ToolsRanks

Tableau vs Looker: which should you choose?

Quick answer: Tableau is built for enterprise, while Looker suits data-teams. For most users Tableau is the stronger default, but Looker can be the better fit depending on your budget and use case. Tableau has the lower entry price.

Both Tableau and Looker get recommended a lot, but they solve the job differently. Below we compare them on pricing, strengths and the use cases each one fits, then give a clear verdict.

Side-by-side

TableauLooker
CategoryBi PlatformBi Platform
What it's known forMarket-leading visual analytics platform (Salesforce) with best-in-class drag-and-drop data visualization, deep enterprise governance and a huge community.Google Cloud's enterprise BI platform built on the LookML semantic modeling layer, giving a single governed source of truth and powerful embedded/data-app capabilities.
PricingCloud Standard ~$15/user/mo Viewer, ~$42 Explorer, ~$75 Creator (billed annually); Enterprise ~$35/$70/$115; min. 1 Creator license requiredCustom quote only (platform fee + per-user); no public list price; enterprise deployments typically tens of thousands to $100k+/yr
Best audienceMid-to-large enterprises and analyst teams that need deep, governed visual analytics.Data teams and software vendors wanting governed metrics and embedded analytics on a cloud warehouse.
Best forenterprise, data-visualizationdata-teams, embedded-analytics
Entry price$15/user/mo (billed annually)Quote (est. ~$35k-$66k/yr)
Biggest strengthBest-in-class visualization depth and flexibility.Strong governed semantic layer (single source of truth).
Main caveatExpensive at scale; every deployment needs at least one Creator seat.No public list pricing; quotes are high (tens of thousands to $100k+/yr).
More on Tableau →More on Looker →

Features compared

Beyond the spec sheet, these are the capabilities that define each tool:

Tableau key features

  • Drag-and-drop visual analytics with VizQL engine, leader in interactive dashboards
  • Tableau Prep for visual data preparation and cleaning
  • Live and in-memory (extract) connections to most databases and warehouses
  • Tableau Pulse and Einstein/Agentforce AI for metrics monitoring and natural-language insights

Looker key features

  • LookML semantic modeling layer for a single governed source of truth
  • Git-based version control of data models
  • Embedded analytics and data-app APIs/SDKs
  • In-database architecture (queries the warehouse live, no extracts)

Pricing tiers side by side

Tableau plans

PlanPriceWhat's included
Viewer (Standard)$15/user/mo (billed annually)Consume dashboards only
Explorer (Standard)$42/user/mo (billed annually)Self-service exploration
Creator (Standard)$75/user/mo (billed annually)Full authoring; min. 1 required
Enterprise edition$35 / $70 / $115 per user/moViewer / Explorer / Creator with advanced governance

Looker plans

PlanPriceWhat's included
StandardQuote (est. ~$35k-$66k/yr)Platform fee + per-user; smaller deployments
EnterpriseQuote (est. ~$132k/yr)Advanced security/governance
EmbedQuote (est. ~$180k-$198k/yr)Customer-facing embedded analytics

Tiers compiled from the vendors' published plans and independent reviews; prices are approximate and change often, so confirm current figures (and your region's taxes) on each vendor's site.

Strengths compared

Where Tableau wins

The reference standard for rich, governed interactive data visualization.

That makes it the stronger pick for mid-to-large enterprises and analyst teams that need deep, governed visual analytics.

Where Looker wins

A governed semantic layer and APIs that make it as much a data platform as a BI tool.

That makes it the stronger pick for data teams and software vendors wanting governed metrics and embedded analytics on a cloud warehouse.

Verdict: choose by fit

Both are good at the job, so let your priorities decide.

FAQ

Is Tableau better than Looker?

Tableau is the stronger default for most users, but Looker can be the better fit depending on your budget and use case.

What is the main difference between Tableau and Looker?

Tableau is the reference standard for rich, governed interactive data visualization. Looker is a governed semantic layer and APIs that make it as much a data platform as a BI tool.

Which is cheaper, Tableau or Looker?

Entry pricing differs: Tableau starts at $15/user/mo (billed annually), while Looker starts at Quote (est. ~$35k-$66k/yr). Compare the tiers above against your usage.

Sources

Facts above are drawn from these independent reviews and the vendors' own pages for Tableau and Looker: