Compare the Top Blockchain APIs that integrate with Rootstock as of November 2025

This a list of Blockchain APIs that integrate with Rootstock. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with Rootstock. View the products that work with Rootstock in the table below.

What are Blockchain APIs for Rootstock?

Blockchain APIs enable blockchain developers to develop blockchain applications that can communicate with blockchain networks, nodes, and clients via an API. Blockchain APIs facilitate all aspects of blockchain data transfer and node communication for decentralized applications and blockchain systems. Compare and read user reviews of the best Blockchain APIs for Rootstock currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    Alchemy

    Alchemy

    Alchemy

    One magic line of code supercharges your development with the world’s most powerful blockchain developer platform, relied upon by 70% of the world's top Ethereum apps. Alchemy Supernode is the most widely used Ethereum API. Get all the functionality of a node, including JSON-RPC support, but with the supercharged reliability, data correctness and scalability needed to run world-class applications on the blockchain. Alchemy Build is a no-configuration in-house suite of developer tools to prototype, debug, and ship products faster. Instantly search through millions of historical requests, view real-time transactions in the mempool, make JSON-RPC calls directly from the dashboard, and quickly scan recent requests and errors. Alchemy Monitor is a comprehensive suite of dashboards and alerts for app health, performance, and user behavior. Instantly check on the health of all your apps in one place, gain user insights without compromising privacy, and get automated alerts.
    Starting Price: $49 per month
  • 2
    The Graph

    The Graph

    The Graph

    APIs for a vibrant decentralized future. The Graph is an indexing protocol for querying networks like Ethereum and IPFS. Anyone can build and publish open APIs, called subgraphs, making data easily accessible. Subgraphs can be composed into a global graph of all the world's public information. This data can be transformed, organized, and shared across applications for anyone to query with just a few keystrokes. Before The Graph, teams had to develop and operate proprietary indexing servers. This required significant engineering and hardware resources and broke the important security properties required for decentralization.
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