The Pyth Terminal: Front Door to the Data

Pyth Terminal is live. Browse 3,000+ feeds across crypto, equities, FX, and commodities. See the data, compare prices, pick the tier that fits.

Announcements

May 20, 2026

The Pyth Terminal: Front Door to the Data
The Pyth Terminal: Front Door to the Data

The Pyth Terminal is live.

For decades, market data platforms were built around exclusivity. Expensive contracts, opaque pricing, and bundled products often required users to pay for more data than they actually needed.

The Pyth Terminal takes a different approach.

It is a new interface for accessing live market data directly from the source — built for developers, traders, protocols, and institutions that need reliable pricing in real time. Open the Terminal and explore thousands of live feeds across crypto, equities, FX, commodities, and more, all updating in real-time.

See the data first

Browse over 3,000 live feeds and explore how prices are formed. Watch charts update tick by tick, compare Pyth prices against external benchmarks, and toggle publishers on or off to understand the underlying data powering every feed.

Users can now evaluate the quality of market data before integrating it into their products. No closed sales process. No black box. Just live data, visible in real time.

Built for how people actually use data

Not every user needs the same thing.

Some only need crypto prices. Others need equities, commodities, or FX. Some want lightweight access for experimentation, while others require full-scale real-time infrastructure for production systems.

The Pyth Terminal is designed around that reality.

Instead of requiring users to enter into massive bundled agreements, Pyth introduces flexible access to the exact data you need, whether you are building an application, running trading systems, or powering institutional workflows.

Real-time market data should be accessible, composable, and transparent. Access the Pyth Terminal here.

Why this matters

Market data has historically been sold behind closed doors. Opaque pricing, complex contracts, and limited ability to evaluate quality before committing. The Terminal moves away from this model.

The terminal is publicly accessible and users can see what Pyth actually delivers, and decide if it fits their needs. Pricing is public. Tiers are clear. The data is visible before you pay for it.

This is the front door to Pyth. Come in and look around here.

Similar stories