About AppTide
AppTide started from a simple frustration: most ASO tools are built like analyst software, but indie teams increasingly work through scripts, agents, and repeatable workflows. They want ranking data and recommendations where they already build.
- ✦ Built for indie app teams
- ✦ Dashboard, API, and MCP in one workflow
- ✦ App Store and Google Play coverage
- ✦ Last updated: April 2026
ASO built for people who would rather automate than babysit a dashboard
AppTide started from a simple frustration: most ASO tools are built like analyst software, but indie teams increasingly work through scripts, agents, and repeatable workflows. They want ranking data and recommendations where they already build.
So we treat ASO as a developer surface. The dashboard exists for visibility, but the real product is a shared data layer that can power REST calls, MCP tools, internal automations, and lightweight audit workflows.
A smaller surface area, a better workflow
The product direction is deliberate: fewer vanity charts, more useful primitives. Teams should be able to inspect a keyword set, compare competitors, refresh an app audit, and ship metadata suggestions without context switching between five tabs.
That is why the roadmap emphasizes API quality, MCP ergonomics, better docs, and fair-use economics before flashy enterprise features. If the workflow works for a solo developer, it usually scales up cleanly.
What you get
One data model, multiple surfaces
The same applications, keywords, competitors, and audit objects power the dashboard, the API, and MCP tools.
Workflow-first automation
Bulk tracking, compare flows, audit refreshes, and metadata recommendations are designed for scripts and agents, not only for clicks.
Affordable usage economics
The $9.99 plan only works if heavy tasks are cached, refreshed asynchronously, and governed by fair-use rules. Cost discipline is part of the product.
Say hello
Questions about the API, MCP, pricing, or a partnership? Send a note. Product feedback is especially useful when it comes from people actively shipping apps.