Prokerala is one of the most widely used astrology APIs in the Indian and Vedic markets, with broad endpoint coverage and a long track record. It's a solid choice for many teams. But it's not the right fit for every project — and the most common reasons people search for alternatives are predictable enough that we can address them head-on.
This article compares five alternatives across pricing, coverage, latency, and best-fit audience.
Verified: May 10, 2026. Pricing changes frequently in this space. Confirm current rates on each vendor's site before committing.
Why look for an alternative?
Prokerala has real strengths — broad Vedic coverage, established documentation, an active customer base, and reasonable free-tier access. So when teams shop around, the reasons usually come down to four specific frictions:
None of this is a knock on Prokerala. It's a question of fit. Below are five alternatives, what they're good at, and where they fall short.
Quick comparison
| Provider | Pricing Model | Free Tier | Endpoints | Vedic Depth | Western Depth | AI Interpretations | Avg Response |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Astrology API | Flat per-request | 50 req/mo | 100+ | Yes (dashas, varga, nakshatras) | Yes (23 house systems, 97+ Arabic parts) | Yes (multilingual) | ~287ms |
| VedicRishi | Credit-based | 50–200 req/mo trial | ~25 | Strong | Limited | Some | ~480ms |
| Free Astrology API | Free | Unlimited (community) | ~15 | Moderate | Moderate | No | Variable |
| DivineAPI | Per-product subscription | 300 req/mo with paid plan | ~20 | Moderate | Moderate | No | ~450ms |
| AstroSeek (public API) | Limited free | Basic endpoints only | ~12 | Limited | Moderate | No | ~750ms |
1. Astrology API
The closest like-for-like alternative if your project needs broad coverage on both sides — Vedic and Western — without operating two vendors. Astrology API exposes 100+ endpoints across Western, Vedic, Chinese, and Hellenistic traditions, with AI interpretation endpoints in 9+ languages, and consistent ~287ms response times from a CDN-fronted infrastructure.
- Free: $0/mo — 50 requests, no credit card
- Starter: $11/mo — 1,000 requests
- Professional: $37/mo — 55,000 requests
- Business: $99/mo — 220,000 requests, all endpoints
- Enterprise: $399+/mo — custom
No credit math. One request = one count toward your quota, regardless of endpoint. That's the single biggest reason teams migrate from Prokerala specifically.
- 100+ endpoints; full Vedic stack (Vimshottari and other dashas, divisional charts including Navamsa/Dasamsa, nakshatras, Vargottama planets, planetary friendships, kundli matching)
- AI interpretations native, multilingual — no extra LLM bill
- 23 house systems, including the rarer ones Western practitioners ask for
- CDN-fronted edge network, ~287ms average response
- Predictable per-request pricing without endpoint-specific credit costs
- Less Indian-market-specific brand recognition than Prokerala in some procurement contexts
- PDF report endpoints are flat-priced; if your usage is overwhelmingly PDF-heavy, do the math against Prokerala's higher-credit PDF charges to compare
- Free tier is intentionally small (50 req/mo) to encourage real-traffic users into the Starter plan
2. VedicRishi
The most direct Vedic-specific alternative to Prokerala. VedicRishi is an India-based astro-tech company offering REST APIs across Vedic astrology, kundli matching, daily predictions, and PDF horoscope reports. It's been around for years and has a stable customer base in the Indian astrology app ecosystem.
- Strong Vedic coverage: Kundli, divisional charts, dashas, kundli matching for marriage compatibility
- Hindi + English native support
- Free trial doesn't require a credit card
- Active in the Indian developer community; familiar to local procurement
- Credit math gets complex once language modifiers, AI options, and BYOLLM stack
- Western astrology coverage is thinner than Vedic
- Response times around ~480ms — better than some, but not at the top of the pack
- Once you exceed your tier, you upgrade rather than overage-pay, which can mean either paying for headroom you don't use or hitting hard stops
3. Free Astrology API
A community-driven free astrology API. Exactly what it says on the tin: free endpoints for natal charts, transits, and basic Vedic calculations, with no formal pricing tier or SLA. Useful for hobby projects, learning, and prototyping.
- $0 cost makes it ideal for portfolio projects, learning, and side projects
- Covers the basic endpoints most beginner astrology apps need
- No credit card friction; sign up and call
- Community-driven means relatively transparent roadmap
- No SLA. Rate limits and uptime are not contractually guaranteed.
- Response times vary widely; not appropriate for latency-sensitive production apps
- Limited endpoint depth compared to commercial APIs
- Support is community-based; no guaranteed response times when something breaks
- Migrating off when your app grows can be painful if you've leaned on free-API-specific response shapes
4. DivineAPI
DivineAPI is a commercial API offering astrology, tarot, and numerology under one umbrella. Reasonable choice for apps that bundle multiple divination tools, with stable documentation and responsive support.
- Tarot and numerology endpoints in addition to astrology — useful if your app is multi-modality
- Good documentation, with responsive customer support (sub-48 hour replies in our testing)
- 12 house systems supported
- Stable and reliable for moderate load
- Per-product pricing stacks — you pay separately for tarot, numerology, and astrology
- ~450ms average response time is fine but not at the top of the pack
- Endpoint count (~20) is narrower than Prokerala or Astrology API
- No AI interpretation layer
- Western coverage is solid but Vedic coverage is shallower than Vedic-specialist APIs
5. AstroSeek (limited public API)
AstroSeek's main offering is its consumer-facing web UI — extensive free calculators, generous chart-drawing tools, and a deep astrology community. Its public API is a much smaller surface than its website features suggest.
- AstroSeek's free web tools are widely respected in the astrology community
- Calculations align with Western tradition expectations
- Familiar brand for many astrology enthusiasts
- Public API surface is small and not positioned as a developer product
- Latency is higher (~750ms in our testing) because the API isn't optimized for high-volume programmatic use
- No formal SLA or developer dashboard
- Documentation is sparse compared to commercial APIs
- Limited geographic distribution
Decision framework
Pick your path based on what your app actually needs, not the brand you've heard of most.
FAQ
Is Prokerala actually a bad choice?
No, it's a good choice for many teams — especially Vedic-first apps with stable endpoint mixes and Indian-market focus. The frictions teams hit are real (credit unpredictability, latency under load, Western-coverage gaps) but they're frictions, not flaws. The question is fit.
Why do credit systems cause budget blow-ups?
Credit cost varies wildly by endpoint. On Prokerala specifically, basic Panchang calls cost ~10 credits, Western natal charts ~500, PDF reports up to 350,000. If you launch a feature that shifts your endpoint mix toward expensive calls (especially PDFs), your monthly bill can multiply without warning. Flat per-request pricing — like Astrology API's model — avoids that surprise.
Can I use multiple APIs at once?
Yes, and some teams do. Common pattern: Prokerala for PDF reports (their PDF system is mature), Astrology API for everything else (predictable per-request billing, AI interpretations, multilingual). Architecturally it's a matter of adapter layers between your domain models and each vendor's response shape.
What about latency from outside the US/EU?
Important question. Astrology API runs a CDN-fronted edge network with ~287ms average globally. Prokerala, VedicRishi, and DivineAPI are typically closer to ~480–520ms from US East Coast and faster from Indian regions. If your audience is concentrated in India, the latency math may favor a local provider; if your audience is global, a CDN-backed API wins.
How do I migrate from Prokerala to one of these alternatives?
What's the most overlooked criterion when picking an alternative?
Response shape stability. Free and community APIs change their JSON shapes without notice; commercial APIs version them. If you're shipping a product that depends on a specific response format, lock in a vendor with a stable, versioned API contract — not a community endpoint that might restructure responses next quarter.


