New York Times vs The Guardian

Same instrument, two spec sheets — measured, not claimed.

Uptime · 30d
Uptime · 90d—%—%
Uptime · 30d—%—%
P50 · ms
P95 · ms
AuthapiKeyapiKey
CORSyesyes
HTTPSyesyes
Card requirednono
Commercial useunclearunclear
Data licenseUnverifiedUnverified
Free tierFree tier — 500 requests/dayFree developer key — registration required
Rate limit500 requests/day on free plan5000 calls/day (developer tier)
In directory since2026-07-052026-07-05
operationalpartialdownno data

New York Times vs The Guardian: common questions

Which is more reliable, New York Times or The Guardian?

On our scheduled checks, The Guardian leads on measured uptime — New York Times at —% versus The Guardian at —% over 90 days. These are our own probe results, not provider claims; the uptime bars above show the day-by-day record for both.

Do New York Times and The Guardian need an API key?

Both ask you to authenticate — New York Times uses an API key and The Guardian uses an API key. Each key is free to obtain; the Auth and Card-required rows above spell out the signup terms.

Can I call New York Times and The Guardian from the browser?

Yes — both New York Times and The Guardian send CORS headers over HTTPS, so front-end code can fetch either directly with no backend proxy. That makes them easy to swap in a client-side app while you compare responses.

Are New York Times and The Guardian free for commercial use?

New York Times has unclear commercial terms, and The Guardian has unclear commercial terms. We track service terms and the data license as separate fields — see the Commercial use and Data license rows above, and confirm both before shipping either in a paid product.