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QuickNode is a blockchain infrastructure platform that enables developers and companies to build, deploy, and scale Web3 applications more easily. Designed for teams developing dApps, wallets, DeFi tools, blockchain games, or on-chain analytics solutions, it provides fast and reliable RPC endpoints without requiring users to manage blockchain nodes themselves. The tool supports many blockchains and networks, allowing users to connect to ecosystems such as Ethereum, Solana, Polygon, and Bitcoin from a single platform.
QuickNode also offers several advanced features to simplify Web3 development, such as RPC, REST, and gRPC APIs, Webhooks, Streams for receiving real-time blockchain data, and Backfills for retrieving historical data. Solutions like dedicated clusters, the add-ons marketplace, and security tools help projects improve performance, stability, and flexibility. The tool is specifically designed for developers, Web3 startups, blockchain companies, and technical teams that require scalable, high-performance infrastructure ready for production.
Performance that keeps you ahead:
Quicknode's global network delivers real-time blockchain data with unmatched speed, reliability, and uptime, enabling seamless experiences for developers and businesses everywhere.
RPC infrastructure you can rely on:
Quicknode's Core API provides globally distributed, low-latency access across every major blockchain, so you can Focus on your users, not your infrastructure.
Real-time data for everything you build:
Stream live blockchain events and view historical data on demand with synchronized data across more than 90 networks for complete visibility and control.
An integrated marketplace to fuel your growth:
Access a growing ecosystem of add-ons and partner APIs that expand your platform’s capabilities. Connect to DeFi data, MEV protection, analytics, and developer tools with a single click—all designed to help you scale faster and more efficiently.
Enterprise infrastructure without limitations:
Power your business with battle-tested infrastructure built for scalability, compliance, and control. Trusted by leading blockchain teams that process billions of requests every day.
Trusted by industry leaders:
From Fortune 500 companies to pioneering Web3 teams, leading organizations rely on Quicknode's proven infrastructure to scale blockchain applications with confidence.
Designed for every use case:
Start where you are:
Powered by a globally distributed, auto-scaling network built for scale. From MVP to enterprise, the most trusted teams in Web3 build on Quicknode.
QuickNode is a blockchain infrastructure platform that gives developers and engineering teams managed access to blockchain networks, without the burden of running and maintaining their own nodes. The core promise is straightforward: instead of provisioning hardware, syncing chains from scratch, and managing uptime yourself, you connect your application to QuickNode's globally distributed node infrastructure through a single API endpoint and start building.
The platform currently supports access to over 65 blockchains and more than 110 networks, covering the most widely used chains in production environments: Ethereum, Solana, Bitcoin, Base, Polygon, Arbitrum, Optimism, Avalanche, BNB Smart Chain, and many others including newer ecosystems like Berachain, Hyperliquid, Starknet, and XRPL EVM. For teams working across multiple chains, this breadth is a genuine operational advantage: a single QuickNode account gives access to all supported networks under one dashboard, without managing separate node configurations per chain.
Endpoint access and API performance sit at the heart of what QuickNode sells. The platform routes requests through a globally distributed network optimized for low latency, with an average response time reported as 2.5x faster than competitors and a stated uptime SLA of 99.99%. Developers can create multiple endpoints within a single plan, configure them per chain or environment (mainnet, testnet), and monitor performance through a built-in analytics dashboard. Both JSON-RPC and WebSocket connections are supported, the latter being essential for real-time event subscriptions such as tracking pending transactions, block confirmations, or smart contract events.
Beyond raw node access, QuickNode has built a suite of developer tools that go significantly further than simple RPC relay. QuickNode Streams is a real-time blockchain data pipeline product that allows teams to filter and stream on-chain events directly into their infrastructure, whether that means a webhook, a Kafka topic, or a serverless function. This replaces the need to build custom indexers for many common use cases. QuickNode Functions is a complementary product that lets developers run serverless JavaScript functions triggered by on-chain events, enabling logic execution without managing additional backend infrastructure.
The platform also includes QuickAlerts, a notification system that monitors blockchain conditions and triggers webhooks or email alerts based on custom rules. Teams building wallets, DeFi protocols, or NFT platforms use this to react to on-chain state changes without polling. An add-on Marketplace rounds out the ecosystem, offering third-party data modules covering NFT metadata, token prices, identity verification, and other data layers that applications frequently need but would otherwise require separate integrations to access.
For teams that need historical data, QuickNode provides archive node access across supported chains, allowing queries against any historical block state. Trace and debug capabilities are also available, which is particularly useful during smart contract development and auditing.
The control panel consolidates endpoint management, usage analytics, billing, and team access in one place. Cryptocurrency payment is accepted for all paid plans, which matters for crypto-native teams that prefer to keep expenses on-chain.
eth_getLogs consume 6 credits per call. A moderately active dApp can burn through the free allocation quickly, and the jump to the Build plan at $49/month is a meaningful commitment for a side project or a developer testing the waters. Competitors like Alchemy offer more generous free tiers for certain use cases.QuickNode uses an API credit model to measure usage. Each API request consumes a number of credits depending on the method called and the blockchain network accessed. The platform includes a set allocation of credits per plan, with flat overage rates applying when usage exceeds the monthly allocation. A 15% discount applies to all plans on annual billing. No credit card is required to start on the free tier.
| Plan | Monthly Price | API Credits Included | Key Inclusions |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | 50 million | Access to over 30 blockchains, Streams & Functions (basic), developer tools, and community support |
| Build | $49/month | 80 million | Multiple endpoints, analytics dashboard, email support, access to archived data, all chains |
| Scale | $299/month | 3 billion | High throughput, Streams & Functions included, priority support, advanced analytics, custom webhooks, multiple team members |
| Business | $900/month | High allocation | 24/7 priority support, dedicated account manager, custom SLAs, advanced security, guaranteed uptime |
| Enterprise | Custom (on request) | Custom | Dedicated nodes, API access, white-glove support, custom integrations, volume pricing, flexible billing, HIPAA & compliance options |
1️⃣ If you are a freelancer or consultant:
Freelancers working on Web3 projects, whether building a client's smart contract integration or maintaining a dApp as part of a longer engagement, typically don't need the throughput of a Scale plan. The question is less about raw infrastructure capacity and more about getting a reliable, easy-to-configure endpoint that doesn't require node management overhead. Supabase won't replace QuickNode for pure blockchain node access, but for independents building Web3-adjacent applications that also require a database layer, authentication, or serverless functions, Supabase covers a significant portion of the backend stack in a way QuickNode doesn't. Many dApps rely on off-chain data storage alongside on-chain interactions, and combining a QuickNode endpoint for blockchain calls with Supabase for the application data layer is a common and practical architecture. Used on its own, Supabase is worth considering for any freelancer building full-stack applications that touch both worlds. DigitalOcean is another option worth mentioning for independents who want more control over their infrastructure at a reasonable cost. While it doesn't provide managed blockchain node access specifically, DigitalOcean's managed Kubernetes and App Platform offerings let experienced developers deploy and run their own node software or supporting backend infrastructure without paying the premium of a specialized blockchain provider. It's the right choice when you have the expertise to manage the stack yourself and the project economics don't justify a QuickNode subscription.
2️⃣ If you are a startup:
Startups building in Web3 face a common infrastructure challenge: they need production-grade reliability from day one to earn user trust, but they’re also managing their burn rate closely. The Build and Scale plans on QuickNode are well-suited to this stage, but alternatives deserve careful consideration depending on the use case. Vercel plays a complementary role here rather than a direct competitive one. For startups building the frontend layer of a dApp, Vercel provides the deployment, edge network, and serverless execution environment that pairs naturally with a blockchain RPC provider like QuickNode on the backend. This combination is widely used in the Web3 startup ecosystem: Vercel handles the application layer, while QuickNode handles the chain connectivity. For startups evaluating their full infrastructure stack, treating both as components of the same decision rather than separate choices leads to better architecture. MongoDB is relevant for startups that need to store and query indexed blockchain data alongside application data. While QuickNode’s Streams product handles the real-time pipeline, teams still need a place to persist and query that data efficiently. MongoDB’s flexible document model is well-suited to the variable and nested structure of blockchain event data. Startups building analytics features, transaction histories, or on-chain activity feeds into their product will likely end up needing both: QuickNode to extract the data, and MongoDB to store and serve it.
3️⃣ If you are an SMB or mid-market company:
Established businesses integrating blockchain into existing products or internal workflows—whether for supply chain traceability, tokenized assets, payment infrastructure, or compliance reporting—tend to have different priorities than crypto-native startups. Predictability, auditability, and support quality matter more than cutting-edge chain support. Google Cloud and its blockchain node engine offering are a natural choice for companies already running workloads on GCP. For organizations with existing Google Cloud commitments and in-house DevOps teams, consolidating blockchain infrastructure within the same cloud provider simplifies billing, security policy enforcement, and vendor management. It doesn’t match QuickNode’s breadth of chain support, but for Ethereum-focused workloads in enterprise environments, the trade-off often makes sense. IBM API Connect offers a different approach for companies that need to expose blockchain data or functionality through governed, enterprise-grade APIs to internal teams or external partners. Rather than a node provider in the traditional sense, it acts as an API management layer that can sit in front of blockchain endpoints and apply rate limiting, authentication, analytics, and transformation logic. For regulated industries where API governance is a compliance requirement, this layer is often non-negotiable, and IBM’s ecosystem integrations with existing enterprise infrastructure give it an advantage that cloud-native tools cannot easily replicate.
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