Compare the Top In-Memory Databases that integrate with DataGrip as of June 2025

This a list of In-Memory Databases that integrate with DataGrip. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with DataGrip. View the products that work with DataGrip in the table below.

What are In-Memory Databases for DataGrip?

In-memory databases store data directly in a system’s main memory (RAM) rather than on traditional disk-based storage, enabling much faster data access and processing. This approach significantly reduces latency and increases performance, making in-memory databases ideal for real-time analytics, high-frequency transactions, and applications requiring rapid data retrieval. They are often used in industries like finance, telecommunications, and e-commerce, where speed and scalability are critical. In-memory databases support both SQL and NoSQL models and typically include features for data persistence to avoid data loss during system shutdowns. Ultimately, they provide high-speed performance for time-sensitive applications while ensuring data availability and integrity. Compare and read user reviews of the best In-Memory Databases for DataGrip currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    SQLite

    SQLite

    SQLite

    SQLite is a C-language library that implements a small, fast, self-contained, high-reliability, full-featured, SQL database engine. SQLite is the most used database engine in the world. SQLite is built into all mobile phones and most computers and comes bundled inside countless other applications that people use every day. SQLite is an in-process library that implements a self-contained, serverless, zero-configuration, transactional SQL database engine. The code for SQLite is in the public domain and is thus free for use for any purpose, commercial or private. SQLite is the most widely deployed database in the world with more applications than we can count, including several high-profile projects.
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    Starting Price: Free
  • 2
    SQL Server

    SQL Server

    Microsoft

    Intelligence and security are built into Microsoft SQL Server 2019. You get extras without extra cost, along with best-in-class performance and flexibility for your on-premises needs. Take advantage of the efficiency and agility of the cloud by easily migrating to the cloud without changing code. Unlock insights and make predictions faster with Azure. Develop using the technology of your choice, including open source, backed by Microsoft's innovations. Easily integrate data into your apps and use a rich set of cognitive services to build human-like intelligence across any scale of data. AI is native to the data platform—you can unlock insights faster from all your data, on-premises and in the cloud. Combine your unique enterprise data and the world's data to build an intelligence-driven organization. Work with a flexible data platform that gives you a consistent experience across platforms and gets your innovations to market faster—you can build your apps and then deploy anywhere.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 3
    Redis

    Redis

    Redis Labs

    Redis Labs: home of Redis. Redis Enterprise is the best version of Redis. Go beyond cache; try Redis Enterprise free in the cloud using NoSQL & data caching with the world’s fastest in-memory database. Run Redis at scale, enterprise grade resiliency, massive scalability, ease of management, and operational simplicity. DevOps love Redis in the Cloud. Developers can access enhanced data structures, a variety of modules, and rapid innovation with faster time to market. CIOs love the confidence of working with 99.999% uptime best in class security and expert support from the creators of Redis. Implement relational databases, active-active, geo-distribution, built in conflict distribution for simple and complex data types, & reads/writes in multiple geo regions to the same data set. Redis Enterprise offers flexible deployment options, cloud on-prem, & hybrid. Redis Labs: home of Redis. Redis JSON, Redis Java, Python Redis, Redis on Kubernetes & Redis gui best practices.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 4
    Exasol

    Exasol

    Exasol

    With an in-memory, columnar database and MPP architecture, you can query billions of rows in seconds. Queries are distributed across all nodes in a cluster, providing linear scalability for more users and advanced analytics. MPP, in-memory, and columnar storage add up to the fastest database built for data analytics. With SaaS, cloud, on premises and hybrid deployment options you can analyze data wherever it lives. Automatic query tuning reduces maintenance and overhead. Seamless integrations and performance efficiency gets you more power at a fraction of normal infrastructure costs. Smart, in-memory query processing allowed this social networking company to boost performance, processing 10B data sets a year. A single data repository and speed engine to accelerate critical analytics, delivering improved patient outcome and bottom line.
  • 5
    Oracle Database
    Oracle database products offer customers cost-optimized and high-performance versions of Oracle Database, the world's leading converged, multi-model database management system, as well as in-memory, NoSQL, and MySQL databases. Oracle Autonomous Database, available on-premises via Oracle Cloud@Customer or in the Oracle Cloud Infrastructure, enables customers to simplify relational database environments and reduce management workloads. Oracle Autonomous Database eliminates the complexity of operating and securing Oracle Database while giving customers the highest levels of performance, scalability, and availability. Oracle Database can be deployed on-premises when customers have data residency and network latency concerns. Customers with applications that are dependent on specific Oracle database versions have complete control over the versions they run and when those versions change.
  • 6
    H2

    H2

    H2

    Welcome to H2, the Java SQL database. In embedded mode, an application opens a database from within the same JVM using JDBC. This is the fastest and easiest connection mode. The disadvantage is that a database may only be open in one virtual machine (and class loader) at any time. As in all modes, both persistent and in-memory databases are supported. There is no limit on the number of database open concurrently, or on the number of open connections. The mixed mode is a combination of the embedded and the server mode. The first application that connects to a database does that in embedded mode, but also starts a server so that other applications (running in different processes or virtual machines) can concurrently access the same data. The local connections are as fast as if the database is used in just the embedded mode, while the remote connections are a bit slower.
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