Compare the Top Relational Database that integrates with Prometheus as of October 2025

This a list of Relational Database that integrates with Prometheus. Use the filters on the left to add additional filters for products that have integrations with Prometheus. View the products that work with Prometheus in the table below.

What is Relational Database for Prometheus?

Relational database software provides users with the tools to capture, store, search, retrieve and manage information in data points related to one another. Compare and read user reviews of the best Relational Database for Prometheus currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    MySQL

    MySQL

    Oracle

    MySQL is the world's most popular open source database. With its proven performance, reliability, and ease-of-use, MySQL has become the leading database choice for web-based applications, used by high profile web properties including Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and all five of the top five websites*. Additionally, it is an extremely popular choice as embedded database, distributed by thousands of ISVs and OEMs.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 2
    TigerData

    TigerData

    TigerData

    TigerData is a high-performance, cloud-native PostgreSQL platform built for real-time analytics, time-series processing, vector workloads and intelligent agent-driven applications. It retains full SQL compatibility while delivering exceptional speed and scale: the platform powers millions of databases, supports streaming data across devices and applications, and enables organizations to consolidate transactional and analytical workloads in a single engine. TigerData enhances PostgreSQL with extensions and execution optimizations that provide low-latency queries, high-concurrency insert rates, hybrid operational/analytical use cases and vector embedding support for AI-driven workloads. Developers gain simplicity and reliability by staying within PostgreSQL’s ecosystem, familiar tools, connectors and syntax, while unlocking performance on par with purpose-built time-series or vector engines.
    Starting Price: $30 per month
  • 3
    CrateDB

    CrateDB

    CrateDB

    The enterprise database for time series, documents, and vectors. Store any type of data and combine the simplicity of SQL with the scalability of NoSQL. CrateDB is an open source distributed database running queries in milliseconds, whatever the complexity, volume and velocity of data.
  • 4
    PostgreSQL

    PostgreSQL

    PostgreSQL Global Development Group

    PostgreSQL is a powerful, open-source object-relational database system with over 30 years of active development that has earned it a strong reputation for reliability, feature robustness, and performance. There is a wealth of information to be found describing how to install and use PostgreSQL through the official documentation. The open-source community provides many helpful places to become familiar with PostgreSQL, discover how it works, and find career opportunities. Learm more on how to engage with the community. The PostgreSQL Global Development Group has released an update to all supported versions of PostgreSQL, including 15.1, 14.6, 13.9, 12.13, 11.18, and 10.23. This release fixes 25 bugs reported over the last several months. This is the final release of PostgreSQL 10. PostgreSQL 10 will no longer receive security and bug fixes. If you are running PostgreSQL 10 in a production environment, we suggest that you make plans to upgrade.
  • 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.
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