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ArangoGraph vs Microsoft Azure SQL Database comparison

 

Comparison Buyer's Guide

Executive Summary

Review summaries and opinions

We asked business professionals to review the solutions they use. Here are some excerpts of what they said:
 

Categories and Ranking

ArangoGraph
Ranking in Database as a Service (DBaaS)
18th
Average Rating
7.6
Reviews Sentiment
4.4
Number of Reviews
3
Ranking in other categories
No ranking in other categories
Microsoft Azure SQL Database
Ranking in Database as a Service (DBaaS)
1st
Average Rating
8.6
Reviews Sentiment
6.9
Number of Reviews
134
Ranking in other categories
No ranking in other categories
 

Mindshare comparison

As of July 2026, in the Database as a Service (DBaaS) category, the mindshare of ArangoGraph is 0.7%. The mindshare of Microsoft Azure SQL Database is 9.5%, down from 15.4% compared to the previous year. It is calculated based on PeerSpot user engagement data.
Database as a Service (DBaaS) Mindshare Distribution
ProductMindshare (%)
Microsoft Azure SQL Database9.5%
ArangoGraph0.7%
Other89.8%
Database as a Service (DBaaS)
 

Featured Reviews

B Goswami - PeerSpot reviewer
Product Manager at Zidio development
Unified data modeling has boosted graph insights and now drives faster recommendations
The first and biggest pain point I noticed was the AQL learning curve; for developers coming from an SQL background, AQL feels initially unfamiliar. There are no widely available online courses or bootcamps teaching AQL in the way that there are for SQL or even Cypher. Better structured learning resources and interactive tutorials would significantly lower the barrier to entry. The second pain point is pricing transparency; cost estimations at scale are not straightforward. When planning for infrastructure growth, it is difficult to predict exactly how costs will scale with increasing nodes, edges, and query volume. A proper cost calculator on their website would be extremely helpful. The third pain point is query optimizer limitations; for very complex multi-level graph traversals, the query optimizer sometimes makes suboptimal execution choices, requiring us to manually hint the optimizer in certain cases, which should not be necessary in a mature database platform. Finally, the ecosystem maturity is another concern; compared to MongoDB or PostgreSQL, the community and third-party tooling around ArangoGraph are still relatively small, resulting in fewer Stack Overflow answers, fewer integrations, and fewer tutorials. None of these are deal-breakers, but they reflect the growing pains of a platform that is still maturing. The core technology itself is generally excellent. One thing I really wish ArangoGraph would improve is the Visual Graph Explorer performance. It is a fantastic feature conceptually, but when the graph grows beyond a certain size, say fifty thousand plus nodes, the explorer becomes noticeably sluggish. Rendering a large graph in the browser gets heavy, so a smarter sampling or progressive loading approach would make it much more usable at scale. Another small but frustrating issue is the error messaging in AQL; when a query fails, the error messages can sometimes be cryptic and unhelpful. As a developer, you often spend more time debugging the error messages than actually fixing the query. More descriptive and actionable error messages would save a lot of developer frustration. Lastly, I would also appreciate a dark mode option for the UI; it sounds minor, but developers spend long hours in the interface, and a dark mode option is something the community has been requesting for a long time. These are not critical issues, but they are the type of polish that separates a good product from a truly great one. A few more improvements I have not mentioned include better GraphQL support, as ArangoGraph has some GraphQL integration, but it is not seamless. Many modern applications are built on GraphQL, and having first-class GraphQL support would make ArangoGraph much more accessible to frontend developers who are not familiar with AQL. Improved data import tools are also needed; migrating existing data into ArangoGraph from other databases like PostgreSQL or MongoDB has been more manual than expected. A proper migration wizard with schema mapping and data transformation built in would significantly reduce onboarding friction. Lastly, better Kubernetes integration would benefit teams running hybrid or on-premises deployments, with native Kubernetes operators being more mature and better documented, as we have seen several community complaints regarding this during our research phase. These improvements would really elevate ArangoGraph from a great database to a complete graph intelligence ecosystem.
Thomas Sawyer - PeerSpot reviewer
Executive Director, Platform Architecture at Sumitomo Mitsui Banking Corporation – SMBC Group
Automatic tuning and multi-region availability have reduced manual workloads and improved performance management
The features of Microsoft Azure SQL Database that I like the most are easy scaling and high availability. I appreciate those features because it's easy to make Microsoft Azure SQL Database readily available in a multi-region infrastructure. Using Microsoft Azure SQL Database is very easy; it's much easier than SQL on-premise because I don't have to worry about deploying infrastructure, and I can rapidly deploy via infrastructure as code. I am using the automatic tuning feature in Microsoft Azure SQL Database. We are using the new feature of data encryption in Microsoft Azure SQL Database with customer-managed keys only. The reliability and stability of Microsoft Azure SQL Database platform are rock-solid; it's as good, if not better, than what our on-premise stability has been from an uptime perspective.

Quotes from Members

We asked business professionals to review the solutions they use. Here are some excerpts of what they said:
 

Pros

"The main ROI for us with ArangoGraph is infrastructure cost and development speed because it is multi-model."
"ArangoGraph has positively impacted my organization as we made a 30% saving in order to build this graph."
"ArangoGraph changed the way our teams think about data, and this mental shift improved our overall data modeling approach across the entire project."
"The most valuable feature of the solution is that our customers do not have to manage the solution."
"Overall, Azure SQL has been great. The ease of deployment and scalability are significant reasons we push our larger clients to Azure. We could throw the kitchen sink at the thing if we wanted."
"The solution is very stable; Microsoft is one of the most stable platforms and it offers 100% stability."
"Microsoft Azure SQL Database is integrated into other Azure capabilities and has a great foundation being on SQL Server with a long history of security, performance, and usability from a DBA perspective."
"I rate Microsoft Azure SQL Database 10 out of 10."
"Our Total Cost of Operations is cheaper using this solution as compared to an on-premises deployment."
"We like the ease of integrating it with our on-premises environment. We use a hybrid model. We have a SQL Server on-premises, and we have an integration with the cloud version. We do CPU or disk intensive processes on-premises. For accessibility, we offload onto the cloud. When you do a lot of IO and things like that in the cloud, Microsoft charges for the CPU activity."
"Azure SQL Database has significantly reduced our total cost of ownership by eliminating the need for managing physical infrastructure, including data warehouses and data centers."
 

Cons

"The first and biggest pain point I noticed was the AQL learning curve; for developers coming from an SQL background, AQL feels initially unfamiliar."
"Regarding the negative points of view about ArangoGraph, the only thing is a performance issue."
"It needs to improve the security features, because people still aren't confident enough to use a public cloud."
"Its automation can be improved. SQL Server Agent was a very big part of the on-prem tools. While moving from on-prem to the cloud, redoing some of such tools was very cumbersome in Azure. There was a whole new set of technologies and methodologies. It should have easier automation-type features to be able to implement such tools. It should have almost a SQL agent type of substance built into that."
"The customer support is hard to reach, with Microsoft’s technical support being difficult to get in touch with."
"Price definitely may be a negative point. As for most of cloud based solution, certain cost components as CPU and IO usage may cause extremely hi costs."
"I think this product can improve its integrations with business intelligence software. The integrations are always cumbersome due to the approvals, passwords, et cetera."
"There is probably more functionality in our on-prem SQL Server than SQL Azure."
"The price is very high, especially when you compare it to other solutions."
"The solution can be improved by reducing the constraints available."
 

Pricing and Cost Advice

Information not available
"I have an annual spend number, and it is in the hundred thousand dollar range. There are no additional costs to the standard licensing fees. Even though you have to look at the cost numbers of what you're going to be charged on a monthly basis, what you have to also remember is that your application may need a lot of rewriting and things like that. You get charged not just for the monthly costs but also for the transactions that occur. If your access to the data layer is not so efficient, your costs will go up because you're pulling far more data than you potentially need. These are hidden costs that nobody ever considers. If your application is not written very efficiently, you may actually increase your costs over on-prem versus cloud."
"It is beneficial in terms of cost because you are charged per data unit instead of licensing."
"I am not aware of the exact pricing, but our monthly bill for Azure is around 80,000. It is less expensive than using SQL Server. It has the pay-as-you-go model, and the charges are based on the usage."
"When you go with SQL Azure Database, you can create a small database, which is around $4 to $5 per month for development purposes."
"We have a three-year contract. The cost was somewhere around $70-80,000 for the original deployment, which was about two years ago"
"It is quite expensive. I would definitely recommend not using the pay-as-you-go model because this will just mean all your money will go to Microsoft. So, really make sure to control resource usage as much as possible."
"I'm not sure what the exact price is, but it's a moderate amount. It's not too expensive."
"We have had some issues with the licensing of the solution."
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Top Industries

By visitors reading reviews
Construction Company
41%
Outsourcing Company
12%
Manufacturing Company
8%
Comms Service Provider
7%
Financial Services Firm
14%
Construction Company
10%
Outsourcing Company
8%
Manufacturing Company
7%
 

Company Size

By reviewers
Large Enterprise
Midsize Enterprise
Small Business
No data available
By reviewers
Company SizeCount
Small Business60
Midsize Enterprise17
Large Enterprise61
 

Questions from the Community

What needs improvement with ArangoGraph?
The first and biggest pain point I noticed was the AQL learning curve; for developers coming from an SQL background, AQL feels initially unfamiliar. There are no widely available online courses or ...
What is your primary use case for ArangoGraph?
ArangoGraph's best use case is relationship mapping, such as finding connections between entities like which user interacted with which product through which channels. Graph traversal queries make ...
What advice do you have for others considering ArangoGraph?
My practical advice for anyone considering ArangoGraph is to think in graphs before starting. Before writing a single line of code or creating any collections, sit down with your team and map out y...
What is your experience regarding pricing and costs for SQL Azure?
I would say I am at a basic experience level with the pricing, setup costs and licensing because while I am the administrator for the service, I do not provision the services and worry about the co...
What needs improvement with SQL Azure?
I have no comments at the moment on how Microsoft Azure SQL Database can be improved. I have no comments on additional features that I would like to see released in the next release. I do not have ...
What is your primary use case for SQL Azure?
My main use cases for Microsoft Azure SQL Database are third-party applications.
 

Overview

 

Sample Customers

Information Not Available
adnymics GmbH, LG CNS, Centrebet, netfabb GmbH, MedPlast, Accelera Solutions, Sochi Organizing Committee, realzeit GmbH
Find out what your peers are saying about Microsoft, Amazon Web Services (AWS), MongoDB and others in Database as a Service (DBaaS). Updated: June 2026.
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