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Microsoft Power Apps vs Superblocks comparison

 

Comparison Buyer's Guide

Executive SummaryUpdated on Jan 25, 2026

Review summaries and opinions

We asked business professionals to review the solutions they use. Here are some excerpts of what they said:
 

Categories and Ranking

Microsoft Power Apps
Ranking in Low-Code Development Platforms
1st
Average Rating
7.8
Reviews Sentiment
6.7
Number of Reviews
96
Ranking in other categories
Rapid Application Development Software (1st)
Superblocks
Ranking in Low-Code Development Platforms
25th
Average Rating
8.0
Reviews Sentiment
3.0
Number of Reviews
1
Ranking in other categories
AI Software Development (23rd)
 

Mindshare comparison

As of June 2026, in the Low-Code Development Platforms category, the mindshare of Microsoft Power Apps is 7.0%, down from 15.7% compared to the previous year. The mindshare of Superblocks is 0.5%, up from 0.3% compared to the previous year. It is calculated based on PeerSpot user engagement data.
Low-Code Development Platforms Mindshare Distribution
ProductMindshare (%)
Microsoft Power Apps7.0%
Superblocks0.5%
Other92.5%
Low-Code Development Platforms
 

Featured Reviews

BS
Automation Enthusiast at Self employed
Low-code AI workflows have streamlined content curation and currently support rapid app creation
Microsoft Power Apps could be improved because there are still a lot of jargons and too many moving parts. For example, if you look at Copilot, the term Copilot is confusing in the sense of whether it is Copilot in M365, Copilot Studio, or Copilot in Microsoft Power Apps. There is a plan designer which uses Copilot. The whole thing how AI has been positioned is still not lucid for the end user. An end user wants to know exactly what they want and where they go to get it. I think that could also be because things are evolving so fast. From an end-user perspective, the way it has been positioned, the clarity and the boundaries between the different types of offerings and AI offerings available is confusing as of now. There should be better clarity on that. The biggest issue I have, and I have also spoken to a few of my clients about this, is the licensing model. In traditional software development, almost 95 percent of the time, the development team bears the cost of the licenses. For example, if I develop something, I may have to pay licenses for four or five different software that I use. As a user, if you use my services, you probably pay something to me as a subscription, but you do not have to bother about the licenses. All that is wrapped under the hood. Unfortunately, in Power Platform as such, and even in other low-code things like UiPath, if you use a premium feature such as Dataverse, almost everything ends up using Dataverse or SQL Server or some relational database. If you use that, then as an app builder or app maker you have to have a premium license. The end user too would need to have a premium license. That really makes the adoption prohibitive. It is too expensive. We are talking about something like around just for Microsoft Power Apps alone, approximately twenty dollars per month, which is extremely high. Another point to consider for what else can be improved in Microsoft Power Apps is that one does not know what compute power one is getting when one buys a license. If you look at the licensing model, you will get to know how much of Dataverse storage you will get in terms of log storage, database storage, and file storage. However, you do not get to know how much of compute power is being given to you. I do not think Microsoft has an SLA saying that any request of a certain amount, such as MB per second, you will get a response time of whatever, one by sixtieth of a second or some millisecond. I do not think that they have that performance SLA in place. They do have storage SLA which comes with the license, but they do not have a corresponding SLA for performance.
AJ
Senior Engineer, Cloud Operations at Cvent
Internal tooling has streamlined access control and operational workflows for cloud teams
The UI is good in most cases, but several friction points have emerged through real-world usage that require workarounds. The pain points are UI customization ceiling. When the team needs non-standard UI patterns, custom layouts, conditional forms, sections, and dynamic component trees, the visual builder becomes a constraint. Workarounds using custom HTML and CSS components are possible but slow and very fragile. There is no structured way to write unit tests for Superblocks logic. Debugging complex JavaScript flows inside the builder is cumbersome compared to a proper IDE environment. Another pain point is documentation and error messages. When an integration fails due to API connection issues or permission errors, the error message surfaced in the builder is often opaque, increasing the debugging time. Superblocks also lacks performance under complexity. Applications with many nested components, large data sets, or high-frequency refresh requirements show noticeable rendering lag. For an infrastructure dashboard displaying live metrics across dozens of resources, this is a real limitation. We have hundreds of AWS accounts, and when someone views the VPN topology or VPC topology of some of the AWS accounts, we see lag issues.

Quotes from Members

We asked business professionals to review the solutions they use. Here are some excerpts of what they said:
 

Pros

"The most valuable features are low-code and fast development."
"What I find the most valuable is the simplicity to create PowerApps and link them to a list and then bring the list from SharePoint, and sharing the data in SharePoint with other people who do not need to have access to a mobile."
"The most valuable feature of Microsoft PowerApps is the ease of use to create an application."
"It uses a lot of AI, which is helpful, especially during the setup process."
"The integration with SharePoint is part of the enterprise package, making it cost-effective."
"It is good for using for small apps and automation on Office stuff."
"It helps bring together data and processes that are spread across different systems because of its high integration capabilities."
"The most valuable feature of Microsoft PowerApps is the user interface."
"With Superblocks, the full workflow submission, routing, approval, provisioning, audit, and deleting the access after twelve hours was built in under a week."
 

Cons

"The user interface is pretty good, although it is a little bit clunky and can be improved."
"Improvements to the capturing of geographic locations and integration with maps would raise my score of the product from seven point five to its maximum of ten."
"I have heard from developers that there is documentation missing in the reporting."
"The solution could improve by having more connectors for different solutions in a way to create custom connectors. Additionally, they should make HTTP Connectors free again because it was not always a premium feature. These HTTP connectors allow you to send API requests which can be important."
"It has to improve the threshold limit where it can handle data beyond 5000 items."
"I would like to have more options for changing the layout because customizing something as simple as colors is very hard."
"There are occasional performance challenges."
"Customization, in general, is somewhat complicated."
"Superblocks also lacks performance under complexity. Applications with many nested components, large data sets, or high-frequency refresh requirements show noticeable rendering lag."
 

Pricing and Cost Advice

"Microsoft PowerApps is expensive, but there are many features included."
"It is comparable to other similar solutions."
"I pay nine dollars monthly for the subscription to this solution and the price of the is reasonable."
"It is not expensive. There is no licensing cost."
"The company has a subscription where you can use certain features for free, but there are features that require a premium subscription to use."
"If you start to use any premium connectors that are not stored in a SharePoint list or on an Excel workbook, then it costs $4 per user per month. If you want unlimited, it's about $16 per month for unlimited apps, and unlimited connectors."
"The price for the license could be more cost-effective."
"The enterprise-level costs a great deal of money, and you have to purchase additional licenses to scale it."
Information not available
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Top Industries

By visitors reading reviews
Financial Services Firm
12%
Manufacturing Company
11%
Government
9%
Comms Service Provider
8%
No data available
 

Company Size

By reviewers
Large Enterprise
Midsize Enterprise
Small Business
By reviewers
Company SizeCount
Small Business32
Midsize Enterprise17
Large Enterprise53
No data available
 

Questions from the Community

How would you choose between Microsoft PowerApps and Salesforce Platform?
I think it depends on your use case. If your organization uses Microsoft Enterprise products, PowerApps will work better in your environment. Similarly, if you have a Salesforce integration in pla...
Would you choose ServiceNow over Microsoft PowerApps?
Hi Netanya, I will choose ServiceNow because ServiceNow is a very good tool compared to Microsoft PowerApp. Because ServiceNow has a very strong module (Performance Analysis) reporting which will ...
Would you choose Microsoft Azure App Service or PowerApps?
Microsoft Azure App Service is helpful if you need to set up temporary servers for customers to run their programs in locations that other cloud providers do not cater to. When servers are closer t...
What needs improvement with Superblocks?
The UI is good in most cases, but several friction points have emerged through real-world usage that require workarounds. The pain points are UI customization ceiling. When the team needs non-stand...
What is your primary use case for Superblocks?
My company recently adopted Superblocks three or four months ago. I work in a Cloud Infrastructure team, and our primary use for Superblocks is building internal operations tooling, dashboards, wor...
What advice do you have for others considering Superblocks?
Be intentional about what you are building in Superblocks versus custom. Superblocks is excellent for building internal tools with standard functionality. If a tool requires deeply custom hooks, hi...
 

Also Known As

PowerApps, MS PowerApps
No data available
 

Overview

 

Sample Customers

TransAlta, Rackspace, Telstra
1. Airbnb 2. Amazon 3. Apple 4. ATT 5. Bank of America 6. BlackRock 7. Citigroup 8. CocaCola 9. Comcast 10. Costco 11. Delta Air Lines 12.Disney 13. eBay 14. ExxonMobil 15. FedEx 16. Ford Motor Company 17. Google 18. Goldman Sachs 19. Home Depot 20. IBM 21. Intel 22. JPMorgan Chase 23. Kraft Heinz 24. McDonalds 25. Merck 26. Microsoft 27. Nike 28. Oracle 29. PepsiCo 30. Procter Gamble 31. Starbucks 32. Tesla
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