Database as a Service Pricing Benchmarks 2026: 11 Products Compared
Quick Answer

Database as a Service pricing across 11 tracked products: entry-tier median $0, top-tier median $0. Cheapest: Aiven. Most premium: Supabase. Updated April 2026.

Last updated: April 24, 2026

Market Median (11 products)

Database as a Service pricing varies across per-seat, per-usage, and enterprise-quoted tiers. Published list prices on vendor pricing pages form the basis of this benchmark; negotiated deals typically land 15-40% below list for teams over 20 seats.

Entry-tier median is $0, top-tier median $0. Negotiated enterprise deals typically land 15-40% below list.

Per-Product Pricing

Product Entry Median Top Unit
Aiven $0 $0 $0 month
Amazon DynamoDB $0 $0 $0 month
Amazon RDS $0 $0 $0 month
Cloud Firestore $0 $0 $0 month
CockroachDB $0 $0.18 $0.60 month
Crunchy Bridge $0 $0 $0 month
MongoDB Atlas $0 $0 $0 month
Neon $0 $0 $0 month
PlanetScale $0 $15 $50 month
Supabase $0 $25 $599 month
Turso $0 $25 $416 month

What this table shows

Low is the entry-tier price (often a free or starter plan). Median is the middle price across published tiers. High is the top published tier — enterprise contracts with negotiated discounts usually land 15-40% below the published high.

Frequently Asked Questions

01 What do database as a service actually cost?

Across 11 tracked products, the entry-tier median is $0 and the top-tier median is $0. Individual products vary significantly — see the per-product table above.

02 Which database as a service is cheapest?

Aiven has the lowest entry-tier price in our tracked set.

03 Which database as a service is most premium?

Supabase has the highest top-tier list price among tracked products.

04 How accurate is this pricing data?

Prices are sourced from vendor pricing pages and automatically re-checked. Any tier marked 'custom' has no public list price; negotiated deals aren't shown here.