Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
Change tools
For non-technical users who want to chat with their database in plain English, BlazeSQL is the simpler, cheaper entry point — but it lacks mobile access and API. Draxlr is a more polished, paid tool with better dashboards and alerting, best for teams that need to share live reports. The biggest difference: BlazeSQL focuses on natural-language querying, while Draxlr is a full dashboard-and-alert platform.
BlazeSQL
Draxlr
Scores at a glance
Choose BlazeSQL if
Choose Draxlr if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| BlazeSQL | Draxlr | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
Yes — BlazeSQL is designed specifically for non-technical users to ask questions in plain English, and it includes a training mode to improve accuracy. Draxlr also has AI querying, but its strength is building dashboards, not just answering questions.
No — neither tool has a mobile app. Both are designed for desktop browsers only. If you need to check data on the go, you'll need a different tool.
BlazeSQL is likely cheaper because its pricing isn't published (possibly free or low-cost). Draxlr costs at least $75/month, which is expensive for one person unless you need its dashboard and alert features.
Yes — both connect to SQL databases like PostgreSQL and MySQL. Draxlr also supports Airtable and Excel/CSV uploads, while BlazeSQL only works with SQL databases.
Draxlr is better — it has a drag-and-drop dashboard builder, email alerts, and embeddable charts. BlazeSQL is more for answering your own questions, not building polished reports.
BlazeSQL wins on simplicity and price for solo querying; Draxlr wins on dashboards and alerts for teams.
If you just want to chat with your database in plain English and don't need fancy dashboards, start with BlazeSQL — it's simpler and likely cheaper. But if your team needs to build live reports, set up alerts, and share insights, Draxlr is worth the $75/month investment. Both are desktop-only, so keep that in mind.