tableArth.ai vs Luzmo
Both put analytics inside B2B software products. Luzmo centers on a low-code, drag-and-drop builder for visually rich embedded dashboards. tableArth.ai centers on natural-language answers on the tables you already have — ask in plain English, get a chart in under about five seconds. Here is an honest, side-by-side look.
Side by side.
A feature-by-feature view. Competitor details are summarized as of writing and framed as differences in emphasis — always confirm current capabilities on the vendor's own site.
| Capability | tableArth.ai | Luzmo |
|---|---|---|
| Primary model | Natural-language answers on existing tables | Low-code, drag-and-drop embedded dashboard builder |
| Who builds the analytics | The end user asks in plain English; nothing to author | Product teams and non-engineers design dashboards |
| Natural-language query | Core — engine writes and runs the SQL automatically | AI-assisted features being added (verify current scope) |
| Charts | Auto-selected across 8 types per answer | Rich, hand-configured visualizations in the builder |
| Dashboards | Auto-built for every table on day one | Authored visually in the low-code builder |
| Answer speed | Streaming, typically under ~5 seconds | Depends on the dashboard you build |
| Ways to ship | Widget, REST API, and Chrome extension | Embedding layer and SDKs for the dashboard builder |
| White-labeling | Yes — on your domain, themeable via CSS variables | Yes — white-labeling is a core strength |
| Privacy modes | Four modes: Full AI, Masked, Hybrid/stats-only, Local template | Standard embedded-analytics security model (verify) |
| Enterprise controls | BYO-LLM key, SSO, SCIM, RBAC, audit logging; SOC 2 Type II in progress | Enterprise SaaS controls (verify current details) |
| Pricing | Usage-based, sales-led | See vendor site |
Comparison reflects publicly available positioning as of writing. Verify current Luzmo details on luzmo.com.
Two approaches to embedded analytics
Luzmo, formerly Cumul.io, is embedded analytics for SaaS built around a low-code, drag-and-drop dashboard builder. Its emphasis is letting product teams and non-engineers compose visually rich dashboards, white-label them, and embed them into a product through a developer embedding layer. As of writing, Luzmo has also been adding AI-assisted features. The center of gravity is the dashboard you build: someone designs the charts, lays out the views, and ships them to customers.
tableArth.ai centers on the other end of the workflow — the question your customer asks. Drop a widget into a data table you already have, call the REST API, or ship a Chrome extension, and customers ask in plain English. The engine writes and runs the SQL automatically, auto-selects a chart across bar, line, area, pie/donut, scatter, stacked bar, funnel, and table, and streams the answer back in under about five seconds. There is no authoring step: every table gets an auto-built dashboard and 15 suggested prompts on day one.
Neither approach is strictly better — they optimize for different jobs. If the job is "our team designs and maintains polished dashboards for customers," a builder-first product is a natural fit. If the job is "let customers ask anything about their data without us building a view for it first," that is what tableArth.ai is for. Many teams will recognize both needs; the question is which one is the bottleneck today. For more background on the category, see what is embedded analytics and natural-language query.
Deployment and privacy
tableArth.ai ships three ways. The widget is a drop-in UI for React, Vue, Angular, or plain HTML — two lines of code, white-labelable on your domain, origin-locked via API key, and themeable through CSS variables. The REST API lets you bring your own UI with Server-Sent Events streaming and per-customer and per-user sessions. The Chrome extension overlays the AI panel on tables in any web app — even ones you did not build. Luzmo's embedding model is oriented around getting its dashboards into your product, which is the right shape for a builder-first tool.
On data handling, tableArth.ai exposes four privacy modes you set per customer, workspace, or table: Full AI (the model sees the full table), Masked data (text is tokenized before the LLM and restored in the output), Hybrid / stats only (the model sees only column statistics while rows render locally), and Local template (pure server-side, zero external AI calls). An API key plus origin guard locks every widget to your domain, and budget caps can be set per widget, endpoint, customer, or user. Enterprise adds bring-your-own-LLM key, SSO, SCIM, role-based access, and audit logging; SOC 2 Type II is in progress. See security for the full picture, and verify Luzmo's current security and compliance posture on its own site.
When tableArth.ai fits best
Choose tableArth.ai when you want customers to get answers from the tables you already ship, without your team authoring a dashboard for every question. It fits when:
- Plain-English, ad-hoc questions matter more than pre-built views.
- You want answers, charts, and a dashboard with no setup — on day one.
- You need to embed via a widget, your own UI over a REST API, or a Chrome extension over an app you did not build.
- Per-customer, per-workspace, or per-table privacy modes are a requirement.
- You prefer usage-based, sales-led pricing scoped to your traffic.
When Luzmo may be the better fit
Luzmo may be the better fit when your priority is hand-crafted, visually rich embedded dashboards that non-engineers on your team can build and maintain through a low-code, drag-and-drop builder. If your product roadmap calls for tightly designed, curated dashboard experiences authored up front — rather than open-ended natural-language questions — a builder-first tool is aligned with that goal. As of writing, Luzmo has also been adding AI-assisted features, so if you want both a mature visual builder and emerging AI capabilities in one place, it is worth evaluating directly. Because both products evolve quickly, confirm Luzmo's current builder, embedding, AI, security, and pricing details on luzmo.com before deciding.
If you would like help mapping these trade-offs to your own product, the docs walk through how the widget and API work, and you can always talk to us. You may also find the broader roundup in embedded analytics tools compared and the build vs. buy guide useful.
Common questions.
What is the main difference between tableArth.ai and Luzmo?
Luzmo centers on a low-code, drag-and-drop builder for visually rich embedded dashboards that product teams and non-engineers can create and maintain. tableArth.ai centers on natural-language answers on the tables you already have: customers ask a question in plain English and get an answer, chart, and auto-built dashboard in under about five seconds, with no dashboard authoring step required.
Does tableArth.ai replace a dashboard builder?
It approaches the problem from the other side. Instead of asking your team to design dashboards up front, tableArth.ai auto-builds a dashboard for every table and lets end users ask ad-hoc questions in plain English. If your priority is hand-crafted, pixel-controlled dashboards authored by your team, a builder-first tool like Luzmo may fit better.
Can I keep my own UI instead of using a widget?
Yes. tableArth.ai ships three ways: a drop-in widget for React, Vue, Angular, or plain HTML in two lines of code; a REST API with Server-Sent Events streaming so you can bring your own UI; and a Chrome extension that overlays the AI panel on tables in any web app, even ones you did not build.
How does tableArth.ai handle data privacy?
tableArth.ai offers four privacy modes set per customer, workspace, or table: Full AI, Masked data (text tokenized before the model and restored in output), Hybrid or stats-only (the model sees only column statistics while rows render locally), and Local template (pure server-side with zero external AI calls). Enterprise adds bring-your-own-LLM key, SSO, SCIM, role-based access, and audit logging. SOC 2 Type II is in progress.
When might Luzmo be the better fit?
If your primary need is for non-engineers to design and maintain visually rich, hand-crafted embedded dashboards through a low-code builder, Luzmo is built around that workflow. As of writing it has also been adding AI-assisted features. Verify current capabilities on luzmo.com, since both products evolve quickly.
How much does tableArth.ai cost?
Pricing is usage-based and sales-led, so there is no public price list. Reach out through the contact page or the pricing page for a quote scoped to your usage.
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