ContextQA
ContextQA
vs
Katalon logo
Katalon
Compared · June 2026

ContextQA vs Katalon:
AI-Native, or Selenium With AI Bolted On?

Katalon is a mature low-code wrapper over Selenium and Appium with a strong recorder, broad web/mobile/desktop/API coverage, and 4.4/5 ratings on G2 and Capterra. ContextQA takes a different bet: AI agents that author, heal, and diagnose the tests themselves, instead of a Selenium core with AI features added on top and Groovy waiting when you outgrow codeless.

The 30-second answer

Katalon is a packaged, GUI-first automation tool built on Selenium/Appium. Its record-and-playback recorder, keyword library, and desktop testing are genuine strengths, and a free Studio tier makes it easy to start. The catch: full-code mode means Groovy (a Java variant few QA teams use), its AI (StudioAssist, TrueTest, self-healing) was layered onto a legacy core over 2024-2025, and scaling parallelism is gated by per-seat licensing.

ContextQA is AI-native from the ground up. Autonomous agents generate tests from Jira, Figma, Swagger, video, or plain English, self-heal them, run root-cause analysis, and cover web, mobile, API, database, Salesforce, SAP, and AI agents, on usage-based pricing with framework-neutral code export.

If you want a mature low-code Selenium IDE with desktop testing and don't mind Groovy and seat-based licensing, Katalon is a safe pick. If you want AI to author and maintain the tests, with first-class Salesforce/SAP and an MCP server for your AI assistant, ContextQA is the better question to ask.

4.4/5
Katalon G2 rating
Across ~218 reviews; 4.4/5 on Capterra (~708 reviews). Verify counts live before publishing.
Source: G2, Capterra
Groovy
Full-code language
Beyond codeless, Katalon scripting uses Groovy, a Java variant uncommon vs Python/JS/C#, narrowing reuse and hiring.
Source: G2 / community reviews
$167/seat
Team Edition, billed annually
Per-seat; cloud parallelism is gated by seat count (1-5 seats = 1 concurrent session). Enterprise is quote-only.
Source: katalon.com/pricing
2024-25
When AI was added
StudioAssist, self-healing, TrueTest and MCP/agent mode were layered onto a Selenium/Appium core; TrueTest launched 2025.
Source: katalon.com (AI page)
Architectural difference

AI-native platform, or Katalon's approach?

How ContextQA and Katalon are built differs in ways that show up in authoring, maintenance, and cost, not just in demos.

ContextQA

One product. One contract. One dashboard. Every test type below shares the same AI engine, the same self-healing layer, the same context graph.

Platform
ContextQA
Web, mobile, API, database, SAP, Salesforce, performance, security, visual, accessibility, AI agent testing, plus AI test generation from Jira/Figma/Swagger/video, a context graph, an MCP server (~50 tools), and code export, all in one base.
Procurement implication: one contract, usage-based pricing, one AI engine. Adding a test type is a feature, not a new SKU or seat tier.

Katalon

A packaged low-code/codeless platform on top of Selenium and Appium. Strong recorder and keyword library; free Studio tier; full-code mode uses Groovy. AI is real but additive, added over 2024-2025.

Core
Katalon Studio
Record-and-playback recorder, keyword-driven tests, Object Repository over Selenium/Appium. Free tier for individuals.
Code
Groovy scripting
Full-code mode is Groovy (Java variant), less common than Python/JS/C# in modern QA teams.
Cloud
TestCloud + TestOps
Cloud browser/device grid and test management/analytics, licensed on top of Studio.
AI
StudioAssist + TrueTest
NL-to-script, self-healing, and TrueTest (2025) that learns from production behavior; plus ~13 Studio MCP tools (Oct 2025).
What reviewers report

The honest read on Katalon

Drawn from public G2, Capterra, Gartner, and independent reviews, the praise and the friction, both.

Going beyond codeless means Groovy scripting, which many modern QA teams standardized on Python, JavaScript, or C# simply don't use.
G2 / community reviews2026
Tests rely on Katalon's own keywords and Object Repository, so leaving the platform is a resource-intensive rewrite.
Independent review (aqua-cloud)2025
Users report flaky selectors and inconsistent behavior, especially on iOS, plus the IDE lagging on large projects.
G2 / Capterra reviews2025
Cloud execution concurrency is throttled by seat count, and the community has repeatedly questioned whether the cost is justified.
qameta.io pricing analysis2026
The recorder and keyword library are a genuine on-ramp for manual testers and non-coders to build real tests.
Capterra review theme2026
Katalon's developer community is comparatively small, making self-service troubleshooting harder than with Selenium.
G2 / community reviews2025
Side by side

The full feature matrix

Grouped by category. Katalon is credited where it genuinely leads; ContextQA where it does.

Capability
Architecture & AI
AI test generationAI-native: agents generate from Jira, Figma, Swagger, video, plain EnglishStudioAssist + TrueTest, added 2024-25 to a Selenium core
ArchitectureSingle AI-native platform with a context graphLow-code wrapper over Selenium/Appium
Self-healingSelf-healing built inLLM-powered locator healing (web + mobile)
MCP / AI-agentMCP server (~50 tools) for Claude, Cursor, VS Code~13 Studio MCP tools + TestOps MCP (Oct 2025)
AI agent testingDedicated AI agent testing (hallucination, drift, tool-calls)No module to test other AI agents
Test types & authoring
Codeless / recorderNo-code recorder + plain-English authoringMature record-and-playback recorder
Scripting languageFramework-neutral code export, not one locked languageGroovy (Java variant) for full code
Web / Mobile / APIWeb, mobile, API, plus databaseWeb, mobile, desktop, API
Desktop (Windows)Not a primary surfaceNative desktop app testing
Salesforce / SAPFirst-class Salesforce + SAP testingGeneral web automation only
Code exportClean export to Playwright, Selenium, Cypress, WebdriverIOExports Java/C# but often Katalon-API-dependent
Operations & pricing
Pricing modelUsage / token-basedPer-seat ($167/seat/mo annual); parallelism gated by seats
Free tierFree trial / pilotFree Katalon Studio for small projects
Learning curveLow: plain English + context-driven generationEasy to start; steeper for Groovy + advanced
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The honest take

Where each platform wins

Both are real tools that win in different contexts. Here's which is which.

Choose ContextQA
ContextQA

You want AI-native, context-driven testing.

AI writes and maintains the tests
Katalon assumes you author tests in its recorder or Groovy. ContextQA's agents generate them from Jira, Figma, Swagger, video, or plain English, then self-heal and diagnose, so authoring stops being the default mode of work.
First-class Salesforce and SAP
Katalon does general web automation but has no dedicated Salesforce or SAP module. ContextQA tests Salesforce and SAP natively, plus database and AI-agent testing.
You live in an AI-assistant workflow
ContextQA's MCP server (~50 tools) drives test creation, runs, and analysis from Claude, Cursor, and VS Code, deeper than Katalon's newer ~13-tool MCP set.
No Groovy, no language lock-in
Katalon's full-code path is Groovy. ContextQA exports clean Playwright/Selenium/Cypress/WebdriverIO so your team keeps the language and framework it already knows.
Usage-based, not per-seat
Katalon gates cloud parallelism by seat count, so scaling CI throughput is a direct line-item cost. ContextQA prices on usage, so cost tracks what you actually run.
Choose Katalon
Katalon

Katalon has real strengths too.

You want a mature low-code Selenium IDE
Katalon's record-and-playback recorder, keyword library, and Object Repository are a proven, polished on-ramp over Selenium/Appium for mixed-skill teams.
You need desktop (Windows) app testing
Katalon supports desktop apps alongside web/mobile/API in one tool, a surface ContextQA doesn't primarily target.
Your team already knows (or wants) Groovy
If your testers are comfortable in Groovy/Java and want full scripting control, Katalon's code mode fits.
You want a long-established vendor + academy
Founded 2016 with a large user base, extensive docs, and the Katalon Academy, it's a known quantity for procurement.
You want a genuinely free entry tier
Katalon Studio's free tier lets individuals and small projects automate before paying for cloud, AI, and management.
Deep dive

Head to head

The differences that show up in daily work, not just in keynotes.

01

Test creation philosophy

ContextQA

ContextQA generates tests from real product context, Jira tickets, Figma designs, Swagger specs, video, or plain English, then keeps them healthy. Authoring is the AI's job, not yours.

Katalon

Katalon's StudioAssist turns natural language into scripts and TrueTest (2025) learns from production user behavior to suggest tests. Credible, but added to a Selenium/Appium core, and full-code work still means Groovy.

Bottom lineKatalon accelerates authoring inside a recorder/IDE; ContextQA removes authoring as the default by generating from context. Pick Katalon for a hands-on low-code IDE; pick ContextQA to have tests appear from your tickets and designs.
02

Language and lock-in

ContextQA

Code export targets Playwright, Selenium, Cypress, and WebdriverIO, so you own portable tests in mainstream frameworks and aren't tied to one language.

Katalon

Beyond codeless, Katalon uses Groovy, and tests lean on Katalon's keywords and Object Repository. Exports exist but often stay Katalon-API-dependent, so leaving is a rewrite.

Bottom lineContextQA wins on portability. If avoiding vendor and language lock-in matters, framework-neutral export beats a Groovy + proprietary-keyword foundation.
03

Coverage breadth

ContextQA

One AI engine spans web, mobile, API, database, Salesforce, SAP, performance, security, visual, accessibility, and AI-agent testing, with a context graph linking app, requirements, and tests.

Katalon

Katalon covers web, mobile, desktop, and API well, and adds desktop (Windows), but has no native Salesforce, SAP, security, or AI-agent-testing modules.

Bottom lineKatalon wins on desktop; ContextQA wins on enterprise breadth (Salesforce, SAP, database, security, AI-agent testing) under one AI engine and contract.
Pricing

What it actually costs

An honest read on each pricing model and what it means as you scale.

Katalon
$167 /seat/mo Team, annual
Per katalon.com/pricing: Team Edition ~$167/seat/month billed annually (first-purchase promo ~$67/seat/mo); Enterprise is quote-only. A free Katalon Studio tier exists.
Per-seat licensing; cloud parallelism gated by seat count (1-5 seats = 1 concurrent session)
Enterprise (SSO, RBAC, audit) is custom/quote-only
Full-code mode requires Groovy, narrowing reuse and hiring
No native Salesforce, SAP, security, or AI-agent-testing modules
Best for: teams wanting a mature low-code Selenium/Appium IDE plus desktop testing, comfortable with seat-based licensing.
The total-cost question. Katalon's seat model means every additional parallel run can require more seats, so scaling CI throughput is a direct, escalating cost, and Salesforce, SAP, security, and AI-agent testing aren't on the menu at all. Compare against ContextQA's single usage-based line that includes all of them. Run the math through the ContextQA ROI calculator.
Migration

Switching from Katalon? Structured, in phases.

Katalon tests rely on its keywords, Object Repository, and Groovy, so a line-by-line port is painful. ContextQA regenerates coverage from your requirements and exports clean framework-neutral code, in three measurable phases over 12 weeks.

Phase 01

Weeks 1-4: Run parallel

Keep Katalon running. Point ContextQA at your app and let AI agents generate coverage from your Jira tickets, Figma, and specs, no Groovy rewrite required.

Phase 02

Weeks 5-8: Compare

Measure coverage overlap and gaps. See where ContextQA's self-healing and root-cause analysis cut maintenance versus your Katalon suite.

Phase 03

Weeks 9-12: Decide

Retire what's redundant. Most teams find AI regeneration plus code export replaces the bulk of Katalon coverage without re-locking into Groovy.

AI regenerates coverage from tickets/specs, not line-by-line porting
Clean export to Playwright/Selenium/Cypress/WebdriverIO
12-week structured pilot with before/after metrics
FAQ

ContextQA vs Katalon: common questions

For AI-native, context-driven testing, yes, ContextQA's agents generate tests from Jira, Figma, Swagger, video, or plain English and cover Salesforce and SAP natively, while Katalon is a low-code Selenium/Appium wrapper with AI added on top. Katalon remains strong if you want a mature record-and-playback IDE and desktop testing. The right pick depends on whether AI-first authoring or a packaged Selenium GUI matters more.
ContextQA is a leading AI-native alternative: instead of bolting AI onto a Selenium core, it uses autonomous agents for generation, self-healing, and root-cause analysis across web, mobile, API, database, Salesforce, and SAP, with an MCP server (~50 tools) for Claude, Cursor, and VS Code. Evaluate it against your need for context-aware generation and AI-assistant workflows.
Katalon uses per-seat licensing (Team Edition ~$167/seat/month annual) with cloud parallelism gated by seat count, plus a free Studio tier. ContextQA uses usage/token-based pricing, so cost scales with what you run rather than headcount, which often climbs slower for teams needing many parallel executions.
Yes, StudioAssist converts natural language to scripts and TrueTest (2025) generates and maintains tests from production behavior. These are credible but were added relatively recently to a Selenium/Appium foundation. ContextQA was built AI-first, generating from Jira, Figma, Swagger, video, and plain English as the core workflow.
Yes, Katalon's record-and-playback recorder and keyword library are genuine strengths for non-coders. The catch is that going beyond codeless means Groovy, which many modern QA teams don't use. ContextQA offers no-code plus plain-English authoring and exports to mainstream frameworks.
There's no single winner for every team, but for AI-native, context-aware testing ContextQA stands out by generating tests from real product context and integrating with AI coding assistants via MCP. Katalon is a strong choice if you want a mature low-code Selenium/Appium IDE. Match the tool to whether AI-first authoring or a packaged GUI is your priority.
Yes. Katalon tests depend on its keywords and Object Repository, so a line-by-line port is hard, but ContextQA regenerates coverage from your requirements and specs instead, and exports clean Playwright/Selenium/Cypress/WebdriverIO. That avoids re-locking into another proprietary framework.
Katalon Studio has a free tier for individuals and small projects, but cloud execution, advanced AI, test management, parallelism, and enterprise features need paid per-seat plans (Team Edition ~$167/seat/month). So it's free to start, paid to scale. ContextQA uses usage-based pricing so you pay for actual execution.

Two real options.
The choice is whether AI writes the tests.

If you want a mature low-code Selenium IDE with desktop testing, Katalon is a safe pick. If you want AI to author, heal, and diagnose the tests, with first-class Salesforce/SAP and an MCP server for your AI assistant, see ContextQA on your actual stack in 30 minutes.