Pyth Network launches Terminal
- Pyth Network launched Pyth Terminal on May 20, 2026, opening public access to more than 3,000 live market data feeds across crypto, equities, FX and commodities. - Pyth’s own pricing page lists 3,059-plus feeds and public plan options, while Terminal offers a free API trial key without contacting sales. - Pyth links the Terminal, pricing page and API-key signup through its website and developer docs for users starting access.
Pyth Network has launched Pyth Terminal, a new web interface that gives public access to its live market data catalog, according to the company’s website and developer documentation. The product went live on May 20, 2026, and Pyth says it lets users browse more than 3,000 feeds across crypto, equities, foreign exchange and commodities. The launch also ties directly into Pyth Pro, the company’s paid data product, through a self-serve signup flow. Pyth’s materials describe the Terminal as a way to inspect live prices, compare them with benchmarks and request API access without going through a sales process. ### When did Pyth actually launch Terminal? Pyth Network dated the launch announcement May 20, 2026, in a blog post titled “The Pyth Terminal: Front Door to the Data.” The post says the Terminal is live and positions it as a public interface for accessing market data directly from the source. The May 24 social posts cited in the source brief appear to be recirculating the product after the launch, rather than marking the initial release date. (pyth.network) Pyth’s own blog and site materials point to May 20 as the company-announced launch date. ### What can users do inside the Terminal? Pyth’s developer documentation says Terminal is a self-serve web application where users can explore the full catalog of price feeds, view historical chart data and get a free Pyth Pro trial key from a browser. (pyth.network) The same page says users do not need to contact sales to start. Pyth’s blog says users can browse more than 3,000 live feeds, watch charts update tick by tick, compare Pyth prices against external benchmarks and toggle publishers on or off to see how each feed is formed. (pyth.network) The company says that setup is aimed at developers, traders, protocols and institutions that need real-time pricing. ### How broad is the data catalog? (docs.pyth.network) Pyth’s main price-feeds page says the network has 3,059-plus price feeds. The same page lists coverage across commodities, crypto, crypto indices, economic data, equities, foreign exchange, metals, net asset values and rates. Pyth’s homepage separately says users can explore 3,059-plus price feeds through the Terminal and cites 138-plus publishers. The company describes itself as a “price layer” for global finance and says the Terminal is the place to inspect the catalog and technical details. (pyth.network) ### How does Terminal connect to Pyth Pro? Pyth’s documentation says Terminal is the fastest way to get started with Pyth Pro, which it describes elsewhere as an enterprise-grade, customizable price-data service delivered through standard APIs. (pyth.network) The docs say users can generate an access token through Terminal and use API keys for websocket connections. Pyth says Pyth Pro was previously known as Pyth Lazer. (pyth.network) The company’s getting-started materials say API keys are required for Pyth Pro websocket connections, while Pyth Core price feeds remain available on-chain without signup. ### Why is Pyth emphasizing public pricing and self-serve access? Pyth’s May 20 blog post says market data has historically been sold through opaque contracts and bundled products, and says the Terminal is meant to offer visible data, public pricing and clear tiers. (docs.pyth.network) That framing comes from Pyth itself. The company’s documentation repeats that approach in practical terms: explore feeds, inspect charts, generate a free API trial key and manage billing online. (docs.pyth.network) Pyth’s price-feeds page also markets “simple pricing structures” and a free trial alongside the live catalog. Pyth’s next step for users is on its own site: open Terminal, review the available feeds, and request a free Pyth Pro API key through the browser-based signup flow. (pyth.network) The company links those steps through its blog, pricing page and developer hub. (docs.pyth.network)