News API Pricing Breakdown 2026: What You're Really Paying For
Vendor pricing pages show you four tier cards and a monthly price. That's not what you need to sign off on a procurement decision. You need $/1K requests normalised across vendors, projected monthly spend at your real volume, and the hidden costs that sit outside the headline price.
This article is for CTOs and product managers choosing a news API in 2026. All pricing below is verified against the vendor's public pricing page as of 2026-04-15 — verify it's still current before you sign anything.
Disclosure
I work on APITube, one of the news APIs priced below. The comparison is structured so APITube lives in the same tables as every other vendor, at public rate-card prices. Where it loses, I flag it explicitly.
TL;DR
A news API is a paid HTTP service that returns structured article data — title, body, source, timestamp, and often NLP fields like sentiment or entities. Monthly costs in 2026 range from $24.99 (cheapest commercial tier) to $1,749+ at the high end of a single published tier, with enterprise plans undisclosed. The lowest headline price is almost never the lowest total cost of ownership.
| Question | Short answer |
|---|---|
| Cheapest commercial tier | Mediastack $24.99/mo; GNews Essential €49.99/mo; APITube Basic $99/mo; NewsAPI.org Business $449/mo |
| Cheapest per-1K requests (paid tier, floor plan) | Mediastack ~$0.25/1K; APITube ~$5.00/1K; GNews ~$1.67/1K (Essential); NewsAPI.org ~$1.80/1K (Business, pre-overage) |
| Who bills overage vs hard-throttles | Bills overage: NewsAPI.org, APITube (PAYG). Hard-403 throttle: GNews, most free tiers |
| Common hidden costs | Commercial-use gate, articles-per-request multiplier, credit-vs-request accounting, annual-only discount lock, NLP as upsell |
Normalised cost-per-1K requests
The number every CTO wants and no vendor publishes. Plan monthly price divided by included monthly requests (or daily cap Ă— 30), in USD, as of 2026-04-15.
| Vendor / Tier | Monthly price | Included requests/month | $/1K requests | Commercial? |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| NewsAPI.org Developer | $0 | 3,000 (100/day) | $0.00 | No |
| NewsAPI.org Business | $449 | 250,000 | $1.80 | Yes |
| NewsAPI.org Advanced | $1,749 | 2,000,000 | $0.87 | Yes |
| GNews Free | €0 | 3,000 (100/day) | $0.00 | No |
| GNews Essential | €49.99 (~$54) | 30,000 (1K/day) | $1.80 | Yes |
| GNews Business | €99.99 (~$108) | 150,000 (5K/day) | $0.72 | Yes |
| GNews Enterprise | €249.99 (~$270) | 750,000 (25K/day) | $0.36 | Yes |
| APITube Basic | $99 | 20,000 | $4.95 | Yes |
| APITube Professional | $199 | 50,000 | $3.98 | Yes |
| APITube Corporate | $599 | 300,000 | $2.00 | Yes |
| APITube PAYG | per-request | n/a | $10.00 | Yes |
| Mediastack Basic | $24.99 | 100,000 | $0.25 | Yes |
EUR prices converted at ~$1.08/€ on 2026-04-15. NewsAPI.org Developer and GNews Free are development-only and cannot be used commercially per their ToS, so the $0 is meaningless for production planning. NewsData.io is omitted from this table because their pricing page did not render during verification — check their current public rate card before quoting them in procurement.
Two things this table reveals that vendor cards hide. First, $/1K does not monotonically track brand recognition — NewsAPI.org and APITube cluster in the same per-unit band despite very different brand-price perception. Second, Mediastack's $0.25/1K is misleadingly low — their cheapest tier excludes full article bodies and ships with reliability issues independent developers have flagged publicly.
Monthly spend at realistic volumes
Normalised per-1K doesn't answer the real question: "At my actual traffic, what will I pay?" Three scenarios a CTO plans against.
| Scenario | Req/day | Req/month | NewsAPI.org | GNews | APITube |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Prototype | 5,000 | 150,000 | $449 (Business, within cap) | ~$108 (Business 5K/day, 150K/mo) | $599 (Corporate) or $1,500 PAYG |
| Growth | 20,000 | 600,000 | $1,079 (Business $449 + 350K overage Ă— $0.0018) or $1,749 Advanced | ~$270 (Enterprise 25K/day, 750K cap) | Custom (exceeds Corporate 300K) |
| Scale | 100,000 | 3,000,000 | $2,649 (Advanced $1,749 + 1M overage × $0.0009) — practically Enterprise custom | Exceeds published tiers — custom | Exceeds published tiers — custom |
Methodology: request-count volumes ignore articles-per-request caps (see Hidden Costs). If your pipeline needs 200 articles per pull, GNews Business (50 art/req) requires 4 requests per pull — multiply its numbers by 4. NewsAPI.org and APITube don't impose this cap at the tier prices shown.
Three non-obvious readings. At Prototype (150K/mo), GNews is the cheapest by a wide margin because its 5K/day Business tier covers the whole volume at ~$108. At Growth (600K/mo), NewsAPI.org overage billing makes Business + overage cheaper than upgrading to Advanced unless you expect the volume to keep climbing. At Scale (100K/day), all three "self-serve" tiers exit the public rate card — you're in sales conversations regardless, so per-1K ranges from $0.30–$1.00 depending on negotiation.
Hidden costs: five traps vendor cards don't mention
1. Commercial-use gate on free tiers
NewsAPI.org Developer ($0) and GNews Free (€0) are explicitly not permitted for commercial use in their respective terms. That "free tier" is a development lure. The real floor price is the first commercial tier: $449/mo (NewsAPI.org Business) or €49.99/mo (GNews Essential). If your comparison spreadsheet has "Free" in the NewsAPI.org column, it's misleading finance.
2. Articles-per-request multiplier
GNews caps how many articles one request returns: 25 on Essential, 50 on Business, 100 on Enterprise. If your use case needs 200 articles per topic pull, Essential forces 8 requests for the same data — multiplying effective cost by 8×. This never surfaces in the headline price. NewsAPI.org's Business tier returns up to 100 articles per call; APITube Basic returns up to 200 per call. Always divide your required-articles-per-pull by the vendor's per-request cap before computing monthly requests.
3. Credit-vs-request accounting
Some vendors (NewsData.io is the commonly cited example) bill in credits rather than raw requests. A single query can cost multiple credits once NLP enrichment, pagination, or historical filters are enabled. "200 credits/day" is not the same as "200 requests/day" — model conservatively, or ask the vendor for a worst-case credit-per-call number in writing.
4. Annual-only discount lock
NewsAPI.org and GNews both advertise ~20% off at annual billing. APITube lists annual prices as a separate line (Basic $959/yr vs $99/mo × 12 = $1,188, so ~19% off). The discount is real, but it's also a 12-month commitment before you've stress-tested the API in production. For a vendor change you might regret in month three, monthly billing is cheap insurance — budget 20% more than the headline annual rate for the first year.
5. NLP as upsell
Sentiment, entity extraction, and category tagging are either an upsell or absent on most vendors. NewsAPI.org doesn't offer them at any tier. GNews doesn't offer them. APITube bundles them across all paid tiers (disclosure noted). If your pipeline depends on these fields, the per-1K comparison above only holds when you normalise for feature parity — otherwise you're comparing a $1.80/1K bare-headline feed against a $4.95/1K feed that returns sentiment + entities + source bias out of the box. At that point you're building your own NLP layer, which has its own monthly cost.
Throttle behaviour: hard-403 vs soft-overage
Two operational modes, and which one your vendor uses decides whether a traffic spike becomes a pager incident or an invoice line.
| Vendor | Behaviour at cap | Operational impact |
|---|---|---|
| NewsAPI.org | Soft overage: bills extra requests at $0.0018 (Business) or $0.0009 (Advanced) per request | Service continues; finance absorbs the spike |
| GNews | Hard 403 at daily cap, resets at 00:00 UTC | Service degrades until reset; your app must handle the error |
| APITube (monthly plans) | Requests return errors until next cycle or plan upgrade | Service degrades; PAYG route avoids this entirely |
| APITube (PAYG) | Continues at $0.01/req until balance exhausted | Service continues; balance tops up manually |
| Mediastack | Hard throttle at cap | Service degrades |
Unlike hard-throttle vendors that return HTTP 403 at the cap, soft-overage vendors continue serving requests and bill the excess — which means a traffic spike on a hard-throttle vendor becomes a pager incident, while the same spike on a soft-overage vendor becomes a line on next month's invoice. Choose based on whether you'd rather protect uptime or protect the budget.
Per-vendor pricing notes
NewsAPI.org
- Tiers: Developer $0 (non-commercial), Business $449, Advanced $1,749, Enterprise custom.
- Strength: transparent per-request overage pricing; 5-year historical data on paid tiers; 20% annual discount published.
- Weakness: free tier is non-commercial, so entry price for production is $449. No sentiment or entity fields at any tier.
- Best for: mature products that need headlines-only at scale and have predictable volumes.
GNews
- Tiers: Free €0 (non-commercial, 12h delay), Essential €49.99, Business €99.99, Enterprise €249.99 (monthly; ~20% off annual).
- Strength: cheapest commercial entry price at €49.99/mo (~$54); daily-cap structure is simple to reason about.
- Weakness: articles-per-request cap silently multiplies real cost; hard-403 at daily cap; no NLP fields.
- Best for: small and mid-volume apps with predictable daily traffic and simple feature needs.
NewsData.io
- Tiers: Free, Basic, Professional, Corporate per their public plans page (prices not verified at time of writing — their page did not render during research).
- Positioning: historical data depth and credit-based billing.
- Caveat: verify current rate card and credit-per-request behaviour in writing before quoting them to finance.
APITube
- Tiers: Basic $99 (20K req/mo), Professional $199 (50K), Corporate $599 (300K), plus PAYG at $0.01/req with no commitment.
- Strength: all paid tiers include sentiment, entity extraction, full article bodies, 65+ filters, and format exports (JSON, Parquet, etc.); unused credits roll over; PAYG removes annual-lock risk.
- Weakness: above 300K req/mo, public tiers end — you're in a custom conversation. At pure-headline workloads with no NLP need, per-1K is higher than GNews Business.
- Best for: mid-volume apps that use NLP fields or want rollover + PAYG flexibility.
FAQ
How much does NewsAPI cost?
NewsAPI.org costs $0 on the non-commercial Developer tier, $449/month on the Business tier (250,000 requests/month, commercial use permitted), $1,749/month on Advanced (2,000,000 requests/month), and a custom-quoted price on Enterprise. A 20% annual discount applies to Business and Advanced. Source: newsapi.org/pricing, verified 2026-04-15.
Is there a free news API?
Yes, but with caveats. GNews Free (100 req/day, 12-hour article delay) and NewsAPI.org Developer (100 req/day) are free but explicitly prohibit commercial use in their terms. APITube's free tier (1,000 requests per day) returns preview article content and the first 5 pages of results — full content requires a paid plan. No production-grade news API is free.
What is the cost per request of a news API?
The cost per 1,000 requests on a mid-tier commercial plan ranges roughly from $0.25 (Mediastack Basic) to $4.95 (APITube Basic) in 2026. Cheaper headline rates often exclude full article bodies, NLP enrichment, or commercial rights, so feature-normalised per-1K is a more honest comparison than raw price.
Do news APIs charge for overage?
It depends on the vendor. NewsAPI.org bills overage at $0.0018/request (Business) or $0.0009/request (Advanced). APITube's PAYG plan bills $0.01/request with no commitment. GNews and most free tiers do not bill overage — they return HTTP 403 at the daily cap until reset, which is an operational risk to plan for.
What's included in an enterprise news API plan?
Enterprise news API plans typically include unlimited or very high request volumes, dedicated support with SLA-backed response times (APITube Corporate lists 2-hour), extended historical data access, higher rate limits per minute, and custom contract terms. Prices are quoted on request; a realistic range is $1,500–$10,000+/month depending on volume and SLA.
A numeric decision framework
Walk the tests in order. Stop at the first vendor that passes all of them for your situation.
- Commercial use required? If yes, eliminate the "Free" tiers on NewsAPI.org and GNews. You cannot deploy them in production under their ToS.
- Monthly budget < $100? APITube Basic ($99), Mediastack Basic ($24.99), or GNews Essential ($54) are the only options. Everything else starts higher.
- Need full article body text? Eliminate Mediastack Basic (snippets only). Shortlist narrows to GNews, NewsAPI.org (Business+), APITube.
- Need numeric sentiment or typed entities? Shortlist collapses to APITube (at this list of four). NewsAPI.org, GNews, and Mediastack don't expose these.
- Daily volume > 25,000 req/day? GNews Enterprise caps at 25K/day. You're on NewsAPI.org Advanced, APITube Corporate/custom, or in a custom conversation.
- Need >3 years historical data? APITube Corporate advertises unlimited; NewsAPI.org paid tiers advertise 5 years; GNews starts from 2020. Pick per depth.
- Unpredictable traffic bursts? Prefer soft-overage vendors (NewsAPI.org, APITube PAYG) over hard-throttle vendors (GNews, free tiers).
Apply the seven tests to your own numbers and you'll end the week with a shortlist of one or two, not seven. That's the procurement outcome — not the tier card.
Verdict
News API pricing in 2026 looks simple from the tier cards and isn't. The headline $ rarely reflects the TCO once you factor articles-per-request multipliers, commercial-use gates, NLP upsells, and throttle behaviour. Run the numbers on your own volume at three scenarios (prototype, growth, scale), walk the seven-step framework above, and don't trust anyone whose "free tier" is development-only.
If you want to sanity-check the numbers on a working key, APITube's free tier (1,000 requests per day) is enough to reproduce the response shape and NLP fields before you commit a dollar — Try APITube free → apitube.io. Run your own test against at least two other vendors from the table before signing anything.
Resources
- APITube — apitube.io — try it free, sentiment and entities included on every article
- Documentation — docs.apitube.io — endpoints, parameters, response structure, integrations
- Pricing — apitube.io/pricing — all tiers
- APITube blog — apitube.io/blog — more guides and comparisons
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