend Pipeline Designer (cloud-native)
  • +Open Studio (community, EOL 2024)
  • +Stitch integration (same parent)
  • +Qlik Sense and Qlik Cloud integration
  • +Big Data and Hadoop legacy connectors
900+ integrations
SnowflakeDatabricksRedshiftBigQuerySalesforceSAPOracleNetSuiteWorkdayQlik SenseQlik Cloud
Geography
Global; strongest in EMEA, US
#8

StreamSets

DataOps platform now inside IBM after the April 2022 acquisition.

Founded 2014 · San Francisco, CA · public · 1,000-100,000+ employees
G2 4.3 (180)
Capterra 4.4
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit StreamSets

StreamSets is a DataOps and continuous data integration platform, founded 2014, acquired by IBM in April 2022 for a reported $110M. The product focuses on smart data pipelines that handle schema drift, with strong streaming and hybrid (on-prem to cloud) coverage. Strengths: best-in-class drift detection and pipeline resilience, hybrid deployment that handles on-prem to cloud well, and integration with the broader IBM data stack (Cloud Pak for Data, watsonx). Trade-offs: post-IBM acquisition customer experience has shown the classic IBM-acquisition pattern (slower velocity, sales motion shift toward broader IBM deals, customer-service complaints), product momentum has slowed relative to pre-acquisition trajectory, and brand recognition outside the IBM installed base has declined.

Best for

Existing IBM enterprise customers (5,000+ employees) needing hybrid on-prem to cloud data integration, especially those already on Cloud Pak for Data, watsonx, or DB2 / Db2 Warehouse stacks.

Worst for

Net-new buyers outside the IBM installed base (Fivetran, Airbyte, Matillion, Informatica all better choices), mid-market buyers without IBM dependencies, or organizations sensitive to post-acquisition velocity slowdown.

Strengths

  • Best-in-class drift detection and pipeline resilience
  • Hybrid on-prem to cloud deployment is genuinely mature
  • Integration with Cloud Pak for Data and watsonx
  • Strong streaming and CDC capabilities
  • Visual pipeline builder with edge-case handling

Weaknesses

  • Post-IBM acquisition velocity slowdown is the consistent pattern
  • Sales motion shifted toward broader IBM enterprise deals
  • Customer-service complaints typical of IBM-acquired products
  • Brand recognition outside IBM installed base declined
  • Net-new buyer momentum minimal

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Professional
    Typical mid-market $48K to $180K annually
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Full DataOps stack; typical $180K to $720K annually
    Quote
  • IBM Cloud Pak for Data integrated
    Bundled with IBM enterprise agreement; custom quote
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-engine seat overages
  • · IBM Cloud Pak for Data co-license requirement
  • · Implementation services often bundled in IBM enterprise agreement
  • · Annual escalators tied to broader IBM contract

Key features

  • +Smart data pipelines with drift handling
  • +Streaming and CDC
  • +Hybrid on-prem to cloud deployment
  • +Pipeline observability and lineage
  • +Cloud Pak for Data integration
  • +watsonx integration
  • +Edge and IoT data ingestion
200+ integrations
SnowflakeDatabricksRedshiftBigQueryDb2Cloud Pak for DatawatsonxKafkaOracleSAPS3
Geography
Global; strongest in IBM enterprise footprint
#9

Estuary Flow

Real-time CDC-first ELT platform built on an open-source streaming runtime.

Founded 2019 · New York, NY · private · 50-5,000 employees
G2 4.7 (110)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Estuary Flow

Estuary Flow is a real-time CDC-first ELT platform built on Estuary Flow (the open-source streaming runtime), founded 2019, with a $23M Series A raised in 2024 led by FirstMark Capital. The product is engineered for low-latency change data capture with millisecond-level lag, rather than the batch or micro-batch model that dominates Fivetran, Airbyte, and Stitch. Strengths: best-in-class CDC latency in the category, exactly-once delivery semantics, materializations into both warehouses and operational systems, and a permissive open-source runtime that buyers can self-host. Trade-offs: connector breadth narrower than Fivetran or Airbyte (still building toward 200+), enterprise governance features still maturing, and the real-time CDC value proposition only matters for buyers whose batch windows are genuinely not acceptable.

Best for

Engineering-led teams (50 to 5,000 employees) where batch windows are not acceptable, especially for fraud, personalization, operational analytics, or ML feature pipelines requiring fresh data.

Worst for

Buyers whose use cases are satisfied by hourly or daily batch (Fivetran, Airbyte, or Hevo simpler and cheaper), enterprises requiring deep governance and metadata (Informatica IICS or Talend better), or marketing-led buyers without engineering capacity.

Strengths

  • Best-in-class CDC latency (millisecond-level)
  • Exactly-once delivery semantics
  • Materializations into warehouses and operational systems
  • Open-source streaming runtime, self-host option available
  • Public, transparent pricing model
  • Aggressive product velocity post Series A

Weaknesses

  • Connector breadth narrower than Fivetran or Airbyte
  • Enterprise governance features still maturing
  • Real-time CDC value proposition is irrelevant if batch is acceptable
  • Brand recognition still building outside engineering communities
  • Smaller reference base than incumbents

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 10GB/month; community support
    $0 /mo
  • Cloud
    Per-GB streamed; from $0.75 per GB
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Volume discounts, SLA, BYOC; typical $48K to $240K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-task overages above tier limits
  • · BYOC infrastructure billed by hyperscaler
  • · Implementation services for complex CDC topologies

Key features

  • +Real-time CDC with millisecond latency
  • +Exactly-once delivery semantics
  • +200+ connectors
  • +Materializations into warehouses and operational systems
  • +Open-source Flow runtime (self-host)
  • +Schema-aware streaming SQL transforms
  • +BYOC (bring-your-own-cloud) for regulated workloads
200+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftPostgreSQLMySQLMongoDBKafkaKinesisSalesforceHubSpot
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU
#10

Portable

Long-tail connector specialist with 300+ niche sources no one else maintains.

Founded 2020 · New York, NY · private · 50-10,000+ employees
G2 4.7 (85)
Capterra 4.7
From $200 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Portable

Portable is the long-tail connector specialist of the category, founded 2020, focused on the 300+ niche SaaS sources that Fivetran and Airbyte do not maintain (think B2B SaaS verticals, regional tools, industry-specific platforms). The positioning is explicitly hands-on: customers request connectors, Portable builds and maintains them, often within days. Strengths: largest long-tail connector catalog by a wide margin, custom connector build SLAs that the major incumbents do not match, simple flat pricing, and direct founder-led customer engagement. Trade-offs: not a fit as a primary ELT platform for top-tier sources (Fivetran or Airbyte better), connector quality on the long tail is genuinely best in category but enterprise governance features are minimal, and the platform is positioned as complementary rather than as a replacement for managed ELT incumbents.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise data teams (any size) that need niche, long-tail, regional, or vertical-specific connectors that Fivetran and Airbyte do not maintain, typically run alongside a primary ELT platform.

Worst for

Buyers needing a single primary ELT platform covering all top-tier sources (Fivetran or Airbyte better as primary), large enterprises requiring deep governance (Informatica IICS better), or teams wanting fully managed ops on the top 50 SaaS sources.

Strengths

  • Largest long-tail connector catalog (300+ niche sources)
  • Custom connector build SLAs measured in days, not quarters
  • Simple flat-pricing model
  • Founder-led customer engagement
  • Long-tail SaaS, regional, and vertical-specific source coverage

Weaknesses

  • Not positioned as a primary ELT platform for top-tier sources
  • Enterprise governance features minimal
  • Smaller reference base than incumbents
  • Less mature pipeline observability than Fivetran or Estuary
  • Most successful as a complement to a primary ELT, not a replacement

Pricing tiers

public
  • Starter
    Up to 5 connectors; flat pricing
    $200 /mo
  • Pro
    Up to 25 connectors; custom connector requests
    $1500 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Unlimited connectors, custom SLAs; typical $48K to $180K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Custom connector requests included at Pro tier and above
  • · No row or event overages (flat pricing)
  • · Implementation typically minimal

Key features

  • +300+ long-tail connectors
  • +Custom connector build (days-level SLA)
  • +Flat-pricing model (no MAR, no events)
  • +Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift, Databricks destinations
  • +Founder-led customer engagement
  • +Simple pipeline UX
300+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryRedshiftDatabricksPostgreSQLS3SalesforceHubSpotStripePendo
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Fivetran vs Airbyte for a Sydney 300-person SaaS company?
Fivetran wins on operational simplicity and connector reliability. Sydney sales team for support, transparent pricing for known data volumes, and connector quality that engineering teams can trust without baby-sitting. Airbyte wins on cost-control and data residency: self-hosted on AWS Sydney keeps all data and metadata in Australia, which is meaningful for CPS 234 regulated buyers or fintech with AUSTRAC sensitivities. For a 300-person SaaS at this scale, Fivetran is typically the right call unless engineering capacity is available to operate Airbyte self-hosted; the operational cost of running Airbyte often outweighs the licence saving at this size.
Does APP 8 prevent us from moving Australian customer data to US Snowflake?
No, APP 8 permits cross-border disclosure of personal information if you take reasonable steps to ensure the overseas recipient handles the data consistently with the APP. The standard practice is: contractual data processing terms with the cloud provider (Snowflake, Fivetran), encryption in transit and at rest, notice in the privacy policy that data may be disclosed overseas, and where practical, use of Snowflake AWS Sydney region for Australian personal information. Many Australian organisations now default to Snowflake AWS Sydney for Australian customer data because the operational simplicity outweighs the cost differential.
How does CPS 234 affect ETL vendor selection at an Australian bank?
CPS 234 requires the regulated entity to maintain information security capability commensurate with the threats. ETL vendors are typically classified as third parties with access to sensitive data and must be subject to documented vendor due diligence including SOC 2 Type II review, ISO 27001 confirmation, contractual incident notification within 72 hours, encryption in transit and at rest, and right-to-audit. Fivetran, Informatica IICS, Matillion all meet the CPS 234 baseline and have published shared-responsibility documents. Airbyte open-source self-hosted shifts more of the security responsibility back to the regulated entity, which is acceptable but requires the entity to operate the security controls. From July 2025 CPS 230 adds operational resilience requirements including supplier risk assessment and exit planning.
What about Australian Government PROTECTED ETL?
For Australian Government PROTECTED classification work, IRAP-assessed cloud hosting is required. Informatica IICS has Australian Government partner offerings; Fivetran does not natively host at PROTECTED. The standard pattern is to deploy self-hosted Airbyte or a custom ETL stack on IRAP-assessed Azure Australia Central (Canberra sovereign), Vault Cloud, or Macquarie Government Cloud. AWS Sydney is IRAP at PROTECTED for IaaS but Fivetran SaaS is not. For OFFICIAL: Sensitive workloads, IRAP-assessed public-cloud SaaS is more available; consult the specific cloud provider's IRAP letter.
What is the difference between ETL and ELT?
ETL (Extract, Transform, Load) transforms data before loading into the destination, traditional for on-prem warehouses where compute was scarce. ELT (Extract, Load, Transform) loads raw data first and transforms inside the destination warehouse, dominant in 2026 because cloud warehouses (Snowflake, BigQuery, Databricks, Redshift) made in-warehouse SQL transformation cheaper than per-row transformation in an ETL tool. Most modern stacks pair an ELT ingest tool (Fivetran, Airbyte, Hevo) with a transformation layer (dbt) and skip the T in ETL entirely.
What is MAR (Modified Active Rows) and why do buyers complain about it?
MAR is Fivetran consumption pricing unit: a row that is created, updated, or deleted in your warehouse during a billing period counts as one MAR (deduplicated within the period). Buyers complain because upstream systems can mutate rows at patterns the buyer does not control, a Salesforce schema change or a CRM bulk update can spike MAR by 30 to 50 percent in a month with no corresponding change in business value. Fivetran provides a MAR estimator but verified buyer disclosures show the gap between estimate and actual bill is the single most consistent complaint we tracked.
What is CDC (Change Data Capture) and which platforms support it?
CDC is a technique for capturing only the changes (inserts, updates, deletes) to a source system rather than re-reading the full table. Log-based CDC reads the database transaction log (Postgres WAL, MySQL binlog) which is the most efficient method. Fivetran, Airbyte, Hevo, Estuary Flow, Informatica IICS, StreamSets, and Matillion all support log-based CDC for the major databases. Estuary Flow leads on latency (millisecond-level), Fivetran leads on reliability, and Airbyte leads on source breadth.
Should I pick open-source or proprietary ELT in 2026?
Open-source (Airbyte OSS, Singer / Meltano) is the right call when you have a platform team that can operate it, your priority is connector flexibility or self-host capability, and you want to avoid consumption-pricing volatility. Proprietary managed (Fivetran, Hevo, Matillion) is the right call when you want hands-off ops, can absorb consumption-pricing volatility, and value vendor-certified connector reliability over breadth. Many mid-market and enterprise stacks run both: managed ELT for the top sources, self-hosted Airbyte or Portable for the long tail.
How do I evaluate connector breadth across vendors?
Treat the vendor headline count with skepticism. Fivetran lists 500+, Airbyte lists 550+ counting community connectors, Informatica lists 500+, Talend lists 900+. The questions that matter: which connectors are vendor-certified vs community-maintained, what is the SLA on a broken connector, does the connector support log-based CDC where applicable, and does the connector handle the schema drift on your specific source. Always run a 14-day trial against your top 3 sources before signing.
Where does dbt fit in the ETL / ELT stack?
dbt is a transformation tool that sits downstream of the ingest layer. The pattern is: ingest tool (Fivetran, Airbyte, Hevo) lands raw data in your warehouse, dbt models transform that raw data into business-ready tables. dbt does not replace an ELT ingest tool, it replaces the T in legacy ETL by pushing transformation into the warehouse via SQL. Fivetran, Airbyte, and Matillion all ship native dbt integration; dbt Cloud separately handles orchestration and CI/CD for the transformation layer.
Should we choose real-time CDC or batch ELT?
Real-time CDC (Estuary Flow, Fivetran log-based, Airbyte CDC) is the right call when your use cases (fraud detection, personalization, operational analytics, ML feature pipelines) cannot tolerate batch windows. Batch ELT (hourly or daily syncs in Fivetran, Hevo, Stitch) is sufficient and significantly cheaper for the BI and reporting use cases that dominate most data stacks. Real-time CDC roughly doubles the cost and the operational complexity versus hourly batch; do not pay for it unless freshness is a measurable business requirement.
How long does an ELT migration take?
Fivetran or Hevo: 2 to 6 weeks for the top 10 to 30 sources. Airbyte Cloud: 3 to 8 weeks. Airbyte OSS: 6 to 16 weeks including infra setup. Matillion: 6 to 12 weeks (visual pipelines slow initial setup but accelerate downstream). Informatica IICS from PowerCenter: 6 to 18 months (this is a re-platforming, not a lift). Talend Open Studio to Talend Cloud after the 2024 EOL: 4 to 12 weeks per project, painful at scale.
How does post-acquisition customer experience compare?
Fivetran (private, no acquisition exposure): stable. Airbyte (private): stable. Snowflake / Databricks ingest tools (not in this list): n/a. Stitch (Talend, then Qlik / Thoma Bravo, 2018 and 2023): orphaned-product symptoms consistently flagged. Talend (Thoma Bravo, then Qlik / Thoma Bravo, 2021 and 2023): customer-support neglect consistently flagged. Informatica (public, 2025 Salesforce talks abandoned): uncertainty hangover but no actual change of control. StreamSets (IBM, 2022): classic IBM-acquisition velocity slowdown and support complaints.
What budget should I expect for a managed ELT platform?
Startup or small mid-market (under 50 employees): $5K to $20K annually (Hevo Free or Starter, Airbyte Cloud entry, Stitch Standard). Mid-market (50 to 500 employees): $30K to $150K (Fivetran Standard, Airbyte Teams, Hevo Business, Matillion Advanced). Upper mid-market (500 to 2,000): $150K to $600K. Enterprise (2,000+): $600K to $3M+. Informatica IICS at large enterprise tier routinely exceeds $1M to $5M. Real-time CDC (Estuary) adds roughly 1.5x to 2x the cost vs batch ELT at comparable scale.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global ETL / ELT Software ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-24. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.