Last Updated: April 2026
If you've ever shopped for a workflow automation tool, you've collided with this decision within about ten minutes of your first search: Zapier or n8n? The two platforms dominate the iPaaS category, get compared constantly on Reddit and Hacker News, and solve roughly the same problem — connect App A to App B, do something useful in between. And yet they target fundamentally different buyers. Picking the wrong one costs you either months of wasted setup or a surprise $1,200 monthly invoice.
Here's the honest verdict up front, before we get into detail: Zapier wins on ease of use and integration breadth. n8n wins on control, customization, and cost at scale. Each of them loses to the other on the opposite dimension. If you're non-technical and want to ship an automation in ten minutes, Zapier. If you're technical, care about cost at volume, and want to self-host, n8n. Everything else is nuance.
The nuance matters though — especially in 2026, with both platforms scrambling to add AI features and a new category of AI-native automation platforms (Arahi AI included) starting to eat the orchestration layer from a different angle. This guide walks through every dimension that matters: pricing, integrations, ease of use, AI support, enterprise features, and where each one genuinely loses.
Quick Verdict: When to Pick Each One
Short on time? Here's the decision framework.
| Pick this | If you… |
|---|---|
| Zapier | Are non-technical, need the widest integration catalog (7,000+ apps), want to build automations without touching infrastructure, and your workflows run at modest volumes (under a few thousand tasks/month per workflow). |
| n8n | Have an engineer on the team, want to self-host for data-privacy or cost reasons, need custom code and fine-grained branching, or run enough volume that Zapier's per-task pricing starts to hurt. |
| Consider something else (Arahi AI, Make) | Want AI agents that reason and choose actions rather than rigid IF/THEN trees, need proactive automation across your business systems, or want a middle-ground between Zapier's ease and n8n's power. |
That's the 30-second version. Below we'll pressure-test each row with real pricing, real integration depth, and real workflow examples.
Side-by-Side: The Feature Comparison Table
This is the table to bookmark. Every row here is a question we've seen teams ask before committing.
| Dimension | Zapier | n8n |
|---|---|---|
| Hosting | SaaS only (hosted by Zapier) | SaaS (n8n Cloud) or fully self-hosted |
| Pricing model | Per task (each step = 1 task) | Per active workflow (Cloud) or free (self-hosted) |
| Entry price | $29.99/mo (Starter) | $24/mo (Cloud Starter) or $0 self-hosted |
| Pricing at ~1K executions/mo (5-step workflow) | ~$73.90/mo (Professional tier covers 2,000 tasks) | $24/mo Cloud, $0 self-hosted |
| Integration count | 7,000+ apps | ~1,000+ nodes (plus custom HTTP) |
| Ease of use (1–5) | 5 | 3 |
| Custom code support | Python/JS "Code by Zapier" step; limited scope | Native Function nodes, Code nodes, full JS/Python; unrestricted |
| Error handling | Basic retries, path branching | Full error workflows, retry logic, conditional paths |
| Workflow logic | Paths (limited branching), filters | Full branching, loops, merging, sub-workflows |
| Self-hosting | No | Yes (Docker, Kubernetes, or desktop) |
| State / persistence | Implicit per-run | Native data persistence across runs |
| AI agent support | Zapier Agents (GA 2025), AI Actions | LangChain nodes, OpenAI / Anthropic nodes, AI Agent node |
| SSO / SCIM | Enterprise (Company) plan only | Enterprise tier |
| SOC 2 | Yes | Yes |
| Data residency (EU, etc.) | Limited to Zapier infra | Full control if self-hosted |
| Community size | Huge — millions of users, polished forum | Active — strong developer community, ~60K+ GitHub stars |
| Licensing | Proprietary SaaS | Fair-code (Sustainable Use License) |
| Best for | Non-technical users, fast 1-to-1 integrations | Technical teams, complex logic, cost-sensitive scale |
You can feel the shape of the tradeoff just reading the table. Zapier optimizes for time to first working automation. n8n optimizes for total cost of ownership and flexibility.
Pricing Deep Dive
Pricing is where most teams actually make the decision — or regret the decision they made six months ago.
Zapier pricing (2026)
Zapier's pricing is per-task. A "task" is each step in a Zap that runs. A Zap with a trigger and four actions burns five tasks every time it executes. Here are the public tiers as of April 2026:
- Free: 100 tasks/month, single-step Zaps only. Fine for testing.
- Starter: $29.99/month (billed annually) → 750 tasks/month, multi-step Zaps, three premium apps.
- Professional: $73.90/month → 2,000 tasks/month, unlimited premium apps, paths, custom logic.
- Team: $103.50/month → 2,000 tasks/month included, shared workspaces, unlimited users.
- Company (Enterprise): Custom pricing, typically starts around $1,000+/month, adds SSO, SCIM, audit logs, advanced admin.
Tasks scale up — the Professional tier can also be purchased at higher volumes (50K tasks, 100K tasks, etc.) with the price increasing non-linearly. At 100K tasks/month on Professional, you're looking at roughly $600–$800/month depending on billing cycle.
n8n pricing (2026)
n8n prices differently. Cloud is per active workflow, not per task. Self-hosted is free.
- Self-hosted: $0. You run it on your own Docker container, VPS, or Kubernetes cluster. No execution limits other than what your hardware supports.
- Cloud Starter: $24/month → 5 active workflows, 2,500 executions/month, 5 concurrent runs.
- Cloud Pro: $60/month → 15 active workflows, 10,000 executions/month, 20 concurrent runs.
- Cloud Business: $500+/month → unlimited workflows, higher execution limits, SSO, log streaming, external secrets.
- Enterprise (self-hosted): Custom pricing, unlocks advanced features like SSO, audit logs, LDAP/SAML, external secrets, and commercial support.
The critical difference: n8n counts executions, not tasks. A 50-step n8n workflow that runs once counts as one execution. A 50-step Zapier Zap that runs once burns 50 tasks. That math alone explains why n8n scales better.
Worked example: 5-step workflow, 500 executions/day
Say you've built a lead-enrichment workflow:
- New row in Google Sheets (trigger)
- Enrich with Clearbit
- Score lead with an AI step
- Write back to Sheets
- Notify Slack
500 executions per day × 30 days = 15,000 runs per month.
Zapier: 15,000 runs × 5 tasks = 75,000 tasks/month. You're past the Professional base tier — you'd need the 100K-task variant, roughly $599/month.
n8n Cloud: 15,000 executions/month fits inside the Pro tier. $60/month.
n8n self-hosted: A $10/month Hetzner VPS will run this without sweating. ~$10/month.
That's a 10x to 60x difference, and it's not a cherry-picked example — it's what most growing teams actually run. This is why technical teams that start on Zapier often migrate to n8n around month six.
Ease of Use and Learning Curve
Pricing is half the story. The other half is whether your team can actually use the thing.
Zapier: built to feel like a productivity app
The first time you use Zapier, you'll build a working Zap in about three minutes. The UI is linear, step-by-step, and assumes you know nothing. Pick a trigger app, authenticate, pick a trigger event, test it, pick an action app, map fields, test again, turn on. The visual language is consistent across all 7,000 integrations — once you've built one Zap, you've built them all.
The flip side: as your logic gets more complicated, Zapier's UI starts to strain. Paths (branching) work but feel clunky. You can't easily loop over arrays. Conditional filtering is basic. Debugging a Zap that failed three days ago means clicking through a run history that's optimized for casual inspection, not engineering diagnosis.
Reality check: Zapier is optimized for the 80% of workflows that are one-trigger-many-actions. When you cross into the 20% that need loops, nested logic, or stateful processing, you start feeling the ceiling.
n8n: built to feel like a node graph
n8n's UI is a canvas. You drop nodes, connect them, configure each one. It borrows from Blender/Houdini-style node-based thinking rather than from form-based SaaS design. For a developer, this feels natural within an afternoon. For a marketer who's never seen a node graph, it's disorienting.
The learning curve is steeper — expect a few days before someone non-technical is productive — but the ceiling is dramatically higher. Once you understand n8n's data model (each node outputs items; downstream nodes map over items), you can build things that would be outright impossible in Zapier: recursive workflows, sub-workflows called like functions, parallel processing with explicit merging, dynamic node execution based on runtime data.
Reality check: Teams that try n8n and "don't get it" usually had one person try it for an hour and give up. Teams that give it a week almost always stick.
The actual productivity inflection point
Here's a pattern we've watched play out at dozens of teams. Someone on the growth or ops team gets handed the automation budget. They pick Zapier because it's the obvious choice and ship three or four workflows in the first month. Six months later the list is at thirty workflows, the task bill is $400+, and a few of the Zaps are doing gnarly multi-path logic held together with filter steps and comments. That's the moment someone asks, "should we look at n8n?"
There's nothing wrong with this trajectory — in fact it's probably the right one. Starting on Zapier lets you validate the use cases before investing in the tooling. You find out which workflows are actually valuable and which ones were vanity automations. When you migrate to n8n (or when you split workloads between both), you do so with real data on what each workflow is worth. Teams that start on n8n often over-engineer their first workflows because the tool rewards complexity. Teams that start on Zapier stay pragmatic.
Integrations: Breadth vs Depth
This is where the comparison gets interesting — because the two platforms are playing different games.
Zapier: maximum breadth, limited depth
Zapier famously ships with 7,000+ integrations. If you can name a SaaS tool, it's in Zapier. That breadth is its moat. The downside: per-integration depth is usually surface-level. Zapier's Google Sheets integration, for example, exposes actions like "create row," "update row," "lookup row" — but doesn't give you access to every Sheets API capability. For 80% of users, that's more than enough. For the other 20%, you hit a wall and reach for the generic Webhooks step.
n8n: fewer integrations, deeper hooks
n8n ships with ~1,000 nodes. Fewer — but each one tends to expose more of the underlying API. The Google Sheets node in n8n supports batch updates, custom range queries, cell-level formatting, and more that Zapier doesn't expose directly. And when a native node doesn't exist, the HTTP Request node is first-class: you can hit any REST or GraphQL API with full header, auth, and pagination control.
For most teams, the practical question is: are all your tools in the catalog? For Zapier, almost certainly yes. For n8n, mostly yes with a sprinkle of HTTP Request calls for edge cases. If you run on niche vertical SaaS (e.g. a Shopify app, a Salesforce managed package, a fintech API), Zapier is more likely to have a one-click integration. If you mostly run on the top 200 SaaS tools, n8n has you covered.
AI Features in 2026
Both platforms spent 2024 and 2025 bolting AI onto their existing products. Neither was designed around AI from the start, which shows in both UX and capability.
Zapier AI features
- Zapier Agents (GA 2025): semi-autonomous agents that can execute multi-step tasks triggered by natural language. Think "find new Stripe subscriptions in the last week, enrich with Clearbit, and post a summary to Slack." Solid for simple delegation; brittle for complex reasoning.
- AI Actions: pre-built steps for common LLM tasks — summarize, classify, extract, generate. Runs on OpenAI or Anthropic models, with your own keys or Zapier's.
- Copilot: natural-language Zap builder. Describe what you want; it drafts the Zap. Good for Zap scaffolding, still requires manual cleanup.
n8n AI features
- AI Agent node: native LangChain-based agent node with tool-use, memory, and chain-of-thought reasoning. More flexible than Zapier's equivalent — you configure the model, prompt, tools, and memory yourself.
- OpenAI / Anthropic / Ollama nodes: direct integrations with all major LLM providers, including local models via Ollama.
- Vector store nodes: native support for Pinecone, Qdrant, Supabase, and more — enables RAG workflows out of the box.
Honest take: if you want to stitch an LLM call into an existing workflow, both work fine. If you want to build an AI-native system — one where agents reason about state and choose actions dynamically — both feel retrofitted. Which is the bridge to the next section.
Enterprise Readiness
If you're evaluating for a larger org, here's the checklist.
| Feature | Zapier (Company) | n8n (Enterprise) |
|---|---|---|
| SSO (SAML) | Yes | Yes |
| SCIM provisioning | Yes | Yes |
| Audit logs | Yes | Yes |
| Role-based access control | Yes | Yes |
| SOC 2 Type II | Yes | Yes |
| GDPR-compliant data residency | EU region available | Full control if self-hosted |
| External secrets management | Limited | Yes (HashiCorp Vault, AWS Secrets Manager) |
| Log streaming | Limited | Yes |
| Private cloud / on-prem | No | Yes |
| HIPAA | Available (contact sales) | Available via self-hosting + BAA-capable infra |
For most SMBs, both are sufficient. For regulated industries (healthcare, finance, government) n8n's self-hosting is often the deciding factor — you can put the entire platform inside your own VPC with no data leaving your perimeter. Zapier's best answer here is a private Zapier-for-Companies instance, but your data still flows through Zapier-managed infrastructure.
If you're evaluating broader orchestration for a regulated org, our enterprise workflow automation guide has more on architecture tradeoffs beyond these two platforms.
Community, Docs, and Support
Support is where the tone of each platform diverges most visibly.
Zapier has the slickest documentation in the industry. Every integration has a dedicated help page; every step has contextual tips. Support is tiered by plan — free users get community help, paid tiers get email, and Company-tier gets priority response with a dedicated CSM. The community forum is large but not especially deep technically.
n8n's documentation is good but more terse — written for people who already know what an API is. The community forum is where the magic happens: thousands of users share workflow templates, custom node builds, and debugging tips. The n8n Discord and GitHub issues are both active. Commercial support is available on the Enterprise tier.
If you value polished hand-holding, Zapier. If you value being able to find someone who's already solved exactly your problem (even if the answer is terse), n8n.
When a Third Option Makes Sense: AI-Native Platforms
Here's where this article takes a turn, and we want to be balanced about it.
Both Zapier and n8n were designed in a pre-LLM world. They're fundamentally IF/THEN platforms: you, the builder, author the logic. The platform executes it literally. This works beautifully for deterministic workflows — "when a row is added, enrich and notify" — and works much worse for workflows that involve judgment.
Consider a support email coming into your inbox. A deterministic workflow has to encode every branch: "if subject contains 'refund' route to billing; if contains 'bug' route to engineering; else…" That works until it doesn't, and most support emails don't parse cleanly into subject-keyword rules. What you actually want is an agent that reads the email, understands intent, pulls relevant context from your CRM, and decides the next best action.
This is where AI-native automation platforms like Arahi AI come in. Instead of authoring IF/THEN trees, you give an AI agent a goal ("triage incoming support emails, resolve the easy ones, escalate the hard ones with context") and a set of integrations it can use (1,500+ of them). The agent chooses which actions to take at runtime based on what it observes. The personal assistant works the same way for individual productivity — proactive rather than rule-driven.
Arahi AI isn't a better Zapier or a better n8n. It's a different shape of tool. For pure deterministic integration work — "webhook hits, transform payload, post to Slack" — Zapier or n8n will be simpler and cheaper. For workflows that need judgment, context, or multi-step reasoning, agent-based automation fits the problem better. Many teams will end up running both: n8n or Zapier for deterministic plumbing, an AI-native platform for the stuff that used to require a human.
If you've already decided Zapier isn't the right fit, our Zapier alternatives roundup covers the full landscape, and our Zapier alternatives page positions where Arahi AI specifically fits. For connecting your stack, the Connect integrations directory lists every app Arahi AI supports.
Verdict
Pick Zapier if: you're non-technical, you want to ship automations in an afternoon, your integration needs span a long tail of niche SaaS tools, your volume is modest, and you value polished support over raw power. Zapier is still the default for good reason — for most small teams and non-engineers, it's the fastest path from zero to working automation.
Pick n8n if: you have engineering capacity on the team, you run enough workflow volume that per-task pricing hurts, you want to self-host for cost or compliance reasons, you need complex logic (loops, sub-workflows, dynamic branching), or you want the platform's source to live inside your own infrastructure. n8n is the honest choice for technical teams who've outgrown Zapier's ceiling.
Pick something AI-native (like Arahi AI) if: your workflows need judgment, not just routing. If you find yourself writing ever-more-complicated IF/THEN trees trying to capture rules that humans would just intuit, that's the signal you've outgrown the iPaaS shape entirely. AI agents that read context and act are a different tool, and worth evaluating alongside — or instead of — traditional automation platforms. Our guide to personal AI assistants goes deeper on that category.
For specific use cases, we've written deeper guides on document workflow automation and marketing automation examples. And for the latest in this space, our workflow automation news tracker keeps running updates.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which is better, n8n or Zapier?
For non-technical users building 1-to-1 app integrations, Zapier wins on ease and integration coverage (7,000+ apps). For technical teams needing self-hosting, open-source flexibility, complex logic, or predictable costs, n8n wins. The "better" choice depends on your team's technical depth and volume: Zapier is faster to start, n8n is cheaper at scale and more customizable.
Is n8n free?
Yes — n8n has a fair-code license (Sustainable Use License) that permits free self-hosted use for internal business purposes. The n8n Cloud plan is paid and starts around $24/month. Self-hosting is genuinely free forever if you run it on your own infrastructure, which is n8n's biggest structural advantage over Zapier.
Is n8n open source?
n8n uses a fair-code license rather than a standard open-source license (OSI-defined). Source code is public, self-hosting is free, and most use cases are allowed — but there are commercial-use restrictions that pure OSI-approved open-source licenses like MIT or Apache 2.0 don't have. For most teams the practical difference is negligible.
Can Zapier do everything n8n can?
No. Zapier can't be self-hosted, lacks native custom code blocks (you can embed code, but less flexibly), doesn't support the same depth of branching and error handling, and can't persist workflow state the same way. n8n can do almost everything Zapier does — with a steeper learning curve and fewer integrations.
Why is Zapier so expensive at scale?
Zapier prices per task, which is each step that runs in a Zap. Complex workflows can burn 10+ tasks per execution, and high-volume workflows can easily exceed $600–$1,200/month. n8n prices per active workflow (or is free if self-hosted), which scales much better for teams running many high-volume workflows.
What about Make (formerly Integromat)?
Make sits between Zapier and n8n — more complex and powerful than Zapier, easier to adopt than n8n, with visual branching. We cover it in a separate Make vs Zapier comparison.
Is there a better alternative to both n8n and Zapier in 2026?
It depends on what you value. If you want AI-native automation — goal-directed AI agents instead of rigid IF/THEN workflows — Arahi AI replaces the orchestration layer with agents that read context and choose the next best action. If you want the same iPaaS model but with better pricing, Make (formerly Integromat) is the main challenger. If you want full self-hosted control, n8n still leads. We maintain a full list of Zapier alternatives here.
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