At a glance

tldraw Eraser
Best for Developers wanting an embeddable whiteboard canvas Engineering teams wanting docs-as-diagrams
Starting price Free Free
Free tier
Open source
Free tier available
Open source
AI Diagram
Architecture Diagrams
Cloud Diagrams
Docs
Embeddable
Multiplayer
Open Source
SDK

tldraw

Strengths

  • Open source and transparent
  • Open-source codebase gives you full transparency and community-driven development
  • Fully open-source — you can self-host, audit the code, and avoid vendor lock-in
  • The core product is free with no paywalled essentials

Weaknesses

  • May lack some advanced features
  • Self-hosting is free but requires server maintenance and DevOps knowledge
  • Fewer built-in features means you may need additional tools to cover gaps
  • Ecosystem of third-party integrations is smaller than the market leaders in diagramming

Eraser

Strengths

  • Includes Architecture Diagrams as a core feature, purpose-built for diagramming workflows
  • Includes Cloud Diagrams as a core feature, purpose-built for diagramming workflows
  • Free for 5 documents — generous enough for most small teams to get real work done
  • Includes docs alongside the core feature set — fewer separate tools needed

Weaknesses

  • Free plan exists but key features are locked behind the paid upgrade
  • Fewer built-in features means you may need additional tools to cover gaps
  • Ecosystem of third-party integrations is smaller than the market leaders in diagramming
  • Limited team/admin features if your organization eventually scales up

The bottom line

Pricing: Both tldraw and Eraser are free. You can try both without spending a dollar.

Feature gaps: tldraw offers Embeddable, Multiplayer and Open Source that Eraser lacks. Eraser brings AI Diagram, Architecture Diagrams and Cloud Diagrams that tldraw does not have.

Team fit: tldraw is geared toward any size teams, while Eraser is aimed at small teams teams. Pick the one that matches where your team is today and where it is headed — migrating tools later is always painful.

Open source: tldraw is open source, meaning you can self-host, audit the code, and avoid vendor lock-in. Eraser is proprietary — you are trusting the vendor with your data and uptime.

Where each tool shines: tldraw's biggest strengths are: open source and transparent. open-source codebase gives you full transparency and community-driven development. Eraser's biggest strengths are: includes architecture diagrams as a core feature, purpose-built for diagramming workflows. includes cloud diagrams as a core feature, purpose-built for diagramming workflows.

Watch out for: With tldraw, users commonly note that may lack some advanced features. With Eraser, the main complaint is that free plan exists but key features are locked behind the paid upgrade.

Choose tldraw if...

  • Your profile matches its sweet spot: developers wanting an embeddable whiteboard canvas
  • You need self-hosting, data sovereignty, or the ability to audit source code
  • You specifically need Embeddable and Multiplayer
  • You care about open-source codebase gives you full transparency and community-driven development
  • Your team size fits the any size profile tldraw is designed for

Choose Eraser if...

  • You need a tool built for engineering teams wanting docs-as-diagrams
  • You specifically need AI Diagram and Architecture Diagrams
  • You care about includes cloud diagrams as a core feature, purpose-built for diagramming workflows
  • Your team size fits the small teams profile Eraser is designed for
  • The free tier works for you: free for 5 documents

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