Krita is the stronger choice when the deciding factor is day-to-day graphic design software workflow fit, while Gravit Designer has the clearer case when pricing shape, deployment control, or rollout risk matters more. For software teams, the practical decision is not feature count; it is which product better supports teams comparing workflow fit, pricing, and operational control without forcing a costly migration six months later.
Quick comparison
| Feature | Krita | Gravit Designer |
|---|---|---|
| Starting price | Free plan | Free plan |
| Free plan | Yes | Yes |
| Open source | Yes | No |
| Self-hostable | No | No |
| G2 rating | Not listed | Not listed |
| Best for | designers that want open-source, self-hosted control | designers that want a mature, full-featured graphic design tool |
| Starting price | Free plan available; paid tiers depend on usage and plan limits. | Free plan available; paid tiers depend on usage and plan limits. |
| Free plan | Yes | Yes |
| Open source | Yes | No |
| Self-hostable | No | No |
| Deployment model | desktop | saas |
| Best for | designers that want open-source, self-hosted control | designers that want a mature, full-featured graphic design tool |
| Primary risk | Requires internal ownership for hosting, upgrades, security patches, or support expectations. | Free-tier limits can hide the real cost until workflows move into production. |
Core workflow fit
Winner: Krita. For core workflow fit, Krita is the safer default because its catalog profile fits the way teams usually evaluate this decision: workflow fit, rollout cost, ownership model, and how quickly the team can prove value with real data. Krita is positioned as open-source digital painting, while Gravit Designer is positioned as cross-platform vector design; that difference matters when the comparison moves from a feature checklist into daily operation. If your team is using this category for the workflow the category is supposed to support, test the winner against one production workflow, one admin workflow, and one reporting workflow before committing. Gravit Designer can still be the better pick when its ecosystem, existing contracts, or migration path reduces change management, but it asks for a more deliberate rollout plan.
Ease of adoption
Winner: Gravit Designer. For ease of adoption, Gravit Designer is the safer default because its catalog profile fits the way teams usually evaluate this decision: workflow fit, rollout cost, ownership model, and how quickly the team can prove value with real data. Krita is positioned as open-source digital painting, while Gravit Designer is positioned as cross-platform vector design; that difference matters when the comparison moves from a feature checklist into daily operation. If your team is using this category for the workflow the category is supposed to support, test the winner against one production workflow, one admin workflow, and one reporting workflow before committing. Krita can still be the better pick when its ecosystem, existing contracts, or migration path reduces change management, but it asks for a more deliberate rollout plan. Adoption also depends on who touches the system every week. A tool that is powerful for admins but slow for contributors creates shadow spreadsheets, skipped updates, and cleanup meetings. In this pair, Gravit Designer has the clearer adoption story for teams that want less training friction.
Reporting and visibility
Winner: Krita. For reporting and visibility, Krita is the safer default because its catalog profile fits the way teams usually evaluate this decision: workflow fit, rollout cost, ownership model, and how quickly the team can prove value with real data. Krita is positioned as open-source digital painting, while Gravit Designer is positioned as cross-platform vector design; that difference matters when the comparison moves from a feature checklist into daily operation. If your team is using this category for the workflow the category is supposed to support, test the winner against one production workflow, one admin workflow, and one reporting workflow before committing. Gravit Designer can still be the better pick when its ecosystem, existing contracts, or migration path reduces change management, but it asks for a more deliberate rollout plan. Governance is where hidden costs show up. Compare permission boundaries, audit needs, export options, SSO expectations, and whether the deployment model matches your security review.
Integrations and automation
Winner: Krita. For integrations and automation, Krita is the safer default because its catalog profile fits the way teams usually evaluate this decision: workflow fit, rollout cost, ownership model, and how quickly the team can prove value with real data. Krita is positioned as open-source digital painting, while Gravit Designer is positioned as cross-platform vector design; that difference matters when the comparison moves from a feature checklist into daily operation. If your team is using this category for the workflow the category is supposed to support, test the winner against one production workflow, one admin workflow, and one reporting workflow before committing. Gravit Designer can still be the better pick when its ecosystem, existing contracts, or migration path reduces change management, but it asks for a more deliberate rollout plan.
Admin and governance
Winner: Krita. For admin and governance, Krita is the safer default because its catalog profile fits the way teams usually evaluate this decision: workflow fit, rollout cost, ownership model, and how quickly the team can prove value with real data. Krita is positioned as open-source digital painting, while Gravit Designer is positioned as cross-platform vector design; that difference matters when the comparison moves from a feature checklist into daily operation. If your team is using this category for the workflow the category is supposed to support, test the winner against one production workflow, one admin workflow, and one reporting workflow before committing. Gravit Designer can still be the better pick when its ecosystem, existing contracts, or migration path reduces change management, but it asks for a more deliberate rollout plan.
Cost at scale
Winner: Gravit Designer. For cost at scale, Gravit Designer is the safer default because its catalog profile fits the way teams usually evaluate this decision: workflow fit, rollout cost, ownership model, and how quickly the team can prove value with real data. Krita is positioned as open-source digital painting, while Gravit Designer is positioned as cross-platform vector design; that difference matters when the comparison moves from a feature checklist into daily operation. If your team is using this category for the workflow the category is supposed to support, test the winner against one production workflow, one admin workflow, and one reporting workflow before committing. Krita can still be the better pick when its ecosystem, existing contracts, or migration path reduces change management, but it asks for a more deliberate rollout plan. Cost should be modeled over twelve months, not from the first plan label. Include seats, usage, storage, integrations, onboarding, and the time spent recreating automations.
Pricing deep-dive
Krita
- Free plan: available for evaluation or limited production use in graphic design software.
- Entry paid tier: starts from free, with paid usage or feature upgrades varying by plan.
- Pricing model: open-source; license is open-source; deployment type is desktop.
- Open-source economics: subscription cost may be replaced by hosting, upgrades, backups, and internal maintenance.
Gravit Designer
- Free plan: available for evaluation or limited production use in graphic design software.
- Entry paid tier: starts from free, with paid usage or feature upgrades varying by plan.
- Pricing model: freemium; license is proprietary; deployment type is saas.
Pricing verdict: Neither product has a clean universal pricing win from catalog data alone. Krita is cataloged as: Free plan: available for evaluation or limited production use in graphic design software. Entry paid tier: starts from free, with paid usage or feature upgrades varying by plan. Pricing model: open-source; license is open-source; deployment type is desktop. Open-source economics: subscription cost may be replaced by hosting, upgrades, backups, and internal maintenance. Gravit Designer is cataloged as: Free plan: available for evaluation or limited production use in graphic design software. Entry paid tier: starts from free, with paid usage or feature upgrades varying by plan. Pricing model: freemium; license is proprietary; deployment type is saas. Build the comparison around the plan that supports your real production workflow, not the cheapest plan each vendor advertises.
How to migrate from Krita to Gravit Designer
What real users say
Krita: Krita users usually praise the parts that match its positioning as open-source digital painting. The recurring criticism is predictable: once teams push it beyond that core use case, they run into plan limits, integration gaps, admin overhead, or migration work that was not obvious during evaluation.
Gravit Designer: Gravit Designer users usually praise the parts that match its positioning as cross-platform vector design. Complaints tend to cluster around pricing clarity, onboarding effort, reporting flexibility, or the amount of manual process needed to keep the system accurate over time.
Sources: Pattern synthesized from catalog data, vendor positioning, public pricing availability, and common review themes; verify current review excerpts before quoting users directly.
Final verdict
Choose Krita if...
- Choose Krita if your team needs open-source digital painting and that positioning matches the work people will do every week.
- Choose Krita if its pricing model, deployment type, and governance profile are easier to approve than forcing Gravit Designer into the same workflow.
- Choose Krita if migration risk is lower because your current data model, integrations, or team habits already resemble its default setup.
Choose Gravit Designer if...
- Choose Gravit Designer if your team needs cross-platform vector design and would otherwise customize Krita heavily to fit.
- Choose Gravit Designer if it gives software teams a clearer path for the workflow being compared without adding admin work after launch.
- Choose Gravit Designer if its free plan, paid entry point, open-source status, or managed service model better fits your procurement constraints.
Consider neither if: Consider neither if you need a fundamentally different graphic design software model: open-source control when both are managed, managed support when both require ownership, or a narrower specialist tool for one workflow. In that case, review the broader category page and adjacent comparisons before committing.