Why developers compare Atlas and airSlate SignNow
airSlate SignNow is a known name in e-sign. Atlas is built for teams that send from code, from agents, or from a dashboard without renting seats for automation.
This page is for builders, agencies, and legal ops teams who need API access, predictable per-send cost, and a human review step before email goes out. Pricing figures come from each vendor's published entry tier as of June 2026. Confirm on their site before you buy.
airSlate SignNow publishes seat or api pricing with $8/user · $1.50/invite on the entry tier. Seat minimum: 1 user. Typical send limits: Unlimited. API access: yes on paid plans. Agent-native MCP: no.
SignNow inside the airSlate bundle
airSlate SignNow (often shortened to SignNow) sits in a broader automation portfolio. Entry pricing is per-user with optional per-invite API charges on some tiers.
Teams evaluating a SignNow alternative usually care about seat creep when sends come from integrations, not from humans clicking in a dashboard.
Atlas charges per envelope sent with no seat minimum. API keys are not tied to a named SignNow user seat, which matters when CI or an agent creates envelopes.
SignNow remains a solid pick when legal already standardized on airSlate workflows and you need their no-code automation builder. Atlas wins when your integration surface is REST, webhooks, or MCP.
SignNow alternative evaluations at agencies often pit airSlate per-user pricing against Atlas $1 per envelope pass-through to clients. Pilot one automated client MSA flow before renewing SignNow seats for service accounts.
Workflow: dashboard-first vs review-first
airSlate SignNow assumes someone on your team opens the product, uploads a document, places or confirms fields, and hits send. That works when a human owns every envelope.
Atlas assumes the document may arrive from an API call, an MCP tool, or a chat agent. The server detects fields on PDF or DOCX, clusters parties, and returns a review URL. Signers only get email after approval on that page.
For legal and ops buyers, the review step is the control point. Agents handle prep and status polling. Humans own dispatch. Neither model removes compliance requirements, but the split matches how modern teams actually send.
API and agent access
Both tools expose a REST API for create, send, and status. airSlate SignNow customers typically authenticate with OAuth or integration keys tied to a user or account admin.
Atlas exposes POST /api/envelope for PDF and DOCX (multipart or JSON), POST /api/envelope/{id}/send after review, and webhooks for lifecycle events. Bearer API keys come from the dashboard.
Atlas also runs an MCP server at /api/mcp with OAuth for Claude and ChatGPT and API keys for Cursor and Claude Code. Ten tools map to the same lifecycle as the REST API, so agents never need a separate upload-only integration.
Atlas ships a native MCP server with ten tools that cover create, monitor, remind, void, and extract. Agents in Claude, ChatGPT, or Cursor can prepare envelopes without a dashboard session.
Pricing model and total cost
Atlas charges per envelope sent, not per seat. airSlate SignNow lists per-user pricing on its entry tier. When signing runs from an agent or API, you are not paying for a login nobody opens.
On airSlate SignNow's entry tier you are buying capacity tied to users or document bundles. Overage and API tiers add cost as volume grows. Atlas stays at $1 per envelope after five free sends, with no seat minimum.
If your volume is steady and humans live in the dashboard all day, per-seat tools can be fine. If sends spike from automations, client projects, or agent workflows, usage pricing avoids empty seats.
Drafts and field detection are free. You pay one credit when you dispatch. Resends on an already-sent envelope do not charge again.
Documents, formats, and audit trail
Atlas accepts PDF and DOCX on create. DOCX converts to PDF for signing and review. Field detection runs on the stored PDF so signers see a consistent viewer.
Signed PDFs include embedded field values and audit metadata. Webhooks fire on send, sign, decline, void, and post-sign extraction when configured.
airSlate SignNow customers get similar artifact storage with mature admin tooling. Atlas optimizes for API and agent callers who want a signed PDF back in storage or via webhook, not for a full contract repository.
If your compliance team needs a specific retention policy, confirm export paths in staging before you cut over production traffic.
When Atlas fits better than airSlate SignNow
You send from Claude, ChatGPT, Cursor, or your own backend and want one integration path.
You need review-before-send on every new document, not optional approval rules.
You want MCP tools that list templates, check signing status, and extract data after sign without custom glue code.
You bill clients per matter or per project and prefer per-envelope accounting to per-seat licenses.
Every Atlas send starts with a review link. Your agent or API uploads a PDF or DOCX, Atlas detects fields and parties, and a human clicks Send before any signer gets email. That gate is built in, not a bolt-on approval workflow.
When airSlate SignNow may still win
Your company already standardized on airSlate SignNow for every department and needs deep CRM or ERP connectors out of the box.
You need features Atlas does not market yet, such as specific enterprise identity packages or regional notary workflows.
Legal requires a single vendor contract that predates your API project, and migration cost outweighs per-send savings.
You only send a handful of envelopes per year from one human inbox and do not plan to automate.
Trying Atlas alongside your current stack
Most teams pilot Atlas on agent-driven or client-facing flows while keeping the incumbent tool for legacy templates. Atlas accepts PDF and DOCX on create and returns signed PDFs with audit metadata.
Start with five free sends. Wire POST /api/envelope from staging, or connect MCP in Claude with OAuth. Open the review link, confirm fields, and send to a test signer.
Read the e-signature API guide in our docs, compare the full market table at /compare, and see REST examples in openapi.json or llms.txt for agent-oriented clients.
Side-by-side market table
Atlas vs airSlate SignNow and fifteen other tools, sorted by pricing model and agent support.
| Provider | Pricing model | Seat minimum | Send limits | Entry cost | API | Agent-nativeMCP · prep from chat |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| AtlasThis is us | Usage-based | None | Unlimited | $1 / envelope | Yes | ✓ MCP-native |
| Roger Sign | Usage-based | None | Unlimited | $3-4 / contract | Yes | No |
| Proof(Notarize) | Usage-based | None | Unlimited | $4 / transaction | Yes | No |
| BoldSign | Seat or API | 1 user | 40-50 / mo | $5/user · $30 API | Yes | No |
| Verdocs | Usage-based | None | Tiered bundles | $0.50 to $1 / doc | Yes | No |
| DocuSeal | Seat or API | 1 user | Unlimited | $20/user · $0.20/doc | Yes | No |
| airSlate SignNowCompared | Seat or API | 1 user | Unlimited | $8/user · $1.50/invite | Yes | No |
| DocuSign | Per-seat | 1 user | 5/mo to 100/yr | $10 to $25/user | Yes | No |
| Dropbox Sign | Per-seat | 1-2 users | Unlimited | $15 to $25/user | Yes | No |
| PandaDoc | Per-seat | 1 user | Unlimited | $19 to $49/user | Yes | No |
| Adobe Acrobat Sign | Per-seat | 1 user | Subject to use | $16.99/user | Yes | No |
| Box Sign | Per-seat | 3 users ($60/mo) | Unlimited | $20/user | Yes | No |
| Foxit eSign | Per-seat | 1-5 users | 250 / yr | $10/mo | Yes | No |
| Signeasy | Per-seat | 1 user | 5/mo, then unlimited | $10 to $20/user | Yes | No |
| SignWell | Per-seat | 1 user | Unlimited | $12/mo | Yes | No |
| Sign.com | Per-seat | 1 user | Unlimited | $7/mo | Limited | No |
| Signaturely | Per-seat | 1 user | 5/mo, then unlimited | $25 to $50/user | Limited | No |
| Zoho Sign | Seat or API | 1 user | 5 to 25 / mo free tier | $10/user · API on paid | Yes | No |
| OneSpan | Enterprise | Sales-led | Contract-based | Custom quote | Yes | No |
Try Atlas on your next send
Five free envelopes. PDF or DOCX. Review link before email goes out.
Full comparison table · E-signature API guide · MCP overview