
No-code tools like Airtable, Zoho, and Power Apps are genuinely useful — but they're not always the right answer. Here's an honest comparison so you can pick the one that fits.
Which is better — no-code or a custom web app?
It depends on what you need. No-code is great for simple, stable needs and a fast start with no developer. A custom web app wins when you need custom logic, complex relationships between your data, deep integrations, no per-user fees, and real ownership of the system.
Where does no-code break down?
A few predictable places: per-user pricing balloons as your team grows; you hit a wall the moment you need custom logic or a workflow the tool wasn't built for; you don't actually own it (you're subject to the vendor's limits, outages, and export rules); and integrations tend to be shallow.
Where does a custom web app win?
It's built around how your team actually works, it integrates with virtually anything, there's no per-user tax, and you own the code and the data. The trade-off is honest: the upfront cost is bigger than a monthly subscription.
So which should I choose?
Start with no-code if your needs are simple and likely to stay that way. Move to custom when you've outgrown it — when the per-user bill, the limits, or the integrations have become the problem. We break this down further on our custom web app vs. no-code comparison. Not sure which side of the line you're on? Get a free review or an instant estimate.
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