★ BEST INVESTING TOOLS COMPARISON ★
VOL. XCIV, NO. 247
Tool comparison edition
Tool Comparison
FinancialData.Net vs Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)
Pick FinancialData.Net if
FinancialData.Net
Best for sheets / excel add-ins and quant
Free • From $19/mo · Web · API · Desktop
- Delayed quotes won't cut it; you need real-time data
- You care about sheets / excel add-ins, quant, and news, things Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) doesn't offer
Pick Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) if
Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)
Best for yield curves and data visualizations
Free · Web · API · 100% positive (2 votes)
- You care about yield curves, data visualizations, and market sentiment, things FinancialData.Net doesn't offer
- You're newer to investing and want something approachable
Skip both if: Neither one clicks with how you research; there are strong third options.
See alternativesOutbound links may include affiliate or sponsor codes.
The verdict
The bottom line
FinancialData.Net and Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) cover a lot of the same ground (4 shared categories, including APIs & data feeds, macro data, and scores), so for the basics you won't go far wrong with either. FinancialData.Net simply does more: 20 categories to Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)'s 9, including sheets / excel add-ins, quant, and news. Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) counters by being completely free.
Key differences at a glance
- Real-time data
- FinancialData.Net
- Broader coverage
- FinancialData.Net20 vs 9 categories
- Desktop app
- FinancialData.Net
- Beginner friendly
- Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)
- Free plan
- Both
Comparison snapshot
| Attribute | ||
|---|---|---|
| Pricing & plans | ||
Starting price | Free • From $19/mo | Free |
Free tier | Yes | Yes |
Free trial | — | — |
Plan limits | 17 limits: Free: requests per day: 300, Free: annual price usd: 0 +15 more | — |
| Platforms & access | ||
Web app | Yes | Yes |
Desktop app | Yes | No |
Mobile app | No | No |
API access | Yes | Yes |
Broker sync | — | No |
Integrations | FinancialData.Net REST API, FinancialData.Net Python SDK / fdnpy +6 more | — |
| Audience & fit | ||
Experience level | Intermediate, Advanced | Beginner, Intermediate, Advanced |
Best for | Pro Retail, Institutional Investors +6 more | — |
Categories covered | 20 | 9 |
Regions | North America, Europe, APAC, LatAm | North America, Europe, APAC |
| Data & capabilities | ||
Data quality | 6 signals: Latency: Real-time and End of Day, Granularity: Minute and EOD +4 more | 3 signals: Latency: End of Day, Granularity: EOD +1 more |
Data partners | SEC EDGAR and FINRA | — |
Capabilities | Greeks | Yield curves |
Security | Data residency: EU | — |
| Try it | Visit FinancialData.Net | Visit Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) |
Standout features
What FinancialData.Net does best
- Build against a REST API with API-key authentication, JSON and CSV responses, an official Python SDK, an Excel add-in, a web viewer, and MCP access on eligible plans.
- Cover real-time and historical prices, fundamentals, financial statements, ratios, market news, event calendars, options, futures, crypto, forex, commodities, OTC securities, indices, ETFs, and mutual funds.
- Use the advertised symbol universe for broad market coverage, including stocks, ETFs, commodities, OTC securities, indices, options, futures, crypto, forex, and mutual funds across 20+ exchanges.
- Pull market-data endpoints for quotes, prices, one-minute prices, option chains, option Greeks, futures prices, ETF holdings, crypto prices, forex prices, and index constituents.
- Use fundamental endpoints for company information, financial statements, key metrics, executive compensation, securities information, and liquidity, solvency, efficiency, profitability, and valuation ratios.
What Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) does best
- Use the Short-term Funding Monitor for repo, commercial paper, certificates of deposit, federal funds, chart views, metadata, spread endpoints, and open REST/JSON access.
- Review the U.S.
- Use Hedge Fund Monitor datasets through open REST/JSON endpoints organized by datasets and mnemonics.
- Track the OFR Financial Stress Index, a daily global market-based stress index built from 33 variables and published with an approximate two-business-day lag.
- Monitor bank systemic-risk indicators such as G-SIB scores, surcharges, OFR Contagion Index data, leverage, assets, and equity metrics.
Data & access details
| Attribute | ||
|---|---|---|
| Coverage & fit | ||
Asset types | StocksETFsMutual FundsFundsCommoditiesCurrenciesCryptosOptions+2 more | BondsMutual FundsHedge Funds |
Experience | IntermediateAdvanced | BeginnerIntermediateAdvanced |
Target audience | Pro RetailInstitutional InvestorsAlgo TradersAnalystsQuants/DevelopersAsset ManagersHedge FundsStudents/Researchers | Not specified |
Regions | North AmericaEuropeAPACLatAm | North AmericaEuropeAPAC |
Coverage details | 15 countries15 exchangesIdentifiers: Ticker, CIK, CUSIP, ISIN, FIGI, LEI, and EIN | Countries: US |
| Data | ||
Data freshness | Real-timeEnd of Day | End of Day |
Data granularity | MinuteEOD | EOD |
Data partners | SEC EDGARFINRA | Not specified |
| Access & integrations | ||
API protocols | REST | REST |
API auth & delivery | Auth: APIKeySDKs: PythonDocs | Auth: None |
Integrations | FinancialData.Net REST APIFinancialData.Net Python SDK / fdnpyFinancialData.Net Excel Add-inFinancialData.Net MCP ServerMicrosoft ExcelChatGPT via MCPClaude via MCPCursor via MCP | Not specified |
Export formats | JSONCSVExcel | CSVJSON |
| Plans & trust | ||
Security & compliance | Data residency: EU | Not specified |
Capability signals | Greeks | Yield curves |
Vendor & support | Afinec, SPSupport: Email | Office of Financial Research, U.S. Department of the TreasuryCountry: USFounded 2010Support: Email |
Curation ratings | Not specified | Methodology 5/5Reliability 5/5UX 4/5 |
Green tags are exclusive to that tool in this comparison.
Pricing breakdown
$19/mo
Starting price
Plans & pricing
- requests per day: 300
- annual price usd: 0
- requests per second: 10
- annual price usd: 159
- +1 more
- requests per second: 30
- annual price usd: 399
- +1 more
- requests per second: 30
- annual price usd: 799
- +2 more
- requests per second: 50
- annual price usd: 1,599
- +3 more
Free
Lower starting price
Plans & pricing
Coverage overlap
Shared categories
4Where the two tools cover the same ground.
FinancialData.Net strengths
16Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) strengths
5What you only get with Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury).
Community category leaders
Vote sentiment comparison
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Frequently Asked Questions
What's the difference between FinancialData.Net and Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)?
FinancialData.Net leans toward APIs & data feeds, sheets / excel add-ins, and quant, while Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) puts more weight on APIs & data feeds, macro data, and yield curves. They overlap in 4 categories, so for most people it comes down to workflow preference and price.
How much do FinancialData.Net and Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) cost?
Good news: both FinancialData.Net and Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) have free plans, so you can run them side by side and only pay if you hit a wall.
Which is better for beginners: FinancialData.Net or Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)?
Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) is the friendlier place to start; its interface takes less getting used to. Both work fine once you're past the basics.
Do FinancialData.Net and Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) have APIs?
Yes, both offer API access, so developers and quants can pull data programmatically or wire up their own integrations.
Should I choose FinancialData.Net or Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)?
It depends on what you're after. Pick FinancialData.Net if sheets / excel add-ins and quant matter to you; go with Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) if you'd rather have yield curves and data visualizations. And if you only need the basics both share, let price decide.
What asset classes do FinancialData.Net and Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) cover?
Both cover mutual funds. FinancialData.Net also handles stocks, ETFs, and funds. Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) adds bonds and hedge funds on top.
Does FinancialData.Net or Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) have real-time data?
FinancialData.Net offers real-time data, which matters if you trade actively. Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury) runs on delayed or end-of-day data, which is perfectly fine for longer-term investors who don't live and die by the tick.
Can I export data from FinancialData.Net and Office of Financial Research (U.S. Treasury)?
Yes, both export to spreadsheets (CSV), which is handy if you like running your own numbers.
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Curation & Accuracy
This directory blends AI‑assisted discovery with human curation. Entries are reviewed, edited, and organized with the goal of expanding coverage and sharpening quality over time. Your feedback helps steer improvements (because no single human can capture everything all at once).
Details change. Pricing, features, and availability may be incomplete or out of date. Treat listings as a starting point and verify on the provider’s site before making decisions. If you spot an error or a gap, send a quick note and I’ll adjust.