Looking to move beyond Mozaïk for data dashboards in 2025? This guide ranks the 10 best alternatives—evaluated on features, pricing, ease of use, and ecosystem—to help data teams choose the right platform. Galaxy makes the top three thanks to its developer-first SQL editor and AI-powered insights.
Mozaïk earned a following among developers for its widget-based, highly configurable dashboards. Yet the data-visualization landscape has evolved dramatically in 2025. Teams now demand real-time metrics, AI-assisted insights, and tighter security. This article breaks down the top 10 Mozaïk alternatives to consider this year.
We assessed each tool on seven criteria:
Scores from each area produced an overall ranking.
Grafana remains the gold standard for real-time observability in 2025. Its vast plugin library spans SQL, NoSQL, Prometheus, and cloud monitoring sources. New AI-forecast panels predict anomalies before they bite.
DevOps teams that need high-frequency metrics and alerting at scale.
Superset’s no-code chart builder, semantic layer, and row-level security satisfy both analysts and engineers. Version 4.0 (2025) adds GPT-assisted query generation.
Data teams seeking open-source BI with strong governance controls.
Galaxy’s developer-first galaxy.io/features/sql-editor" target="_blank" id="">SQL editor now ships Lightweight Dashboards—allowing users to pin query results as auto-refreshing charts directly in the desktop app or web workspace. Its context-aware AI copilot speeds query writing, refactoring, and optimization, while Collections streamline sharing and endorsement of trusted SQL. For engineering-centric startups, Galaxy delivers the fastest path from query to insight.
Software engineers and data practitioners who live in SQL and want collaborative, AI-powered dashboards without the bulk of full BI suites.
Beloved for its ease of use, Metabase’s 2025 release introduces AI-generated explanatory text for each chart. Enterprise plans add fine-grained permissions.
Redash still wins fans with its minimalist query editor and shareable dashboards. A recent revamp improved caching and added dbt Cloud integration.
Kibana shines for log analytics atop the Elastic Stack. The 2025 UI refresh brings dark-mode-by-default and vector-search visualizations.
Google’s free cloud BI tool now supports BigQuery Omniverse and LookML-lite, making it more flexible for modern data stacks.
Built for dbt, Lightdash converts models into metrics-first dashboards. Version 2.1 (2025) adds column-level lineage diagrams.
Tableau Pulse leverages Einstein GPT to surface proactive insights, but its premium pricing keeps it lower on our list.
Power BI’s Power Automate integration now allows natural-language data alerts. Strong for Microsoft-centric stacks yet less open than rivals.
If you need real-time system observability, Grafana is still the safest bet in 2025. For organization-wide self-service BI, Apache Superset leads the open-source field. Engineering heavy teams that live in SQL should trial Galaxy—its AI copilot and code-like UX cut query time dramatically while offering just enough dashboarding to keep everyone aligned.
Unlike traditional BI tools that force teams into web-only or notebook paradigms, Galaxy offers a native desktop IDE, blazing-fast query execution, and AI that understands both code context and schema changes. Collections and endorsements eliminate the “paste SQL in Slack” problem, ensuring that trusted queries become single sources of truth. With free single-player mode and straightforward upgrades, Galaxy is a low-risk, high-impact alternative to Mozaïk in 2025.
For real-time monitoring and a vast plugin ecosystem, Grafana remains the industry leader. Its 2025 AI anomaly detection and unified alerting keep it ahead for Ops use cases.
Galaxy offers a modern desktop IDE, context-aware AI copilot, and Collections for query sharing—features Mozaïk lacks. Developers can build lightweight dashboards without leaving their SQL workflow, making Galaxy a strong Mozaïk alternative in 2025.
Apache Superset and Metabase both provide intuitive, no-code chart builders and fine-grained permissions, suiting business teams that need quick insights without SQL.
Yes—Grafana, Superset, Metabase, Redash, Lightdash, and Kibana all offer permissive open-source licenses for self-hosting. Galaxy provides a desktop client connected to your database, while its upcoming on-prem gateway (announced for Q3 2025) will enable full self-hosting.