Compare/Activepieces vs Google ADK

AI tool comparison

Activepieces vs Google ADK

Which one should you ship with? Here is the side-by-side panel verdict, pricing read, reviewer split, and community vote comparison.

A

Automation

Activepieces

Open-source Zapier with 400 MCP servers built in

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Free

Entry

Activepieces is a fully open-source automation platform that has quietly evolved from a Zapier alternative into an AI-first agent builder. The platform now includes ~400 MCP server integrations that make any of its pieces instantly usable as tools by Claude Desktop, Cursor, Windsurf, or any MCP-compatible agent — bridging the gap between traditional workflow automation and the emerging agent ecosystem. Built with TypeScript and licensed MIT for the community edition, Activepieces supports 200+ integrations with HTTP, loops, branches, and auto-retries, plus a native AI SDK for building custom agents. Critically, 60% of its pieces are community-contributed — giving it a breadth no single company could build alone. Self-host it on your own infrastructure or use their cloud, with enterprise features on a commercial license. Trending on GitHub today, Activepieces represents the convergence of old-school workflow automation with new-school MCP agent tooling. If MCP becomes the universal protocol for AI tool use, Activepieces' existing library of 400+ integrations becomes an instant moat — every piece becomes an agent capability without any extra work.

G

Agent Frameworks

Google ADK

Google's open-source multi-agent framework built for production from day one

Ship

75%

Panel ship

Community

Paid

Entry

Google Agent Development Kit (ADK) is an open-source Python framework for building, evaluating, and deploying multi-agent systems at production scale. It handles orchestration with built-in tool calling, memory management, structured output, streaming, and first-class connectors for Vertex AI, Gemini, and any OpenAI-compatible API. ADK's philosophy is agent-as-code rather than visual builders. Agents are Python classes with typed inputs/outputs, making them testable, versionable, and CI/CD-compatible from day one. The framework includes an evaluation harness, artifact management, session persistence, and failure recovery — all the production plumbing that most agent frameworks leave to the developer. The multi-agent layer handles spawning, communication, and coordination between agents as a platform primitive rather than custom glue code. With 8,200+ GitHub stars since its April release, ADK is already one of the most-watched agent frameworks. The combination of Google's infrastructure backing, Apache 2.0 licensing, and pragmatic production focus sets it apart from research-oriented frameworks. It's the entry point to Google's broader agentic infrastructure stack, including the newly announced 8th-gen TPUs.

Decision
Activepieces
Google ADK
Panel verdict
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Ship · 3 ship / 1 skip
Community
No community votes yet
No community votes yet
Pricing
Free / Open Source (MIT) / Enterprise
Open Source (Apache 2.0)
Best for
Open-source Zapier with 400 MCP servers built in
Google's open-source multi-agent framework built for production from day one
Category
Automation
Agent Frameworks

Reviewer scorecard

Builder
80/100 · ship

The MCP auto-bridge is the killer feature — your existing Activepieces workflows instantly become tool calls for any agent. Self-hostable, TypeScript throughout, and a massive community piece library makes this genuinely production-ready.

80/100 · ship

The evaluation harness and session persistence are what make this real. Most frameworks give you the happy path and leave you to build all the production scaffolding yourself. ADK ships with the hard parts included, which is why it hit 8K stars so fast.

Skeptic
45/100 · skip

At 400 pieces, quality control becomes a real concern — community contributions vary wildly in reliability and maintenance. And Zapier/Make/n8n all have larger ecosystems. Being open-source is a feature but not a moat if the UX still lags behind commercial alternatives.

45/100 · skip

Google has a graveyard of developer platforms it's abandoned — Stadia, Firebase, Cloud Functions v1. Betting your production agent infrastructure on Google's continued commitment to an open-source framework is a real risk, especially when LangChain and CrewAI have two years of community momentum.

Futurist
80/100 · ship

Workflow automation platforms become LLM infrastructure when every action becomes a tool call. Activepieces is quietly repositioning itself at the foundation of the agentic stack — and the open-source moat means it can't be locked out by any single AI vendor.

80/100 · ship

Google is making a stack bet: ADK → Vertex AI → 8th-gen TPUs. If that stack wins, ADK becomes the Rails of agentic AI — the default framework for the majority of production deployments. The infrastructure integration is the moat that makes this more than just another orchestration layer.

Creator
80/100 · ship

The combination of no-code automation and direct MCP integration with tools like Claude Desktop is genuinely empowering for non-technical creators. Build a workflow once, use it as an agent tool everywhere — that's the dream for anyone drowning in manual tasks.

80/100 · ship

Typed inputs and outputs for agents finally makes multi-agent pipelines debuggable. I can build a research → draft → review → publish pipeline and actually understand what's happening at each stage — instead of debugging opaque string-passing between prompts.

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