Open-Meteo · Pricing Plans

Open Meteo Plans Pricing

Open-Meteo offers a free non-commercial tier with no API key required and three commercial subscription tiers (Standard, Professional, Enterprise) billed at fixed monthly rates with no per-call overage charges. Paid plans provide dedicated server infrastructure, commercial use rights, higher monthly call budgets, and access to extended APIs not available on the free tier. All plans can be upgraded, downgraded, or cancelled at any time via the customer portal. Billing is processed through Stripe.

Open Meteo Plans Pricing is the machine-readable pricing-plan profile for Open-Meteo on the APIs.io network, conforming to the API Commons Plans specification.

It defines 4 plans, with named plans including Free (Non-Commercial), API Standard, API Professional, API Enterprise.

Tagged areas include Weather, Forecasts, Historical Weather, Air Quality, and Marine.

4 Plans
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WeatherForecastsHistorical WeatherAir QualityMarineClimateOpen SourceFree

Plans

Free (Non-Commercial)

Open access for non-commercial use with no API key required, no sign-up, and no credit card. Intended for personal projects, educational use, open research, and non-profit websites without advertising. Commercial use is strictly prohibited under this tier.

API Standard

Commercial subscription providing access to core weather APIs on dedicated server infrastructure with no daily rate limit and a 1 million call monthly budget. Includes an API key and a dedicated API endpoint.

API Professional

Commercial subscription extending the Standard plan with access to advanced research-grade APIs including historical reanalysis, ensemble probabilistic forecasts, climate projections, seasonal outlooks, and satellite-derived solar radiation data. Provides a 5 million call monthly budget on dedicated servers.

API Enterprise

Custom enterprise tier for organizations requiring more than 50 million API calls per month, bespoke data integrations, SLA-backed uptime, and priority support. Pricing is negotiated directly with the Open-Meteo team.