Editorial take
Why it stands out
Merge should be framed as product integration infrastructure, not as a general automation platform.
Tool profile
Customer-facing integration infrastructure for SaaS and AI products, with unified APIs, agent tooling, and pricing tied to linked-account scale.
Customer-facing integrations
Merge belongs in the database because it solves a real product-infrastructure problem that many teams underestimate until integrations become a bottleneck. The official site now positions Merge around customer-facing integrations, agent infrastructure, and unified APIs for AI and SaaS products, with clear messaging about helping teams ship integrations faster without owning the full maintenance burden. That makes Merge meaningfully different from internal automation tools or developer utilities that only help with one integration edge case.
It also deserves inclusion because the pricing page publishes concrete economics for the entry tier. The checked official pricing currently shows Launch with 3 production linked accounts for free and then $650 per month for up to 10 total production linked accounts, with $65 per linked account after that, while Professional and Enterprise are contract-based. That is exactly the sort of pricing detail buyers need to understand whether the product fits their integration volume and go-to-market stage.
Quick fit
Editorial take
Merge should be framed as product integration infrastructure, not as a general automation platform.
What it does well
Primary use cases
Fit notes
Pricing snapshot
Merge's official pricing currently starts with 3 production linked accounts free, then $650/month for up to 10 total production linked accounts on Launch, with $65 per linked account after that. Professional and Enterprise are contract-based.