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

Top 10 Reverse ETL Software in Australia for 2026

Independent Australian reverse ETL ranking, AUD pricing, AWS Sydney + Azure Australia East residency, APP 8 cross-border data, Atlassian and Canva data ops reality.

Australia verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-24

Australian reverse ETL adoption tracks the modern Aussie data-team build-out. Hightouch and Census split the dominant Aussie market at Atlassian, Canva, Employment Hero, Culture Amp, SafetyCulture and Linktree. RudderStack is the open-source-leaning pick at engineering-led shops. Hevo Activate and Polytomic hold smaller mid-market footprints. Fivetran HVR-built reverse ETL (now Fivetran Activations) lands where Fivetran is already the ingest pipeline. Workato runs at Aussie enterprise with broader iPaaS needs. CBA, Westpac, ANZ and NAB data-ops teams increasingly include reverse ETL in their warehouse-native customer-data stacks, typically on AWS Sydney or Azure Australia East.

Picks for Australia

  • Aussie data team running Snowflake or BigQuery wanting modern reverse ETL: hightouch-retl Hightouch is the modern Aussie reverse ETL default at Atlassian, Canva, Employment Hero, Culture Amp, SafetyCulture and Linktree. Strong AWS Sydney support, deep Salesforce/HubSpot/Braze syncs.
  • Aussie data team wanting flexible reverse ETL with strong observability: census-retl Census is the second-most-installed Aussie reverse ETL at SaaS data teams. Strong observability and audit features useful at APRA-regulated data ops.
  • Engineering-led Aussie shop wanting open-source-leaning reverse ETL: rudderstack-retl RudderStack runs at engineering-led Aussie SaaS (Octopus Deploy, Immutable, smaller Atlassian-adjacent shops). Open-source posture, strong fit for data-team-controlled stacks.
  • Aussie team already on Fivetran ingest: fivetran-retl Fivetran Activations is the natural pick where Fivetran is already the warehouse ingest pipeline. Fivetran has strong Aussie commercial presence and AWS Sydney residency on enterprise.
  • Aussie SMB mid-market wanting bundled ELT + reverse ETL: hevo-activate Hevo Activate sits alongside Hevo Data ELT. Affordable bundled pick for Aussie SMB-to-mid data teams that want one vendor for both directions.
  • Aussie enterprise wanting reverse ETL inside broader iPaaS: workato-retl Workato lands at Aussie enterprise running broader iPaaS workloads with reverse-ETL-like patterns. Common alongside Workday HCM, NetSuite and Salesforce.
Market context

How the reverse etl software market looks in Australia

Australian reverse ETL demand reflects the modern Aussie data-team build-out at SaaS scale-ups and the slow-but-steady warehouse-native customer-data shift at Aussie banks and insurers. The clear local pattern is Atlassian, Canva, Employment Hero, Culture Amp, SafetyCulture and Linktree running Snowflake (or BigQuery) on AWS Sydney, layered with dbt for transformations, Fivetran or Stitch for ingest, and Hightouch or Census for reverse ETL. This is the modern Aussie data stack and it has reached the point where most senior Aussie data hires expect it as a baseline.

Hightouch dominates the Aussie SaaS data team segment. Census is the strong second with growing footprint at observability-focused teams. RudderStack runs at engineering-led shops preferring open-source. Hevo Activate handles Aussie SMB-to-mid data teams wanting bundled ELT + reverse ETL. Polytomic, Grouparoo and Streamkap hold smaller niches. Airbyte's self-hosted positioning attracts a subset of Aussie engineering-led teams wanting full control over their pipelines.

At the Aussie enterprise tier, CBA, Westpac, ANZ and NAB data ops teams are progressively building warehouse-native customer-data stacks, typically on Snowflake or Databricks via AWS Sydney or Azure Australia East. Reverse ETL is increasingly part of these builds, with Hightouch and Census the most-evaluated picks (with strict APRA CPS 234 sub-processor language and Sydney data residency). Workato runs at Aussie enterprise where broader iPaaS needs accompany reverse ETL. Fivetran Activations is gaining ground at customers already running Fivetran ingest.

The compliance overlay is meaningful. Most Aussie data engineering leads now require AWS Sydney or Azure Australia East residency for any reverse-ETL platform handling customer data, plus documented APP 8 cross-border-disclosure language, sub-processor lists, and incident-response SLAs.

Compliance & local rules

Australian reverse ETL compliance sits primarily under the Privacy Act 1988 and the 13 Australian Privacy Principles. APP 6 limits secondary use of personal information collected for one purpose - reverse ETL workflows that push customer data into a new operational system (CRM, ad platform, marketing automation) must verify that the destination use was disclosed at collection or that consent has been obtained. APP 8 governs cross-border disclosure, which matters because Hightouch, Census, RudderStack, Hevo Activate, Polytomic and most reverse-ETL platforms host primarily in the US. APP 11 governs security of personal information in transit and at rest. The Notifiable Data Breaches scheme requires OAIC notification within 30 days. APRA CPS 234 information-security obligations apply to bank and insurer reverse-ETL deployments; CPS 230 (effective 1 July 2025) brings material-service-provider risk into scope. SOCI Act 2018 entities apply third-party-risk obligations. The Spam Act 2003 governs reverse-ETL workflows pushing data into outbound-messaging platforms (the recipient platform inherits the compliance obligation, but the data flow itself needs documented basis). AWS Sydney, Azure Australia East and GCP Sydney are standard on enterprise tiers. Documented data-lineage and consent-state propagation through reverse ETL is increasingly expected at APRA-regulated customers.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Australia

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Hightouch
Engineering-led mid-market and enterprise on a modern warehouse
$0 $0 4.7 Global; strongest in US, EU, UK
2 Census
Engineering-led mid-market on a modern warehouse
$0 $0 4.6 Global; strongest in US, EU
3 RudderStack Reverse ETL
Engineering-led teams and regulated industries
$0 $0 4.6 Global; user-controlled residency for self-host
8 Fivetran HVR + Lite Connector
Existing Fivetran ELT customers extending into reverse-ETL
$0 $0 4.2 Global
4 Hevo Activate
Mid-market with strong APAC presence
$0 $0 4.4 Global; strongest in India, SEA, Middle East, US
5 Polytomic
Mid-market with PostgreSQL or MySQL alongside warehouse
$0 $0 4.7 Global; strongest in US, EU
7 Workato Recipes
Mid-market and enterprise iPaaS buyers
Quote - 4.7 Global
10 Airbyte Reverse ETL
Existing Airbyte ELT customers extending into reverse-ETL
$0 $0 4.5 Global; strongest in US, EU
9 Streamkap
Engineering-led teams needing sub-minute sync latency
$0 $0 4.6 Global; strongest in US, EU
6 Grouparoo (Airbyte)
Existing Airbyte ELT customers extending into reverse-ETL
$0 $0 4.5 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
Hightouch 50-500 employees A$48,000 22 Hightouch Business, Aussie SaaS data team
Hightouch 500-5,000 employees A$165,000 11 Hightouch Enterprise, Aussie ASX and bank data ops
Census 50-500 employees A$42,000 18 Census Platform Pro, Aussie SaaS
RudderStack Reverse ETL 20-200 employees A$22,000 14 RudderStack Cloud, Aussie engineering-led
Fivetran HVR + Lite Connector 200-2,000 employees A$78,000 13 Fivetran Activations bundled with Fivetran ingest
Workato Recipes 500-2,000 employees A$125,000 9 Workato Enterprise iPaaS with reverse-ETL patterns
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.

Hightouch ANZ

Visit ↗

Hightouch has growing Aussie SaaS data-team footprint at Atlassian, Canva, Employment Hero, Culture Amp, SafetyCulture and Linktree. AWS Sydney support on enterprise.

Census ANZ

Visit ↗

Census is the second-most-installed Aussie reverse ETL with strong observability features. Common at APRA-adjacent data ops.

Atlassian Data Engineering

Visit ↗

Sydney-headquartered. Atlassian's public data-engineering talks frequently reference the warehouse + dbt + reverse ETL stack and shape Aussie data team tool choices.

Canva Data Platform

Visit ↗

Sydney private. Canva runs a large warehouse-native data stack and is a frequent Aussie reference for reverse ETL choices.

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

Hightouch

Standalone reverse-ETL category leader expanding into composable CDP and AI Decisioning.

Founded 2018 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-5,000 employees
G2 4.7 (480)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Hightouch

Hightouch is the standalone reverse-ETL category leader, founded 2018 in San Francisco. The company raised a $40M Series B in February 2022 at a reported $450M valuation, co-led by Andreessen Horowitz and Iconiq, with earlier participation from Y Combinator, Bain Capital Ventures, and Amplify Partners. The product treats the warehouse (Snowflake, BigQuery, Databricks, Redshift) as the system of record and syncs models, audiences, and traits into 250+ downstream operational SaaS destinations. Strengths: deepest reverse-ETL feature set in the category, strongest engineering-led adoption, modern audience builder (Hightouch Audiences) that lets non-engineers compose audiences from warehouse tables, and AI Decisioning (GA 2024) extending Hightouch into composable-CDP territory. Trade-offs: requires a warehouse to be the source of truth (no warehouse, packaged CDP is the right call); marketing-only buyers without engineering support find it engineering-heavy; sync latency is batch (5-minute floor at the Pro tier, 1-minute at Enterprise on selected destinations), not the sub-second the "real-time" framing sometimes implies; and the per-MTU + per-source pricing model can escalate at scale similar to Segment.

Best for

Engineering-led mid-market and enterprise (50 to 5,000 employees) using Snowflake, BigQuery, Databricks, or Redshift as the source of truth, wanting standalone reverse-ETL with the deepest audience modeling and destination depth.

Worst for

Marketing-only teams without engineering or analytics-engineering capacity (Twilio Segment or another packaged CDP fits better), organizations without a mature warehouse (composable CDP does not work without it), or buyers needing sub-second sync latency (Streamkap or RudderStack Stream are streaming-first alternatives).

Strengths

  • Deepest reverse-ETL feature set in the standalone tier
  • Strongest engineering-led adoption (G2 leadership, large dbt-ecosystem presence)
  • Hightouch Audiences lets non-engineers compose audiences from warehouse tables
  • AI Decisioning (GA 2024) extends Hightouch into composable-CDP territory
  • 250+ destinations including all major CRM, marketing, support, and ad tools
  • Strong governance: SOC 2 Type II, GDPR, HIPAA BAA available, column-level privacy
  • Public, tier-based pricing on Starter and Pro; transparent at lower tiers

Weaknesses

  • Requires warehouse as source of truth (does not fit packaged-CDP buyers)
  • Sync latency is batch (5-min floor at Pro tier); "real-time" framing overstates
  • Per-MTU plus per-source pricing escalates at scale similar to Segment
  • Enterprise quotes turn opaque above the Pro tier; deal-pricing gap is real
  • Marketing-only buyers without engineering support find it engineering-heavy

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Free
    1 source, 5 destinations, up to 1K MTU
    $0 /mo
  • Starter
    Mid-market entry; 1 source, ~10K MTU; published rate
    $350 /mo
  • Pro
    Multi-source; typical mid-market spend $25K to $80K annually
    Quote
  • Business
    Audience tooling, governance; typical $80K to $240K annually
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    AI Decisioning, RBAC, HIPAA BAA; typical $240K to $800K+ annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · MTU overages on high-cardinality audience syncs
  • · Per-source overages above tier inclusions
  • · Annual contract escalators typically 7 to 12 percent at renewal
  • · AI Decisioning module gated to Enterprise tier

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL syncs from warehouse to 250+ destinations
  • +Hightouch Audiences (warehouse-native audience builder)
  • +AI Decisioning (composable-CDP layer, GA 2024)
  • +Identity resolution at warehouse layer
  • +Sync observability with diff and audit
  • +Column-level privacy and PII masking
  • +dbt integration (model-to-destination)
  • +Customer Studio for non-technical operators
250+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftSalesforceHubSpotMarketoIterableBrazeZendeskIntercomFacebook AdsGoogle Ads
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, UK
#2

Census

Reverse-ETL co-leader with the strongest sync observability and data-quality story.

Founded 2018 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-2,000 employees
G2 4.6 (290)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Census

Census is the standalone reverse-ETL co-leader, founded 2018 in San Francisco. The company raised a $60M Series B in March 2022 led by Sequoia Capital, with Andreessen Horowitz, Insight Partners, and Tiger Global participating across earlier rounds. The product covers warehouse-out syncs into 200+ destinations with a strong editorial focus on sync correctness, observability, and data quality, positioning Census as the choice when audit and reconciliation are first-class requirements rather than afterthoughts. Strengths: best sync observability and data-quality tooling in the category, strong feature parity with Hightouch on the core reverse-ETL motion, public pricing on entry and Platform tiers, and credible mid-market positioning. Trade-offs: smaller standalone footprint than Hightouch, narrower destination ecosystem (~200 versus Hightouch ~250), product velocity has been mixed across 2024 and 2025 with customers noting slower release cadence than the Hightouch trajectory, and the AI / composable-CDP story is less developed than Hightouch AI Decisioning.

Best for

Engineering-led mid-market organizations (50 to 2,000 employees) using a modern warehouse as the source of truth, especially when sync correctness, audit, and data-quality observability are first-class requirements.

Worst for

Buyers needing the absolute deepest destination ecosystem (Hightouch leads), teams who want a packaged CDP without warehouse maturity (Twilio Segment, mParticle better), or buyers prioritizing AI-driven decisioning (Hightouch AI Decisioning more developed).

Strengths

  • Best sync observability and data-quality tooling in the category
  • Strong feature parity with Hightouch on core reverse-ETL syncs
  • Public pricing on entry and Platform tiers (transparent at the bottom of the range)
  • Credible mid-market positioning at competitive pricing
  • dbt integration with model-to-destination lineage
  • Composable Audiences GA in 2023; warehouse-native audience builder

Weaknesses

  • Narrower destination ecosystem than Hightouch (~200 vs ~250)
  • Product velocity mixed across 2024 and 2025; release cadence trails Hightouch
  • AI and composable-CDP layer less developed than Hightouch AI Decisioning
  • Enterprise quotes opaque above the Platform tier
  • Smaller standalone footprint than Hightouch limits reference checks at large scale

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Free
    Up to 10 destinations, basic syncs, no premium connectors
    $0 /mo
  • Starter
    Mid-market entry; ~10K MTU; published rate
    $800 /mo
  • Platform
    Multi-source, observability tooling; typical mid-market $25K to $100K annually
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    SSO, RBAC, advanced governance; typical $100K to $400K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · MTU overages on high-volume audience syncs
  • · Per-source overages above tier inclusions
  • · Annual contract escalators typically 7 to 10 percent at renewal
  • · Premium connectors gated above the Free tier

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL syncs from warehouse to 200+ destinations
  • +Sync observability and diff tooling
  • +Composable Audiences (warehouse-native audience builder)
  • +Data quality checks at the sync layer
  • +dbt integration with model-to-destination lineage
  • +Identity resolution at warehouse layer
  • +Column-level privacy controls
200+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftSalesforceHubSpotMarketoIterableBrazeZendeskIntercomKlaviyo
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU
#3

RudderStack Reverse ETL

CDP and reverse-ETL on one open-core substrate, Insight-backed.

Founded 2019 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-1,000 employees
G2 4.6 (240)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit RudderStack Reverse ETL

RudderStack Reverse ETL is the warehouse-out side of the broader RudderStack platform, founded 2019, with Insight Partners-led funding and an open-source CDP heritage (Apache 2.0). The combined product is the only standalone vendor in this list that ships event-streaming CDP and reverse ETL on one substrate, making it the natural choice when buyers want a single vendor for both inbound event capture (Segment-style) and outbound warehouse activation. Strengths: only standalone CDP + RETL on one platform, open-source self-host option for regulated workloads (Apache 2.0 core), warehouse-first architecture by design, and competitive pricing relative to Twilio Segment plus a standalone reverse-ETL pairing. Trade-offs: reverse-ETL feature depth narrower than Hightouch or Census (the activation side is younger than the streaming side), destination ecosystem is also narrower (~200 vs Hightouch ~250), and engineering-led product framing makes it less of a marketing-buyer choice than packaged CDPs.

Best for

Engineering-led teams (50 to 1,000 employees) wanting a single vendor for inbound event collection and outbound warehouse activation, especially regulated industries that need self-hostable CDP plus RETL.

Worst for

Buyers needing the deepest standalone reverse-ETL features (Hightouch leads), marketing-only teams without engineering capacity (packaged CDP fits better), or organizations that already run Twilio Segment and only need warehouse activation (Hightouch or Census are cleaner adds).

Strengths

  • Only standalone vendor with CDP plus reverse ETL on one substrate
  • Open-source self-host (Apache 2.0 core) for regulated workloads
  • Warehouse-first architecture across both event capture and reverse ETL
  • Competitive pricing vs Segment + standalone RETL pairing
  • Strong engineering-led adoption in dataops and platform communities
  • Stream + Reverse ETL + Profiles on one product surface

Weaknesses

  • Reverse-ETL feature depth narrower than Hightouch or Census
  • Destination ecosystem (~200) narrower than Hightouch (~250)
  • Engineering-led framing limits marketing-buyer adoption
  • Support response times reported as variable on Cloud Pro tier
  • Documentation gaps surface on advanced audience modeling

Pricing tiers

public
  • Open Source
    Self-hosted; Apache 2.0; free
    $0 /mo
  • Cloud Free
    Up to 1M events / month; basic destinations
    $0 /mo
  • Cloud Pro
    ~10M events / month; published rate; mid-market entry
    $500 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Reverse ETL, advanced governance, SSO, SLA; typical $40K to $180K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Self-host infra and observability cost not included
  • · Cloud event overages above tier inclusions
  • · Enterprise tier required for the full Reverse ETL feature surface
  • · Annual escalators at renewal

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL syncs from warehouse to 200+ destinations
  • +Inbound event streaming (Segment-class CDP)
  • +Open-source core (Apache 2.0)
  • +Self-host option for regulated workloads
  • +Identity resolution with Profiles
  • +Warehouse-first architecture
  • +Privacy and consent controls
200+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftSalesforceHubSpotIterableBrazeMarketoMixpanelAmplitude
Geography
Global; user-controlled residency for self-host
#8

Fivetran HVR + Lite Connector

Fivetran's reverse-direction extension via HVR replication and the Lite Connector destination class.

Founded 2012 · Oakland, CA · private · 200-10,000+ employees
G2 4.2 (140)
Capterra 4.3
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Fivetran HVR + Lite Connector

Fivetran HVR + Lite Connector is Fivetran's reverse-direction extension, built on the HVR log-based replication technology Fivetran acquired in February 2023, plus the Lite Connector destination class that lets Fivetran write to selected SaaS destinations. Fivetran is the managed-ELT market leader (last priced at a $5.6B post-money valuation in September 2021), and the reverse-direction extension is positioned as a stack-consolidation play for buyers already on Fivetran inbound. Strengths: reduces vendor count for Fivetran-anchored stacks, leverages Fivetran's connector reliability and governance posture (SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA, GDPR, ISO 27001), and HVR brings credible CDC-based replication into the reverse-ETL motion. Trade-offs: reverse-ETL feature depth is meaningfully narrower than Hightouch or Census, destination catalog (~50 reverse destinations) is the second-smallest in this list, audience tooling is effectively absent, and Fivetran MAR pricing volatility (the single most consistent buyer complaint in the broader ELT category) extends to the reverse direction.

Best for

Existing Fivetran ELT customers (200 to 10,000+ employees) who want to reduce vendor count and have basic warehouse-out sync requirements (CRM, marketing, support enrichment) without deep audience modeling.

Worst for

Buyers needing standalone reverse-ETL category-leader features (Hightouch leads), marketing-led teams wanting modern audience tooling, organizations not already on Fivetran ELT, or buyers sensitive to MAR pricing volatility.

Strengths

  • Reduces vendor count for Fivetran-anchored stacks
  • Leverages Fivetran's connector reliability and governance posture
  • HVR brings CDC-based log replication into the reverse direction
  • Strong enterprise governance (SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA BAA, GDPR, ISO 27001)
  • Familiar Fivetran UX for existing customers

Weaknesses

  • Reverse-ETL feature depth meaningfully narrower than Hightouch or Census
  • Destination catalog (~50 reverse destinations) second-smallest in this list
  • Audience tooling effectively absent compared to Hightouch Audiences
  • Fivetran MAR pricing volatility extends to the reverse direction
  • Lite Connector destination class still maturing relative to standalone leaders

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Standard (bundled)
    MAR-tiered; typical mid-market reverse spend $24K to $96K annually as add-on
    $0 /mo
  • Enterprise (bundled)
    Volume discounts, RBAC, audit logs; reverse adds $96K to $480K annually
    Quote
  • Business Critical (bundled)
    HIPAA, customer-managed keys, premium support; reverse adds $200K+ annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · MAR spikes from outbound sync mutations
  • · No standalone reverse pricing line; bundled with Fivetran ELT spend
  • · Annual increases of 7 to 12 percent at renewal
  • · Premium support tiers required for sub-1-hour SLA

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL via Lite Connector destination class
  • +HVR-based log replication for select sources
  • +Bundled with Fivetran ELT (one vendor, both directions)
  • +Strong governance posture inherited from Fivetran
  • +Column-level masking and PII detection
  • +~50 reverse destinations
50+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftSalesforceHubSpotMarketoNetSuiteWorkday
Geography
Global
#4

Hevo Activate

India-headquartered combined ELT + reverse-ETL with mid-market pricing.

Founded 2017 · Bangalore, India · private · 50-1,000 employees
G2 4.4 (180)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Hevo Activate

Hevo Activate is the reverse-ETL product from Hevo Data, headquartered in Bangalore, India, founded 2017. Hevo raised a $30M Series B in June 2022 led by Sequoia Capital India, with Qualgro and Chiratae Ventures participating. Activate (GA May 2024) is positioned as the warehouse-out sibling to the Hevo Data ELT pipeline product, letting a single vendor own both inbound ingest and outbound activation. Strengths: combined ELT + reverse-ETL in one platform, event-based pricing model that avoids the per-MTU / per-credit volatility of Hightouch and Census, strong mid-market and APAC positioning, and competitive INR-denominated pricing for Indian buyers. Trade-offs: standalone reverse-ETL feature depth is narrower than Hightouch or Census, destination ecosystem is smaller (~125 vs Hightouch ~250), the Activate product is younger than the ELT product and still maturing, 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 combined ELT + reverse-ETL from one vendor with predictable event-based pricing.

Worst for

Buyers needing the deepest standalone reverse-ETL features (Hightouch or Census lead), large enterprises with strict governance requirements (Hightouch Enterprise or RudderStack self-host fit better), or buyers needing the absolute widest destination ecosystem.

Strengths

  • Combined ELT + reverse-ETL from one vendor (single-vendor data stack)
  • Event-based pricing model avoids per-MTU and per-credit volatility
  • Strong mid-market and APAC positioning with India-based support
  • Competitive INR-denominated pricing for Indian buyers
  • Real-time CDC source support inherited from Hevo Data ELT
  • Responsive customer support relative to category peers

Weaknesses

  • Standalone reverse-ETL feature depth narrower than Hightouch or Census
  • Destination ecosystem smaller than Hightouch (~125 vs ~250)
  • Activate product is younger than the ELT product and still maturing
  • Brand recognition outside India and SEA still lower than incumbents
  • Audience tooling less developed than Hightouch Audiences or Composable Audiences

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 1M events / month; basic destinations; bundled with Hevo Data Free
    $0 /mo
  • Starter
    Bundled Activate; entry tier; published rate
    $239 /mo
  • Business
    Multi-destination, audiences; typical mid-market $14K to $52K annually
    Quote
  • Business Critical
    Premium SLA, VPC peering; typical $52K to $180K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Event overages on high-volume destinations
  • · Annual escalators at renewal
  • · Premium support tier required for sub-1-hour SLA
  • · Custom Python destination transformations

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL syncs from warehouse to 125+ destinations
  • +Combined with Hevo Data ELT for full bidirectional pipeline
  • +Event-based pricing across the platform
  • +In-flight transformation (Python and visual)
  • +Auto schema mapping on outbound syncs
  • +Pipeline alerting and monitoring
  • +India-based support
125+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryRedshiftDatabricksSalesforceHubSpotZoho CRMFreshdeskMarketoIterableIntercom
Geography
Global; strongest in India, SEA, Middle East, US
#5

Polytomic

Modern reverse-ETL challenger with strong PostgreSQL and MySQL source support.

Founded 2020 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-1,000 employees
G2 4.7 (95)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Polytomic

Polytomic is a modern reverse-ETL platform, founded 2020, with a $13M Series A raised in 2022 led by Khosla Ventures with participation from Y Combinator. The product is positioned as a leaner, warehouse-and-database-native alternative to Hightouch and Census, with first-class support for transactional databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB) as sources alongside the standard cloud warehouses. Strengths: cleaner product surface than Hightouch or Census for buyers who do not need deep audience modeling, strong PostgreSQL and MySQL source support, simpler pricing model, and credible third-bid alternative when Hightouch and Census come in too expensive. Trade-offs: smaller team and smaller reference base than the leaders, destination ecosystem narrower (~150), audience and identity-resolution tooling less developed than Hightouch, and the Composable CDP narrative is less developed than at Hightouch or Census.

Best for

Mid-market data teams (50 to 1,000 employees) using PostgreSQL, MySQL, or MongoDB alongside a warehouse, especially those who do not need deep audience tooling and want a simpler reverse-ETL product than Hightouch or Census.

Worst for

Buyers prioritizing audience modeling and composable-CDP features (Hightouch leads), enterprises needing the broadest destination ecosystem (Hightouch leads), or teams that have already committed to a warehouse-first source-of-truth architecture and want the deepest reverse-ETL features.

Strengths

  • Cleaner product surface than Hightouch or Census for non-audience-heavy use cases
  • First-class PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB source support (not warehouse-only)
  • Simpler pricing model than Hightouch per-MTU + per-source structure
  • Credible third-bid alternative for mid-market refusing Hightouch / Census quotes
  • Bidirectional sync support for some destinations
  • Fast time-to-first-sync

Weaknesses

  • Smaller team and reference base than Hightouch or Census
  • Destination ecosystem narrower (~150 vs Hightouch ~250)
  • Audience and identity-resolution tooling less developed than leaders
  • Composable CDP narrative less developed than at Hightouch or Census
  • Enterprise governance still maturing

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Free
    Limited syncs; basic destinations
    $0 /mo
  • Team
    Mid-market entry; per-sync billing; typical $9K to $24K annually
    $0 /mo
  • Business
    Multi-destination, observability; typical $24K to $90K annually
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    SSO, RBAC, governance; typical $90K to $300K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-sync overages on high-frequency destinations
  • · Annual contract escalators
  • · Premium connector tier

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL syncs from warehouse and OLTP databases to 150+ destinations
  • +PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB as first-class sources
  • +Bidirectional sync support for selected destinations
  • +Simpler pricing model than per-MTU
  • +Sync observability
  • +SOC 2 Type II governance
150+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftPostgreSQLMySQLMongoDBSalesforceHubSpotMarketoZendesk
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU
#7

Workato Recipes

Broader iPaaS using reverse-ETL syncs as one workflow pattern alongside business-process automation.

Founded 2013 · Mountain View, CA · private · 500-10,000+ employees
G2 4.7 (540)
Capterra 4.7
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Workato Recipes

Workato is a broader iPaaS (integration-platform-as-a-service) headquartered in Mountain View, CA, founded 2013, with a Series E in November 2021 led by Battery Ventures and General Atlantic at a reported $5.7B valuation. Workato is not a pure reverse-ETL vendor; it covers the reverse-ETL use case as a recipe pattern alongside bidirectional business-process automation, app-to-app integration, and workflow orchestration. Strengths: broadest scope of any vendor in this list (1,000+ connectors, full iPaaS feature surface, advanced workflow logic), strong enterprise installed base and governance, and credible choice when reverse-ETL is one of many integration use cases rather than the primary one. Trade-offs: not purpose-built for reverse-ETL (audience modeling, sync observability, and warehouse-native architecture are not first-class), pricing is opaque and meaningfully higher than standalone reverse-ETL vendors, implementation is heavier than a dedicated reverse-ETL tool, and the buyer profile is iPaaS-first, not reverse-ETL-first.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise buyers (500 to 10,000+ employees) where reverse-ETL is one of many integration use cases (alongside app-to-app, workflow, and business-process automation), especially organizations that already run Workato for broader iPaaS.

Worst for

Buyers whose primary need is warehouse-out activation (Hightouch, Census, or RudderStack purpose-built for this), data teams wanting audience modeling and warehouse-native sync semantics, or budget-conscious mid-market.

Strengths

  • 1,000+ connectors across the iPaaS surface
  • Advanced workflow logic and orchestration beyond simple syncs
  • Strong enterprise installed base and governance
  • Credible single-vendor choice when reverse-ETL is one of many integration use cases
  • Bidirectional integration (not just warehouse-out)
  • Mature SOC 2 Type II, HIPAA, and ISO 27001 posture

Weaknesses

  • Not purpose-built for reverse-ETL
  • Audience modeling, sync observability, and warehouse-native architecture not first-class
  • Pricing opaque and meaningfully higher than standalone reverse-ETL vendors
  • Implementation heavier than a dedicated reverse-ETL tool
  • Buyer profile is iPaaS-first, not reverse-ETL-first

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Workato Workspace
    Per-recipe pricing; typical mid-market $30K to $120K annually
    Quote
  • Workato Business
    Multi-workspace, governance; typical $120K to $360K annually
    Quote
  • Workato Enterprise
    Full iPaaS surface, SSO, RBAC; typical $360K to $1.5M+ annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-recipe overages above tier inclusions
  • · Implementation services typically 1x to 2x license cost
  • · Premium connectors gated to higher tiers
  • · Annual escalators at renewal

Key features

  • +1,000+ connectors across SaaS, databases, warehouses
  • +Recipe-based workflow automation (including reverse-ETL patterns)
  • +Bidirectional integration support
  • +Advanced workflow logic, scheduling, and orchestration
  • +Enterprise governance (SOC 2, HIPAA, ISO 27001)
  • +Workbot for Slack and Microsoft Teams (workflow operations)
  • +AI Copilot for recipe building (Workato AI)
1000+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksSalesforceHubSpotNetSuiteWorkdaySAPServiceNowMarketoSlack
Geography
Global
#10

Airbyte Reverse ETL

Open-core challenger's warehouse-out extension via Grouparoo acquisition and native destination tooling.

Founded 2020 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-5,000 employees
G2 4.5 (130)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Airbyte Reverse ETL

Airbyte Reverse ETL is Airbyte's warehouse-out extension, built on the April 2022 Grouparoo acquisition plus a growing set of native destination connectors developed inside the Airbyte connector catalog. Airbyte is the credible open-core ELT challenger to Fivetran, last priced at $1.5B post-money in the December 2021 Series B led by Altimeter and Coatue. The reverse-ETL extension lets existing Airbyte customers consolidate inbound and outbound on one vendor without leaving the open-core posture they chose Airbyte for in the first place. Strengths: open-core trust posture preserved (no BSL shift after the 2024 community discussion), self-host option (Airbyte OSS) for sovereign and regulated workloads, and integration with the Airbyte Connector Builder for custom destinations. Trade-offs: reverse-ETL feature depth narrower than Hightouch, Census, or RudderStack (the warehouse-out story is younger than the inbound ELT story), destination ecosystem still building (~80), audience tooling effectively absent, and Airbyte Cloud credit pricing shares some of the volatility characteristics buyers complain about with Fivetran MAR.

Best for

Existing Airbyte ELT customers (50 to 5,000 employees), especially engineering-led teams that value open-core posture, self-host capability, and want one vendor for both directions of warehouse data movement.

Worst for

Buyers needing standalone reverse-ETL category-leader features (Hightouch leads), marketing-led teams wanting modern audience tooling, or organizations that have not already committed to Airbyte for inbound ELT.

Strengths

  • Open-core trust posture preserved (no BSL shift after 2024 discussion)
  • Self-host option (Airbyte OSS) for sovereign and regulated workloads
  • One vendor for inbound ELT and outbound reverse-ETL
  • Airbyte Connector Builder lowers the bar for custom destinations
  • Strong community presence and contributor ecosystem

Weaknesses

  • Reverse-ETL feature depth narrower than Hightouch, Census, or RudderStack
  • Destination ecosystem still building (~80)
  • Audience tooling effectively absent compared to Hightouch Audiences
  • Airbyte Cloud credit pricing shares MAR-style volatility characteristics
  • Warehouse-out story is younger than the inbound ELT story

Pricing tiers

public
  • Airbyte OSS
    Self-hosted; free under dual-license (MIT plus ELv2)
    $0 /mo
  • Airbyte Cloud
    Credit-based consumption; reverse-ETL destinations included
    $0 /mo
  • Cloud Teams
    Credit-based plus RBAC, SSO; reverse bundled
    $0 /mo
  • Self-Managed Enterprise
    Reverse-ETL bundled; typical $80K to $400K annually for the platform overall
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Credit consumption spikes on outbound destinations
  • · Self-host infra and observability cost not included
  • · Enterprise support tier required for SLA commitments
  • · No standalone reverse-ETL pricing line; bundled with broader Airbyte spend

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL via native Airbyte destination connectors
  • +Self-host via Airbyte OSS for sovereign workloads
  • +Connector Builder for custom destinations
  • +One vendor for inbound and outbound (Airbyte-anchored stacks)
  • +Open-source heritage preserved through dual-license
  • +Strong community contributor ecosystem
80+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftSalesforceHubSpotMarketoIterableKlaviyoMailchimp
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU
#9

Streamkap

CDC-first streaming activation with sub-minute latency from transactional databases.

Founded 2022 · New York, NY · private · 50-1,000 employees
G2 4.6 (45)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Streamkap

Streamkap is a CDC-first streaming data platform, founded 2022, focused on sub-minute latency from transactional databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, SQL Server) into operational destinations. The product overlaps with reverse-ETL when the activation source is a transactional database rather than a warehouse-resident model, making it a credible streaming alternative for buyers who need lower latency than the 5-minute-to-hourly batch floor that dominates Hightouch, Census, and the broader reverse-ETL category. Strengths: best-in-class sync latency for CDC-source-to-SaaS-destination paths, modern streaming runtime (Debezium-based), credible alternative when batch windows are not acceptable, and aggressive product velocity post-launch. Trade-offs: smallest reference base and youngest company in this list, destination ecosystem narrowest among modern entrants, not warehouse-out by default (CDC-source-first), and the buyer profile is narrower than the broader reverse-ETL category.

Best for

Engineering-led teams (50 to 1,000 employees) needing sub-minute sync latency from transactional databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, SQL Server) into operational destinations, especially fintech, e-commerce, and operational-analytics use cases where batch is not acceptable.

Worst for

Buyers whose source of truth is the warehouse (Hightouch or Census are the right choice), marketing-led teams without engineering capacity, or enterprises needing the deepest destination ecosystem and audience tooling.

Strengths

  • Best-in-class sync latency (sub-minute) on CDC-source paths
  • Modern streaming runtime built on Debezium
  • Credible alternative when batch windows are not acceptable
  • Aggressive product velocity post-launch
  • PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, SQL Server as first-class sources

Weaknesses

  • Smallest reference base and youngest company in this list
  • Destination ecosystem narrowest among modern entrants
  • Not warehouse-out by default (CDC-source-first, not warehouse-source)
  • Audience tooling absent compared to Hightouch
  • Enterprise governance still maturing

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Limited tasks; community support
    $0 /mo
  • Growth
    Per-task billing from $1 per task-hour; published rate
    $0 /mo
  • Business
    Multi-task, observability; typical $24K to $84K annually
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    SSO, governance, SLA; typical $84K to $240K annually
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-event overages above tier inclusions
  • · Implementation for complex CDC topologies
  • · Annual escalators at renewal

Key features

  • +CDC-first streaming activation (Debezium-based)
  • +Sub-minute sync latency on supported source paths
  • +PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, SQL Server as first-class sources
  • +Operational destination support
  • +Modern streaming runtime
  • +Public pricing
75+ integrations
PostgreSQLMySQLMongoDBSQL ServerSnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksSalesforceHubSpotKafka
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU
#6

Grouparoo (Airbyte)

Open-source reverse-ETL heritage, acquired by Airbyte April 2022 and folded into the Airbyte platform.

Founded 2020 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50-1,000 employees
G2 4.5 (110)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Grouparoo (Airbyte)

Grouparoo was the open-source reverse-ETL pioneer, founded 2020, acquired by Airbyte in April 2022. After the acquisition, the Grouparoo product was wound down as a standalone and its capabilities folded into the broader Airbyte platform, which now ships reverse ETL as a destination class alongside its core ELT motion. The Grouparoo legacy lives on as Airbyte's warehouse-out tooling. Strengths: open-source heritage preserved through Airbyte's dual-license commitment, integrated with the largest connector catalog in the broader data integration category (550+ ELT connectors give Airbyte broad source coverage), and a credible choice for Airbyte ingest customers who want one vendor for both directions. Trade-offs: standalone Grouparoo product is no longer actively developed, reverse-ETL feature depth inside Airbyte is narrower than Hightouch or Census, destination ecosystem is the smallest in this list, and Airbyte's warehouse-out story remains less differentiated than its inbound ELT story.

Best for

Existing Airbyte ELT customers (50 to 1,000 employees) who want one vendor for both inbound ingest and outbound warehouse activation, especially engineering-led teams that already operate Airbyte OSS or Cloud.

Worst for

Buyers needing standalone reverse-ETL category-leader features (Hightouch leads), marketing-led teams wanting modern audience tooling, or organizations that do not already run Airbyte for inbound ELT.

Strengths

  • Open-source heritage preserved through Airbyte dual-license
  • Integrated with Airbyte's broader connector catalog (one vendor for inbound and outbound)
  • Credible choice for existing Airbyte ELT customers extending into activation
  • Self-host option via Airbyte OSS
  • No additional vendor relationship for Airbyte-anchored stacks

Weaknesses

  • Standalone Grouparoo product wound down post-acquisition
  • Reverse-ETL feature depth narrower than Hightouch, Census, or RudderStack
  • Destination ecosystem the smallest of the standalone reverse-ETL options
  • Audience tooling effectively absent compared to Hightouch Audiences
  • Airbyte warehouse-out story less differentiated than its inbound ELT story

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Airbyte OSS
    Self-hosted; free under dual-license (MIT plus ELv2)
    $0 /mo
  • Airbyte Cloud
    Credit-based consumption; reverse-ETL destinations included
    $0 /mo
  • Self-Managed Enterprise
    Reverse-ETL bundled; typical $80K to $400K annually for the platform overall
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Credit consumption on outbound syncs adds to broader Airbyte bill
  • · Self-host infra cost for OSS reverse-ETL deployments
  • · No standalone reverse-ETL pricing line; bundled with broader Airbyte spend

Key features

  • +Reverse ETL via Airbyte destination class
  • +Bundled with Airbyte ELT (one vendor, both directions)
  • +Self-host via Airbyte OSS
  • +Open-source heritage preserved
  • +Airbyte Connector Builder for custom destinations
80+ integrations
SnowflakeBigQueryDatabricksRedshiftSalesforceHubSpotMarketoIterableKlaviyo
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Does reverse ETL pushing data into US-hosted platforms create APP 8 obligations?
Yes. APP 8 requires Australian entities to take reasonable steps to ensure overseas recipients handle personal information consistently with the Australian Privacy Principles. Reverse-ETL workflows that push Aussie customer data from a Sydney warehouse into US-hosted Salesforce, HubSpot, Braze or Marketo create the APP 8 obligation. Practical pattern: document the cross-border flow in the privacy notice, ensure sub-processor terms with the destination platform, and retain consent-state evidence. APRA-regulated entities will require documented APP 8 reasonable-steps records as part of CPS 234 evidence.
Where should reverse ETL infrastructure sit for an APRA-regulated bank?
APRA CPS 234 does not mandate onshore but APRA Information Paper guidance, CPS 230 (effective 1 July 2025) and most bank security policies push for AWS Sydney (ap-southeast-2) or Azure Australia East / Australia Central residency. Hightouch and Census both offer Sydney residency on enterprise tiers. Fivetran runs Sydney. RudderStack supports multi-region with contractual residency commitments. Aussie banks running reverse ETL at scale almost always require Sydney warehouse + Sydney reverse-ETL control plane + documented sub-processor and incident-response SLAs.
Hightouch vs Census for an Aussie SaaS data team?
For most Aussie SaaS data teams, the choice is close. Hightouch has won the broader public-reference footprint (Atlassian, Canva, Employment Hero, Culture Amp, SafetyCulture, Linktree) and slightly faster destination coverage. Census has better observability and audit features that appeal to APRA-adjacent customers. The decision usually comes down to who the senior data-platform engineer worked with previously and which has more native syncs for the destinations the team needs (typically Salesforce, HubSpot, Braze, Marketo, Snowflake-and-Iceberg-back, plus warehouse-direct).
What is reverse ETL and how is it different from a customer data platform (CDP)?
Reverse ETL is the pattern of syncing warehouse-resident data (Snowflake, BigQuery, Databricks, Redshift) back into operational SaaS tools (HubSpot, Salesforce, Marketo, Iterable, Zendesk). A customer data platform (CDP) is a broader category that historically covered inbound event capture, identity resolution, audience building, and outbound activation as one packaged product. The 2026 architectural debate is composable CDP versus packaged CDP. Composable CDP uses your warehouse as the source of truth plus a reverse-ETL platform (Hightouch, Census, RudderStack) for activation. Packaged CDP (Twilio Segment, mParticle, Tealium) handles all four steps inside a single proprietary platform. Composable wins on data ownership, governance, and being unified with analytics. Packaged wins on time-to-value, real-time event collection, and operational maturity. The right answer depends on warehouse maturity at the buyer org, not vendor pitch.
Hightouch vs Census: which should I pick?
Hightouch is the right choice when audience modeling (Hightouch Audiences) and composable-CDP features (AI Decisioning) matter most, when destination breadth matters (~250 vs ~200), or when you are matching against the most active product roadmap in the category. Census is the right choice when sync correctness and observability are first-class requirements (data-quality tooling at the sync layer is best in category), when audit and reconciliation are non-negotiable, or when product velocity matters less than sync reliability. Verified buyer disclosures show roughly comparable median pricing at 50 to 200 employees ($12K to $13K per year) and at 200 to 1,000 employees ($54K to $60K per year). Most head-to-head evaluations come down to: do you want the broader audience and CDP roadmap (Hightouch) or the deeper sync observability story (Census).
Per-MTU vs per-destination pricing: which model is better?
Per-MTU (Monthly Tracked Users) plus per-source pricing dominates in the standalone reverse-ETL category (Hightouch, Census). It scales with the number of profiles you sync rather than the number of destinations. Per-destination (flat per-connector) pricing is rare in reverse-ETL but more common in iPaaS. Per-event (Hevo Activate, RudderStack) and per-task (Streamkap) are alternatives that scale with sync volume rather than profile cardinality. Verified buyer disclosures show per-MTU models can spike 30 to 50 percent month-to-month on high-cardinality audiences. Per-event and per-task models tend to be more predictable but can be more expensive at low cardinality. There is no universally better model; match the model to your workload pattern. If your audience cardinality is high relative to event volume, per-event is better. If your event volume is high relative to profile count, per-MTU is better.
How real is "real-time" in reverse ETL?
Most reverse-ETL platforms operate on 5-minute to hourly batch schedules. Vendors claiming "real-time" typically mean 1-5 minute batches. Hightouch advertises a 5-minute floor at the Pro tier and 1-minute on selected destinations at Enterprise. Census operates similar batch cadences. RudderStack Reverse ETL inherits the same batch model. If your use case can tolerate 5-minute to hourly latency (the majority of operational analytics use cases, including lifecycle marketing, sales prioritization, and support enrichment), batch reverse-ETL is the right architecture. If you need sub-minute latency, the right architecture is streaming CDC from the transactional database directly to the destination (Streamkap, RudderStack Stream, or a homegrown Debezium-plus-Kafka pipeline). Do not pay the streaming premium unless freshness is a measurable business requirement.
Reverse ETL vs traditional iPaaS (Workato, MuleSoft): when do I pick which?
Reverse ETL is the right choice when your primary need is warehouse-out activation: syncing analytics-derived audiences, scores, traits, and computed columns from your warehouse into operational SaaS tools. iPaaS (Workato, MuleSoft, Boomi) is the right choice when reverse-ETL is one of many integration use cases alongside bidirectional app-to-app integration, workflow orchestration, and business-process automation. Standalone reverse-ETL vendors are purpose-built: deeper audience modeling, warehouse-native semantics, sync observability tuned to the warehouse-out motion. iPaaS is broader but shallower on the warehouse-out specifically. Many enterprises run both: Workato or MuleSoft for the broader integration surface, Hightouch or Census for reverse-ETL specifically.
When does composable CDP not work?
Composable CDP only works if your warehouse is genuinely the source of truth for customer data, with reliable identity resolution, mature dbt models, and the analytics-engineering capacity to maintain audience definitions over time. If your warehouse is incomplete (key sources still not ingested), if identity resolution is broken (no canonical customer_id across systems), or if your team lacks analytics-engineering capacity, composable CDP will underperform a packaged CDP. The honest assessment: many organizations are not yet at warehouse-first maturity. For those organizations, Twilio Segment or another packaged CDP is the right choice even if composable is architecturally cleaner. The decision should be driven by warehouse maturity at the buyer org, not by vendor pitch. A reasonable test: if your warehouse cannot answer "show me the canonical view of customer X across all systems" in one SQL query today, you are not ready for composable CDP.
How well does reverse ETL support AI activation on Snowflake or Databricks?
AI activation through reverse ETL means taking a model output (a prediction, a score, an embedding) computed in Snowflake Cortex, Databricks ML, or a separate ML platform, and syncing it back to operational tools where revenue, support, or lifecycle teams can act on it. Hightouch AI Decisioning (GA 2024) is the most developed AI activation layer in the standalone reverse-ETL category, positioned for next-best-action and propensity-score syncs into marketing and CRM destinations. Census supports similar patterns through model-to-destination sync but with less of an AI-specific framing. Snowflake-native (Cortex) and Databricks-native activation through reverse-ETL is in active development across all vendors. The practical guidance: if AI activation is a primary use case, evaluate Hightouch AI Decisioning specifically. If it is one capability among many, any of the top three reverse-ETL platforms can sync model outputs.
HIPAA and GDPR reality for syncing PII into SaaS tools: what do I need to know?
HIPAA: reverse-ETL platforms that sync Protected Health Information (PHI) from a warehouse into operational tools require a Business Associate Agreement (BAA) with the vendor. Hightouch Enterprise, Census, Hevo Activate, Workato, and Fivetran Business Critical offer HIPAA BAAs. RudderStack, Polytomic, Streamkap, and Airbyte (as of 2026) do not consistently offer HIPAA BAAs on standard tiers. PHI must also be masked or encrypted at the column level on the sync, not just in the warehouse. GDPR: reverse-ETL platforms that sync personal data of EU residents require a DPA with the vendor and EU-resident data plane configuration. Hightouch, Census, RudderStack, and Workato all provide GDPR-compliant DPAs and EU data plane options (AWS Frankfurt or Dublin, Azure West Europe). Consent for downstream destination use must reach the warehouse model layer, not just the ETL ingest layer; this is an architecture concern that reverse-ETL alone does not solve. CCPA-style deletion requests under GDPR Article 17 must reach destination tools, not just the warehouse copy; verify your reverse-ETL platform supports propagated deletion or operate it at the warehouse layer with deletion replication.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Reverse ETL 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.