Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
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For everyday users, neither Inscripta nor Nabla is a practical choice — both are enterprise-grade healthcare tools with no mobile app, hidden pricing, and steep onboarding. Nabla wins for doctors who need fast, EHR-integrated clinical notes; Inscripta wins for developers building custom HIPAA-compliant transcription pipelines. The single biggest difference: Nabla is a ready-to-use ambient scribe for clinicians, while Inscripta is an API-first platform for engineers.
Inscripta
Nabla
Scores at a glance
Choose Inscripta if
Choose Nabla if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Inscripta | Nabla | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
No. Nabla is better because it's designed for clinicians with no coding — it listens during patient visits and writes notes automatically. Inscripta requires API integration and is meant for larger organizations.
No. Neither tool has a mobile app. Both require a desktop computer or a browser. If you need mobile transcription, look at Otter.ai or Microsoft Dictate instead.
Both hide their pricing behind 'contact sales.' Inscripta is enterprise-priced (likely thousands per month). Nabla may offer a per-clinician subscription, but it's not publicly listed. Neither is cheap for a regular person.
Nabla is easier — you sign up with a medical email, install a browser extension, and start using it. Inscripta requires generating API keys, configuring webhooks, and selecting domain models — it's for developers only.
Not really. Both are specialized for healthcare. Inscripta can technically transcribe any audio, but its pricing and complexity make it overkill. Nabla is locked to clinical note generation. For general use, try Otter.ai or Descript.
Nabla wins for doctors who want instant AI notes; Inscripta wins for developers building custom healthcare transcription — but neither is for the average person.
If you're a doctor tired of typing notes, Nabla is your best bet — but only if your clinic has good Wi-Fi and you're willing to pay for the full version. If you're not in healthcare, skip both: they're expensive, complex, and lack mobile apps. For everyday transcription, look at simpler tools like Otter.ai or Descript.