ToolsRanks

Adalo review (2026): verdict, pros & cons

Visual no-code builder focused on native iOS/Android and web apps from a single project, with a relational database and direct publishing to the App Store and Google Play.

We weighed Adalo the same way as every other nocode app builder tool we track: what it does well, what it costs, and who actually benefits.

Verdict: If native-mobile-apps is your priority, Adalo rarely disappoints. Our editorial rating is 4.5/5 — an editorial assessment from sourced research and feature comparison, not an average of user reviews.

Who Adalo is for

Reach for Adalo first when your work centres on native-mobile-apps and startups. When that lines up with your workflow it pays off fast; otherwise it can feel like more tool than you need.

Notable features

In practice, the features that define Adalo are concrete:

One of the few accessible no-code tools that ships genuinely native mobile apps to both app stores.

Pros & cons

What stands out

Watch-outs

Pricing: Free plan (build/test, 500 records); reported Starter ~$36/mo, Professional ~$65/mo, Team ~$160/mo (payment processing tier), Business ~$200/mo (annual billing); AI Builder added in 2026 · full pricing breakdown →

Bottom line

Our take: Adalo is worth shortlisting for native-mobile-apps and less compelling if that is only a side concern; a free plan lets you trial it at zero cost, paid plans start around $36/mo, so validate fit on your own workflow first.

Alternatives to consider

Not sure Adalo is the one? We compare the strongest options side by side in our Adalo alternatives roundup — useful if pricing or a specific feature is a sticking point.

See Adalo plans →

FAQ

Is Adalo good?

In our assessment, yes for its core use case: native-mobile-apps. We rate it 4.5/5 editorially. If native-mobile-apps is your priority, Adalo rarely disappoints.

Is Adalo worth the money?

Paid plans start around $36/mo. For native-mobile-apps it generally justifies the cost; if that is not your main need, weigh it against cheaper alternatives first.

What are the downsides of Adalo?

Apps can get slow/laggy with larger datasets; No source-code export (platform lock-in); Native store publishing requires a paid plan (Starter $36/mo).

Sources

Our read on Adalo draws on these independent reviews and vendor pages: