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Apertis vs Exogram

Apertis and Exogram are both inference engines & infra tracked by AIDiveForge. Below is a side-by-side comparison of pricing, capabilities, platforms, and ownership — sourced from each tool's live website and verified before publishing.

Apertis

Apertis

Apertis functions as an API gateway layer that sits between your coding agents — Cursor, Cline, Claude Code and the like — and the underlying model providers. You point your agent at one endpoint, authenticate once, and the platform handles provider routing, failover, and cost tracking behind it. The vendor states that automatic failover keeps production agents running when a provider has an outage, which removes a class of silent failures teams usually discover too late. The free tier covers basic models with no payment required; premium models and higher quotas are paid-only features. The platform is cloud-only — no self-hosted option — so your API traffic routes through Apertis infrastructure, and teams with data-residency requirements hit that wall immediately.

Exogram

Exogram

Exogram is an execution governance layer that intercepts AI agent actions — payments, database writes, customer emails, record updates — and applies a policy decision before anything hits your infrastructure. The vendor describes a four-way enforcement decision: allow, deny, escalate, or log. Policy rules are checked at runtime, not after the fact, which means a $25,000 invoice approval blocked against a $1,000 limit never reaches your payment system. The immutable audit trail is positioned for SOC 2, HIPAA, and financial compliance workflows. The tool is not itself an agent runner — it assumes you already have an agent; it governs what that agent is allowed to touch.

AttributeApertisExogram
PricingPaidPaid
PriceFrom $33/quarter (Lite plan, $11/mo equivalent)
Free trialNoNo
Open sourceNoNo
Has APIYesYes
Self-hosted optionNoNo
PlatformsWeb-based API; CLI/TUI agents via supported integrationsSaaS, Cloud
Released2025-05
Pros
  • Single API endpoint for multiple model providers, so rotating a compromised key or switching a model mid-project touches one config entry instead of one per agent per provider.
  • Automatic provider failover is built into the routing layer, which means a production coding agent keeps running through an upstream outage instead of throwing an unhandled exception at the worst possible time.
  • Unified billing across providers, so monthly AI infrastructure cost is one line item rather than a reconciliation exercise across five separate vendor invoices.
  • New model versions are added to the platform automatically per vendor documentation, so your agent gains access without a credentials update or a config change on your end.
  • Free tier covers basic models with no payment required, which means a team can validate the integration and routing behavior before committing budget to premium model access.
  • Runtime policy enforcement at the tool-call boundary, so unauthorized payments and database mutations are blocked before they execute rather than flagged after the damage is done.
  • Four-way enforcement decisions — allow, deny, escalate, log — which means regulated workflows get a human review step without building a custom approval queue on top of your agent stack.
  • Immutable audit logs positioned for SOC 2 and HIPAA compliance, so teams in regulated industries have a defensible record of every action an agent attempted and what decision was returned.
  • Pre-built integrations with LangChain, CrewAI, AutoGen, Vercel AI SDK, and LlamaIndex, so teams already running these frameworks add a governance layer without rewriting their agent code.
  • An open protocol spec (EAAP) published as RFC-0001, so teams who need to audit, extend, or independently verify the governance model are not working against a black-box contract.
Cons
  • No self-hosted deployment option exists — all API traffic routes through Apertis cloud infrastructure. Teams with data-residency requirements, HIPAA obligations, or any compliance posture that restricts where model prompts travel cannot use this platform and will move to a self-hostable gateway like LiteLLM or a direct provider integration instead.
  • The value proposition depends entirely on the providers Apertis has contracted with at any given moment. If your agent's critical model — a specific Anthropic version, a fine-tuned endpoint — is not available through the platform, you are back to maintaining a direct integration alongside the gateway, which recreates the fragmentation problem you were solving.
  • Cost predictability, which the platform positions as a core benefit, breaks down if your agent usage is highly variable and you are comparing against a pay-per-token direct model. Flat subscription pricing on a low-usage month means you overpay relative to direct API access — teams that run bursty, project-gated workloads rather than continuous agent pipelines see worse economics here.
  • Exogram governs actions but does not orchestrate agents — teams that need branching logic, memory, or coordination between multiple agents still maintain a separate orchestration layer, which means adding Exogram adds a second system to debug when an escalation fires unexpectedly.
  • No self-hosted deployment option is described on the vendor page, which means teams whose compliance requirements mandate on-premises data residency — common in financial services and healthcare — cannot use Exogram without routing agent traffic through external infrastructure; those teams move to building policy enforcement into their own API gateway instead.
  • The tool launched in approximately May 2025, so production case studies at scale are not yet publicly available; teams evaluating for high-volume payment workflows are working from architecture documentation and demos rather than documented incident records from comparable deployments.
Bottom line

Apertis and Exogram are closely matched on pricing model, openness, and API availability — pick by feature set and platform support in the table above.

Comparison data is sourced and verified by the AIDiveForge data pipeline. AIDiveForge is editorially independent.