</> JMS Dev Lab
Services Pricing About Blog Contact Get in Touch
Get in Touch
  1. Home
  2. /
  3. Blog
  4. /
  5. Outgrown Airtable

Outgrown Airtable? Here's What to Do Next

14 March 2026

Airtable is a genuinely great tool. It sits in that sweet spot between a spreadsheet and a database, and for thousands of small businesses it's the first step towards organising their operations properly. If you're reading this, it probably served you well for a long time.

But you're here because something has changed. The tool that once made everything easier is now creating friction. You're not imagining it — and you're not alone. Here's how to know for sure, and what to do about it.

Signs You've Outgrown Airtable

Outgrowing Airtable doesn't happen overnight. It creeps up on you. Here are the warning signs:

You're hitting record limits. Airtable's free plan caps you at 1,000 records per base. Even on paid plans, the 50,000 records-per-table limit is a hard ceiling. If you're archiving old records just to stay under the limit, or splitting data across multiple bases to work around it, your database has outgrown the container.

Per-seat costs are escalating. Airtable's pricing model charges per user. That's fine when it's just you and a co-founder. But as your team grows — an operations manager, a sales rep, a part-time bookkeeper who only logs in twice a month — the monthly bill climbs fast. Suddenly you're paying for seats that barely get used.

Your automations are getting fragile. Airtable's built-in automations are useful for simple triggers, but complex multi-step workflows quickly become brittle. When an automation fails silently at step four of seven, and nobody notices until a client chases you, that's a reliability problem disguised as a feature.

You have a growing stack of Zapier and Make workarounds. When Airtable can't do something natively, the standard advice is to connect it to Zapier or Make. One or two integrations are fine. But when you have a dozen zaps holding your operations together, you've built a distributed system that nobody can see the full picture of. Each connection is a potential point of failure, and debugging it requires logging into three different platforms.

Your clients or external users can't use it. Airtable Interfaces have improved, but they're still limited. If you need clients, customers, or suppliers to interact with your data — submitting forms, viewing their own records, getting notifications — Airtable wasn't designed for that. You end up building elaborate workarounds or asking people to navigate a tool they shouldn't need to understand.

Your Three Options

Once you've recognised the problem, you have three realistic paths forward.

Option 1: Upgrade to Airtable Business

Airtable's Business plan costs $45 per seat per month. It raises the record limit to 125,000 per table and adds features like Gantt views and advanced automations. If your main issue is the record cap and you have a small team, this might buy you time.

But it doesn't solve the fundamental architectural limits. You're still on a no-code platform with no-code constraints. And at $45/seat, a team of 10 is paying $5,400 per year — with no guarantee you won't hit the next ceiling.

Option 2: Switch to Another No-Code Platform

Notion, Baserow, NocoDB, SmartSuite — there's no shortage of alternatives. Some are cheaper. Some are open-source. Some have higher record limits.

But switching from one no-code platform to another is like moving from a one-bedroom flat to a slightly larger one-bedroom flat. You solve the immediate space problem, but you hit the same walls again in a year or two. The underlying constraint — a generic tool trying to fit your specific workflow — hasn't changed.

Option 3: Build Custom Software

This is the option most people dismiss too quickly, because "custom software" sounds expensive, slow, and enterprise-scale. But it doesn't have to be any of those things.

A custom web app, purpose-built for your workflow, is a one-time development cost. You own it outright. There are no per-seat fees. It scales as your team and data grow, without artificial limits. And it does exactly what you need — nothing more, nothing less.

The Real Cost Comparison

Let's put numbers on it. Take a team of 10 people using Airtable over three years:

Airtable Business: 10 seats × $45/month = $450/month. Over 3 years, that's $16,200. And you still don't own anything — if you stop paying, you lose access. Add in the Zapier plans you're running alongside it ($50–$100/month for a meaningful workflow), and you're looking at closer to $20,000 over three years for a system you can't fully control.

Custom development: A focused web application that replaces your core Airtable workflow typically costs between $5,000 and $15,000, depending on complexity. Hosting runs $20–$50/month. Over three years: $5,700–$16,800 total. And at the end, you own it. No per-seat costs. No record limits. No third-party pricing changes that blow up your budget.

The crossover point comes faster than most people expect — often within the first year.

What "Custom" Actually Means

When people hear "custom software," they picture a two-year enterprise project with a team of consultants and a six-figure budget. That's not what we're talking about.

We're talking about a web application. It runs in a browser, just like Airtable does. Your team logs in, sees their dashboard, does their work. The difference is that it's built specifically for your workflow, not adapted from a generic template.

Think of it like this: Airtable is a rental property. You can rearrange the furniture, but you can't knock down walls or add a room. Custom software is a house built to your spec. It costs more upfront, but it's yours, and it fits how you actually live.

The Migration Isn't as Scary as You Think

This is the part that puts most people off. "We have years of data in Airtable — we can't just move it."

Actually, you can. Airtable makes it straightforward to export your data as CSV files. Every table, every view, every record — it all comes out cleanly. From there, importing into a custom system is a standard part of any development project. A good developer will build the import process alongside the application, mapping your existing data structure into the new system.

You don't even have to move everything at once. Most businesses start by migrating their core workflow — the thing that's causing the most pain — and keep Airtable running for everything else while they transition.

The GDPR Question

If your business operates in the EU or handles EU customer data, there's another factor worth considering. Airtable is a US-hosted service, which means your data is subject to US jurisdiction, including the CLOUD Act. This gives US authorities the legal ability to access data stored by American companies, regardless of where the data subjects are located.

For many SMBs, this isn't a dealbreaker — but it's a compliance consideration that gets harder to ignore as data protection enforcement increases. Custom software hosted on EU infrastructure (which is straightforward to set up) removes this concern entirely.

What "Graduation" From Airtable Looks Like

The smartest approach isn't to abandon Airtable entirely. It's to graduate from it strategically.

Keep Airtable for the simple stuff — internal task lists, content calendars, lightweight project tracking. It's excellent at those things, and there's no reason to over-engineer a replacement.

Build custom software for your core workflow — the system your business depends on, the one that touches customers, handles money, or manages your critical operations. That's where the record limits, per-seat costs, and automation fragility actually hurt you.

The result is the best of both worlds: the flexibility of Airtable where it works, and purpose-built software where it matters.

Ready to Make the Move?

If any of this sounds familiar, we should talk. At JMS Dev Lab, we build custom software for businesses that have outgrown their off-the-shelf tools. No enterprise pricing, no lengthy procurement process — just a straightforward conversation about what you need and what it would cost.

Wondering what custom development would cost for your situation?

See our pricing or start a free conversation.

</> JMS Dev Lab

Custom software for businesses that are too unique for off-the-shelf tools and too small for enterprise pricing.

Services
Custom Development JewelryStudioManager StaffHub Jewel Value SmartCash Pitch Side RepairDesk GrowthMap QualCanvas
Company
About Blog Contact
Legal
Privacy Policy Terms of Service Pay Invoice
© 2026 JMS Dev Lab. All rights reserved.