Organizations using advanced data analytics need a way to get data out of where it resides so that they can move it to a data warehouse or data lake. That’s where data extraction software comes in.
It is nearly impossible to purchase a tool that does only data extraction. The most basic of these tools also transforms the data and load it into another system. In the early days of data mining, many data extraction vendors marketed their products as ETL (short for extract, transform, load), or data migration tools. Over the years, most vendors have added more capabilities to their tools and now call them data integration and/or data pipeline tools, although the core capabilities remain the same.
It’s worth noting that many data fabric and data management platforms also incorporate data extraction and data integration features. However, some organizations find it useful to have separate data extraction software. These standalone tools sometimes offer better performance and can be more affordable if organizations don’t need the full capabilities of a more advanced data platform.
The list below focuses on tools whose primary purpose is data extraction, rather than more broad capabilities.
If you are in the market for data extraction software, keep these tips in mind:
With those tips in mind, here are ten data extraction software applications you might want to consider:
Jump to:
Founded in 1985, Altair sells a variety of software, hardware and services, primarily related to data analytics, product design, high-performance computing and the Internet of Things. Its customers include NASA, RUAG Space, PING Golf, Specialized, Ford, Stanley Black & Decker, Kyoto University and others. Over the years, Altair has acquired a number of other technology companies, including Datawatch, the previous vendor of the Monarch software.
Part of the company’s data analytics lineup, Monarch is Altair’s “market-leading self-service data preparation solution.” It incorporates both data extraction, data cleansing, and transformation capabilities, and it offers more than 80 pre-built data preparation functions. It can extract data from PDFs and text files, as well as structured sources, and it requires no coding abilities. It is available in a variety of different versions and can be deployed in the cloud as software as a service or on premises.
An annual subscription to the Monarch Complete cloud service starts at $1,995. A free trial and demos are available. Prices for the server version are available on request.
Pros
Cons
Domo is a business intelligence startup founded in 2010. It claims more than 1,800 customers, including DHL, ESPN, L’Oreal, Traeger, Zillow, Ebay, Comcast, Autodesk and others. It has won several awards, including Ventana Research Digital Leadership Award – Analytics and Best Business Intelligence Software Company from Digital.com.
Data extraction capabilities are included in Domo’s Data Integration product. Its key features include more than 1,000 pre-built connectors for cloud systems, fast query response times, automated data pipeline workflows, data federation and massively parallel processing. It also includes some data governance capabilities and offers strong security.
Pricing and a free trial are available on request. Prices depend on which Domo platform features you use, data volume, storage needs, refresh rates, query volumes and the number of users.
Pros
Cons
Founded in 2013, Etleap is one of the few vendors on this list that still describes itself as an ETL vendor, although it also sometimes describes its product as data pipeline software. Its customers include Mode, Blink Health, LendingHome, Airtable, Pagerduty and others.
Domo makes it easy to create an ETL pipeline to build a cloud data warehouse on AWS Redshift or Snowflake. Key features include flexibility, scalability, coded or code-less transformation creation options, compliance, SSO integration and more. It integrates with more than 50 data sources, including MySQL, AWS, PostgreSQL, Oracle, Salesforce, Marketo, Jira, Hubspot and Hadoop.
Pricing and a free demo are available on request.
Pros
Cons
Founded in 2013, Fivetran is a pure-play startup that focuses on “simple, reliable data integration for analytics teams.” It has more than 1,000 customers, including Square, DocuSign, Lime, Spanx, Udacity and others.
The Fivetran platform offers fully managed ELT pipelines. Key extraction features include normalized schemas, incremental batch updates, 24-hour tech support, real-time monitoring, granular system logs, and a 99.9% uptime guarantee. It has more than 150 built-in connectors, including MySQL, Oracle, Amazon S3, Microsoft Dynamics, and many others, and it can pull data directly from more than 5,000 different cloud-based applications.
Fivetran lists pricing on its website, but the pricing method is complicated. The service costs $1/credit for the Starter version, $1.50/credit for Standard, and $2/credit for Enterprise. Credits are determined based on the monthly active rows, but as your volume increase, each credit covers more active rows. Free trials are available.
Pros
Cons
Based in the Czech Republic, Keboola offers a data operations platform that includes storage, sharing, transformations and data science capabilities. Its customers include Mall Group, Kiwi.com, Platterz, Heureka, Firehouse Subs, Hello Bank! and others.
Keboola can perform ETL or ELT jobs. It promises fast deployment, enterprise-grade security, automation, an open platform, “scaffolds” for connecting to common data sources, data catalog capabilities, a developer portal and more.
Keboola offers a free plan with 300 free minutes each month, with paid overages after that. The subscription plan adds more features and starts at $2500 per month.
Pros
Cons
Matillion describes itself as a cloud-based ETL software provider. Founded in 2010, it has amassed an impressive customer list that includes The Home Depot, Travis Perkins, GE, Siemens, Western Union, Splunk, Ikea, Cisco, Amazon, Merck, Accenture and others. Gartner named it a Niche Player in its Magic Quadrant for Data Integration tools.
Matillion natively integrates with AWS Snowflake and Redshift, Google BigQuaery, Microsoft Azure Synapse and other cloud services, making it easy to feed data into a data warehouse. It supports advanced transformations and has a long list of pre-built connectors for data sources.
The software is available in two different versions: Data Loader is a free version with basic capabilities, and ETL is the paid version. The ETL version has four different pricing tiers: Medium ($1.79 per hour), Large ($3.49 per hour), XLarge ($6.49 per hour) and Enterprise (pricing on request). A demo is available.
Pros
Cons
Founded in 2015, Panoply offers a cloud data platform that allows small to medium-sized businesses to create data warehouses. Its customers include Kaplan, Spanx, Shinesty and others. It has won several awards, including being named a Gartner Cool Vendor in 2019.
This platform combines data extraction and integration with full data warehouse capabilities, and some versions also include data governance features. It offers connectors for more than 60 data sources, and it promises world-class security and 99.99% uptime. Other features include fully managed syncing and storage, automatic data type detection, built-in performance monitoring, high scalability and pre-built SQL queries.
Panoply comes in Lite ($200 per month), Starter ($325 per month), Pro ($665 per month), Business ($995 per month) and Enterprise (pricing on request) versions. All offer a free 14-day trial.
Pros
Cons
Rivery describes its platform as a “real-time data pipeline,” and it offers cloud-based ETL, data migration and data orchestration capabilities. Its customers include Bayer, the American Cancer Society, Minute Media, WalkMe and others.
On its list of benefits, Rivery touts its ability to ingest data from any source, scalability, speed, low cost and simplicity. It designed its ETL tool to be used by business users without assistance form DevOps teams, and it is compatible with AWS Snowflake and Redshift, Google BigQuery and Microsoft Azure.
Rivery offers some pricing details on its website, but the information is not very specific. It says its Base package costs between $10 and $50,000 per year with a free trial available, and pricing for the Enterprise package is available on request.
Pros
Cons
Now owned by unified data fabric vendor Talend, Stitch offers “simple, extensible ETL.” While Talend and Stitch products integrate well together, Stitch still operates as an independent business unit. Its customers include Peloton, Envoy, Invision, Indiegogo, Instapage and Postman.
This fully managed data pipeline integrates with more than 130 data sources, and the company sponsors the Singer open source framework, which makes it easy to build integrations with other applications. Stitch doesn’t require any coding, and you can set it up in minutes. It offers orchestration, security, compliance, and data quality features.
Stitch Standard starts at $100 per month for 5 million rows of data, climbing up to $1,250 per month for 300 million rows. Discounts are available for an annual purchase, and the company offers a free 14-day trial. Prices for Stitch Enterprise are available on request.
Pros
Cons
Calling itself the “most advanced data pipeline,” Xplenty offers both ELT and ETL capabilities. It is a pure-play startup founded in Isreal in 2012. Its customers include Gap, Samsung, Philip Morris International, PWC, Masterclass, Deloitte, Accenture, Ikea and others.
Xplenty offers a complete data pipeline toolkit that includes orchestration and monitoring capabilities. It integrates with more than 140 data sources and is particularly well-suited to organizations that use Salesforce. It is highly scalable has advanced customization capabilities.
A demo is available and pricing are available on request.
Pros
Cons
Data Extraction Software |
Pros |
Cons |
Altair Monarch |
· Mature product · Easy to use · Integrates with other Altair tools |
· High price · Poor scalability · Requires training |
Domo |
· Comprehensive features · Lots of connectors · Flexibility |
· Too many features for some · High price · Buggy releases |
Etleap |
· AWS integration · ETL only · Training and support |
· Limited features · Few customer reviews · Requires technical knowledge |
Fivetran |
· Fast setup · Pay-as-you-go pricing · 99.9% uptime SLA |
· Limited transformation capabilities · Estimating pricing can be · Slow syncing |
Kaboola |
· Broad capabilities · Good customer service · Free tier |
· Not easy to use · No CI support · Slow onboarding |
Matillion |
· Easy to use · Fast performance · Upfront pricing |
· Slow customer support · Poor error handling · Inadequate documentation |
Panoply |
· Highly rated · Good customer support · Easily connects to data sources |
· Not great for enterprises · Limited connectors · No data visualization |
Rivery |
· Good reviews · Good customer support · Easy to use |
· Time-consuming setup · Poor documentation · Vague pricing |
Talend/Stitch |
· Highly extensible · Good customer support · Affordable |
· Limited filtering · Limited data transformation · Poor logging and error reporting |
Xplenty |
· Salesforce integration · Easy to use · Good customer support |
· Scalability problems · Poor logging and error · Inadequate documentation |
Datamation is the leading industry resource for B2B data professionals and technology buyers. Datamation's focus is on providing insight into the latest trends and innovation in AI, data security, big data, and more, along with in-depth product recommendations and comparisons. More than 1.7M users gain insight and guidance from Datamation every year.
Advertise with TechnologyAdvice on Datamation and our other data and technology-focused platforms.
Advertise with Us
Property of TechnologyAdvice.
© 2025 TechnologyAdvice. All Rights Reserved
Advertiser Disclosure: Some of the products that appear on this
site are from companies from which TechnologyAdvice receives
compensation. This compensation may impact how and where products
appear on this site including, for example, the order in which
they appear. TechnologyAdvice does not include all companies
or all types of products available in the marketplace.