Ascend vs. Airtable — Ascend
Comparison

Ascend vs. Airtable

Airtable is a brilliant relational database. It's also a database that ends at the database — you bolt on Stacker for sharing, Toggl for time, and FreshBooks for invoices. Ascend keeps the relational power and adds the rest of the workflow.

Use Airtable if…
  • You need extreme schema flexibility for a non-services use case.
  • Your interface designer (Airtable Interfaces) is core to your product.
  • You have engineers who maintain Airtable Scripts and Automations.
Use Ascend if…
  • You build databases to track client work, hours, and invoices.
  • You want pages, kanban, time tracking, and billing in the same workspace.
  • You're done paying $20+/seat for guest interface viewers.

Same relational power. Plus the rest of the workflow.

Airtable is a great database. Ascend is a great database, plus rich pages, plus a unified inbox, plus time tracking on every row, plus invoicing — all in one subscription. If your databases are about doing client work, Ascend is the shorter path.

With Airtable
  1. 1. Build the base in Airtable
  2. 2. Buy Airtable Interfaces or pay for Stacker for client sharing
  3. 3. Add Toggl/Harvest for time tracking
  4. 4. Wire automations to a billing tool
  5. 5. Pay per editor seat for everyone who needs to update data
With Ascend
  1. 1. Build the database in Ascend
  2. 2. Hit play on a row to track time
  3. 3. Click Generate Invoice — done.

Feature-by-feature

No checkbox fluffing. Where Airtable is genuinely better, we say so.

FeatureAscendAirtable
Relational databases with linked records
Multiple views (table, kanban, calendar, gallery)
Formula and rollup properties
Forms that submit to your database
Both have native form builders. Ascend Forms include conditional logic and server validation.
Rich-text page documents alongside databases
Airtable has comments and notes; not full Notion-style pages.
Time tracking on every record
Airtable has no built-in timer.
Branded invoicing built-in
External client sharing free of seat fees
Airtable bills per editor and per Interface viewer on Pro+.
Custom interfaces / dashboard builderBasic
Airtable Interfaces is more powerful for building custom internal apps.
Scripting / extensions ecosystemPublic API + MCPMarketplace
Airtable has a deeper third-party app marketplace.
Pricing for a 10-person team$182/mo (Studio + 7 seats)~$240/mo on Business
Airtable Business is $24/user/mo. Ascend Studio is $49 + $19/seat after the first 3 — and bundles time tracking and invoicing on top.

Airtable is a trademark of Airtable, Inc. — we have no affiliation. Comparison reflects publicly documented Airtable features as of 2026.

Wondering...

Migrating from Airtable

  1. 1
    In Airtable, download each base as CSV (one CSV per table).
  2. 2
    In Ascend, create a database per Airtable table and import the CSV. Field types auto-map.
  3. 3
    Recreate links between tables using Ascend Relation properties.
  4. 4
    Move any client-facing Interfaces to Ascend share links — fine-grained per-record permissions, no seat fees.
  5. 5
    Connect Stripe to enable invoicing on the same data.

Frequently asked

The questions teams ask before switching.

Can Ascend handle relational data as well as Airtable?

Yes. Ascend supports linked records, lookups, rollups, formulas, and reverse relations — the core Airtable primitives. The schema editor is intentionally familiar.

Do you have something like Airtable Interfaces?

Ascend Pages let you compose custom views with embedded database blocks, but Interfaces is more powerful for building polished internal apps. We are catching up here.

How much will I save?

A 10-person Airtable Business team is ~$240/mo. The same team on Ascend Studio is $182/mo (Studio $49 + 7 × $19/seat) — and includes invoicing, time tracking, and rich pages on top of the database, so you also drop a separate billing tool.

Is migrating risky?

No data leaves your control. Export to CSV, import to Ascend, keep the Airtable base alive in parallel until you are confident in the cutover.

Try Ascend free — no card required.

Solo $19/mo. Studio $49/mo for up to 3 seats. 30-day free trial replaces Airtable and the rest of your stack.