The AI gateway commercial vs. open-source decision is one that most organizations reach not by planning but by accident. One team has already integrated directly with Azure OpenAI. Another is using LiteLLM to wrap a few models. A third wants to use the enterprise API management platform you already have. Suddenly, you need to make a choice, and the conversation gets complicated fast.
This companion post to my APIM for AI Workloads series takes a step back from the Azure API Management specifics and addresses the question that comes before all of it: which gateway should you be using in the first place? The series covers APIM in depth because it’s the right answer for the Microsoft ecosystem. But it’s not the only answer, and for some organizations it’s not the right one.
Here is how to think through the decision properly.
Why the AI Gateway Commercial vs Open Source Choice Matters More Than You Think
Most API gateway decisions are relatively low-stakes. If you pick the wrong one, you migrate. But the AI gateway decision carries more weight for two reasons.
First, the gateway sits in the critical path of every AI interaction in your organization. Its policy language, authentication model, and observability hooks become embedded in the way your teams build AI-powered applications. Switching later is not impossible, but it is disruptive.
Second, the governance patterns you establish now, how you handle token limits, cross-charging, PII, and compliance logging, are much harder to retrofit than to design in from the start. The Team Rockstars IT AI Gateway whitepaper, published this month, makes this point well: organizations that set up audit logging via an AI gateway from day one build a direct compliance advantage under the EU AI Act. Those who add it later risk complex and costly rework.
So the choice deserves deliberate thought, not a default.
The Commercial Options for AI Gateway
Commercial AI gateways offer a faster path to production and offload operational complexity to the vendor. The main options in the market today are:
Azure API Management is the right choice if you are already in the Microsoft ecosystem. Its AI-specific policy extensions for token limits, token metrics, semantic caching, and load balancing across PTU and PAYG backends are mature and tightly integrated with Azure Monitor and Application Insights. The series covers this in depth from Part 1 onwards.
Kong Konnect is a strong option for organizations that already use Kong for API management and want to extend it into AI. Its plugin ecosystem covers rate limiting, authentication, and observability, with AI-specific plugins growing quickly.
Portkey is purpose-built as an AI gateway with a lightweight footprint and fast time-to-value. It supports a broad range of model providers, has built-in semantic caching and observability, and is a practical option for teams that want AI governance without the overhead of a full enterprise API management platform.
Apigee (Google Cloud) is the natural choice for GCP-centric organizations. Like APIM in the Microsoft world, its AI gateway capabilities are deepening with each release as Google embeds Gemini and Vertex AI integrations.
The common advantages across all commercial options are faster deployment, built-in compliance features, vendor support contracts, and operational burden offloaded to the vendor. The common risks are licensing costs, proprietary policy languages that create switching friction, and dependency on the vendor’s roadmap.
The Open Source Options for AI Gateway
Open-source gateways offer maximum control and no licensing costs, but they require your organization to own what the vendor would otherwise handle.
LiteLLM is the most widely adopted open source AI gateway today. It provides a unified API across more than 100 model providers, with built-in rate limiting, spend tracking, and a proxy server that is straightforward to self-host. The community is active, and the feature velocity is high. The supply chain risk is real, though: a 2025 attack targeting LiteLLM and Trivy demonstrated that even widely used security-adjacent tools can become attack vectors. If you run LiteLLM in production, you own the patching cadence.
Agent Gateway from Anthropic is purpose-built for MCP and agentic traffic. If your primary use case is governing tool calls from AI agents rather than managing completion API traffic, it is worth evaluating alongside the broader options.
One API provides a unified, OpenAI-compatible interface across multiple providers and is widely used by organizations seeking provider-agnostic routing without vendor lock-in.
HelixML focuses on self-hosted deployments with strong data-sovereignty properties, making it relevant for organizations where data-residency requirements rule out SaaS-based gateway options.
AI Gateway Commercial vs Open Source: Five Decision Factors

Five factors consistently determine which direction is right for a given organization:
Time to value. In my experience, commercial gateways can be production-ready in days to weeks. Open source deployments typically take weeks to months to reach production quality, depending on how much custom policy logic you need to build. If you have an urgent compliance or cost control problem to solve, commercial is the pragmatic choice.
Compliance and data residency. For Dutch and European organizations operating under AVG, NIS2, and the EU AI Act, commercial gateways offer contractual guarantees: data processing agreements, certified regions, and SLAs with defined incident response times. Open source can meet the same requirements, but you are responsible for demonstrating compliance yourself rather than relying on a vendor certification.
Internal platform capability. Open source is not free. The licensing cost is zero, but according to the CNCF’s platform engineering maturity model. Organizations without a dedicated platform engineering team that can credibly own the gateway long-term should not choose open source. The operational gap will become visible at the worst possible moment.
Flexibility and lock-in risk. Open source wins on long-term flexibility. Proprietary policy languages in commercial gateways create switching friction that grows over time as you invest in custom policies. If multi-cloud strategy and provider-agnosticism are strategic priorities, design your gateway layer with that in mind from the start, even if you begin with a commercial option, applying the strangler fig pattern to abstract away proprietary dependencies over time.
Supply chain risk. This factor is underweighted in most evaluations. The 2025 supply chain attack targeting LiteLLM and Trivy demonstrated that open source security tooling itself can become an attack vector. Commercial vendors have contractual obligations around vulnerability disclosure and patching. With open source, that obligation falls to your team.
A Decision Framework for AI Gateway Commercial vs Open Source

The flowchart above works through the most decisive questions in order. A few practical observations from applying it:
Regulated industries almost always land in commercial. Healthcare, financial services, and insurance organizations operating under Dutch or European regulation have compliance requirements that are significantly easier to satisfy with contractual vendor guarantees than with self-operated open source tooling. At my company, the AVG and healthcare-specific data processing requirements made APIM the clear choice.
The hybrid pattern is underused. Many organizations run a commercial gateway in production for governed workloads, while developer teams use LiteLLM or a lightweight open source option in lower environments for experimentation. This gives you the compliance and operational properties you need in production while keeping the innovation surface open. It is more work to maintain two gateway patterns, but the tradeoff is often worth it.
Design for replaceability regardless of what you choose. The Team Rockstars whitepaper frames this well: choose your first gateway deliberately, but design for replacement. Use open standards, abstract your policy logic where possible, and avoid deep coupling to proprietary features without open-source equivalents. The gateway landscape is evolving fast enough that what is the right choice today may not be in two years.
Where This Fits in the APIM for AI Workloads Series
The rest of the series goes deep on Azure API Management specifically: the token metric policy, load balancing and circuit breaking, semantic caching, and MCP gateway for agentic workloads. If you have landed on APIM as your gateway of choice or if you are in a Microsoft-centric organization where it is the natural fit, the series covers the production patterns you need.
- Part 1: Why your AI APIs need a gateway.
- Part 2: Authentication and authorization.
- Part 3: Token limit policy.
- Part 4 (coming May 20): Token metric policy and cross-charging.
- Part 5 (coming May 27): Load balancing and circuit breaking.
- Part 6 (coming June 3): Semantic caching.
- Part 7 (coming June 10): APIM as MCP gateway for agentic AI workloads.








