Best Workato Alternatives in 2026

Workato is a strong enterprise iPaaS, but at $10,000+/year with annual contracts, it's a significant investment. Some teams find Workato's recipe-based approach limiting for complex transformations, others are priced out entirely, and some need capabilities Workato doesn't cover well (like EDI or data warehousing). Here are the alternatives worth considering.

At a Glance

Tool Price Best For Key Difference
MuleSoft (Salesforce) $50,000+/year Salesforce-heavy enterprises needing API management Full API lifecycle management with Salesforce ecosystem
Make (Integromat) $0 - $29+/mo Teams wanting powerful automation at lower cost Visual workflow builder at 1/10th the price
n8n Free (self-hosted) - $50+/mo Teams needing self-hosted integration with code flexibility Open-source, self-hostable, full code access in workflows
Boomi Custom ($50,000+/year) Large enterprises needing EDI, MDM, and API management Full integration suite including EDI and master data management
Tray.io Custom ($600+/mo) RevOps teams needing automation between GTM tools Purpose-built for revenue operations workflows
Fivetran $1/mo + usage Teams focused on data pipeline automation (ELT) Automated ELT pipelines, not workflow automation

1. MuleSoft (Salesforce)

Price $50,000+/year
Best For Salesforce-heavy enterprises needing API management

Coverage & Capabilities

Comprehensive connector library for enterprise applications. Includes API design, development, and management. Tight Salesforce integration as part of the Salesforce platform. Handles complex enterprise integration patterns.

VERDICT

The enterprise upgrade from Workato. MuleSoft is more powerful and more expensive. Worth it for Salesforce-heavy organizations that need API management alongside integration.

Read the full MuleSoft (Salesforce) review →

2. Make (Integromat)

Price $0 - $29+/mo
Best For Teams wanting powerful automation at lower cost

Coverage & Capabilities

1,000+ integrations. Visual canvas-style builder that handles complex branching logic. Dramatically cheaper than Workato. Lacks enterprise features like SOC 2, audit logs, and role-based access.

VERDICT

The best Workato alternative for teams that don't need enterprise governance. Make does 80% of what Workato does at a fraction of the price. The gap is in compliance, team controls, and high-volume data processing.

Read the full Make (Integromat) review →

3. n8n

Price Free (self-hosted) - $50+/mo
Best For Teams needing self-hosted integration with code flexibility

Coverage & Capabilities

400+ integrations with custom code capability. Self-hosting gives full data sovereignty. Open-source community contributes connectors and templates. Best for teams with engineering resources.

VERDICT

The developer-friendly alternative. If your team can self-host and wants code-level control over integrations, n8n provides Workato-like visual workflows with unlimited flexibility.

Read the full n8n review →

4. Boomi

Price Custom ($50,000+/year)
Best For Large enterprises needing EDI, MDM, and API management

Coverage & Capabilities

Wide enterprise connector library. Includes EDI/B2B integration, master data management, and API management in a single platform. More comprehensive than Workato for complex enterprise needs.

VERDICT

A lateral move from Workato for enterprises that need EDI or master data management. Similar price range but different strengths. Boomi covers more enterprise integration patterns; Workato is easier for business users.

Read the full Boomi review →

5. Tray.io

Price Custom ($600+/mo)
Best For RevOps teams needing automation between GTM tools

Coverage & Capabilities

300+ connectors focused on CRM, marketing, and sales tools. Designed for RevOps use cases: lead routing, data sync, enrichment workflows. Less enterprise-heavy than Workato but more specialized for go-to-market operations.

VERDICT

If your integration needs center on GTM tools (CRM, MAP, data providers), Tray.io is more focused than Workato. Less capable for ERP or backend system integrations, but faster to deploy for sales and marketing workflows.

Read the full Tray.io review →

6. Fivetran

Price $1/mo + usage
Best For Teams focused on data pipeline automation (ELT)

Coverage & Capabilities

300+ data source connectors optimized for warehousing (Snowflake, BigQuery, Redshift). Fully managed ELT. Not a workflow automation tool like Workato. Specifically solves data movement from source systems to warehouses.

VERDICT

Not a direct Workato replacement. Fivetran solves data pipeline automation (moving data to warehouses) while Workato solves application integration (connecting apps). Many companies use both.

Read the full Fivetran review →

How We Chose These Alternatives

We evaluated these alternatives based on enterprise features (governance, compliance, audit), integration depth, pricing, scalability, and job market demand from our database of 23,000+ job postings.

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the cheapest Workato alternative?

Make (Integromat) starts at $9/month with a free tier. n8n is free when self-hosted. Both handle complex workflow automation at a fraction of Workato's $10,000+/year starting price. The trade-off is fewer enterprise controls.

Is MuleSoft better than Workato?

MuleSoft is more powerful for API lifecycle management and Salesforce integrations. Workato is easier to use for business users and faster to implement. MuleSoft costs 3-5x more. Choose MuleSoft if you're a Salesforce enterprise needing API management; choose Workato for broader, simpler integration needs.

Can Make replace Workato?

For workflow automation, yes. Make handles complex branching logic and has 1,000+ integrations. What Make lacks: SOC 2 compliance, role-based access controls, audit logs, enterprise support SLAs, and high-volume data processing capabilities. If you need those, Workato or Boomi is the better fit.

About the Author

Rome Thorndike has spent over a decade working with B2B data and sales technology. He led sales at Datajoy, an analytics infrastructure company acquired by Databricks, sold Dynamics and Azure AI/ML at Microsoft, and covered the full Salesforce stack including Analytics, MuleSoft, and Machine Learning. He founded DataStackGuide to help RevOps teams cut through vendor noise using real adoption data.