DataStax Pricing Plans & History (2026)
Data & Analytics
Santa Clara, CA-based data infrastructure company founded 2010. Acquired by IBM (2025). Provides distributed NoSQL and vector database solutions. Serves enterprises building AI applications with AstraDB, DataStax Ente…
About DataStax pricing
DataStax, a Data & Analytics product, is tracked by PricingSaaS for every pricing change, plan update, and packaging shift. DataStax currently offers 5 pricing plans. Below you'll find the current DataStax pricing plans for 2026, recent pricing history, and answers to common questions about how DataStax prices its product.
DataStax Pricing Plans
Free Trial
BYOC (Bring Your Own Cloud)
On-Prem Software
Enterprise Pay Per Use
Enterprise Subscription
Pricing history for DataStax
Frequently asked questions about DataStax pricing
How much does DataStax cost in 2026? +
DataStax publishes its current pricing tiers on its pricing page. PricingSaaS tracks every plan, price point, and add-on so you can see the latest DataStax pricing at a glance, plus how it has changed over time.
When did DataStax last change its pricing? +
PricingSaaS monitors DataStax's pricing page continuously. Sign in to PricingSaaS Pulse to see the full pricing history and get alerts whenever DataStax updates plans, prices, or packaging.
Does DataStax offer a free plan or trial? +
Free plans, trials, and freemium tiers (when offered) are listed in the plan grid above. If DataStax introduces or removes a free tier, the change is captured in PricingSaaS Pulse.
What category is DataStax in? +
DataStax is tracked under Data & Analytics. Santa Clara, CA-based data infrastructure company founded 2010. Acquired by IBM (2025). Provides distributed NoSQL and vector database solutions. Serves enterprises building AI applications with AstraDB, DataStax Enterprise, and Langflow.
Track every pricing change at DataStax
PricingSaaS Pulse monitors DataStax's pricing page continuously. Get notified when plans change, prices shift, or features move.
See pricing history on Pulse