
Knit API
Unified APIs software
Embedded integration platforms
Data integration tools
Cloud data integration software
- Features
- Ease of use
- Ease of management
- Quality of support
- Affordability
- Market presence
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$499 per month
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What is Knit API
Knit API is a unified API platform that provides a single integration layer to connect an application to multiple third-party SaaS systems through normalized endpoints. It is used by product and engineering teams that need to embed integrations (for example, HR, ATS, accounting, or CRM data flows) without building and maintaining separate connectors for each vendor. The product typically includes managed authentication, data normalization, and tooling to monitor and troubleshoot integrations across supported providers.
Single normalized API surface
Knit API reduces integration complexity by exposing a consistent data model and endpoints across multiple downstream systems. This can lower the amount of provider-specific code an engineering team maintains over time. It also helps standardize how an application reads and writes common business objects across vendors.
Embedded integration delivery model
The product is designed to be embedded into a software product, supporting use cases where integrations are part of the core customer experience. This approach typically centralizes authentication flows, connection management, and tenant-level configuration. It can shorten time-to-deliver for adding new third-party integrations compared with building each connector in-house.
Operational tooling for integrations
Unified API platforms commonly provide observability features such as connection status, error logs, and retry handling to support production operations. This helps teams diagnose failures across many customer tenants and providers. It also supports ongoing maintenance as upstream APIs change.
Coverage limited to supported apps
Knit API’s value depends on the breadth and depth of its supported third-party connectors and objects. If a required system or endpoint is not supported, teams may still need to build and operate custom integrations. This can create a mixed architecture where some integrations run through the unified layer and others do not.
Normalization can reduce specificity
A normalized data model may not expose every vendor-specific field, workflow, or edge-case behavior. Teams often need escape hatches (provider-specific endpoints) for advanced use cases, which can reduce the benefits of standardization. Data mapping differences across providers can also require additional validation and reconciliation logic.
Vendor dependency and change risk
Using a unified API introduces dependency on the platform’s uptime, roadmap, and connector maintenance practices. Changes in upstream provider APIs can impact customers until the connector is updated. Organizations with strict compliance, data residency, or security requirements may need additional review of how credentials and data are handled.
Plan & Pricing
| Plan | Price | Key features & notes |
|---|---|---|
| Start Up | $499 per month | All whitelisted connectors; 24-hour sync frequency; Knit’s standard Auth component; Integration management dashboards; typically includes ~10 connected accounts or 50,000 API calls (per FAQs). |
| Scale Up | Get in touch (custom) | Everything in Start Up plus flexible sync frequencies, data filtering at source, white-labelled auth, custom field mappings, request unsupported connectors, go-live support, 30-day log retention, Email + Slack support. (Pricing page lists "Get in touch"; FAQs note a typical Scale price of $1,500/month.) |
| Enterprise | Get in touch (custom) | Everything in Scale Up plus custom domain for Magic Link, support for customer-managed secrets, multiple data-centre locations, 90-day log retention, extended go-live support, dedicated account manager, SLAs and advanced security/compliance. |