Best Test Automation Frameworks

Compare the Top Test Automation Frameworks as of April 2025

What are Test Automation Frameworks?

Test automation frameworks are sets of tools, components, and practices that automate the process of testing software applications. These frameworks enable testers to write, execute, and manage test scripts for various types of software testing, including functional, regression, load, and performance testing. They often provide features such as reusable test scripts, integration with continuous integration/continuous deployment (CI/CD) tools, reporting, and test result tracking. Test automation frameworks help improve test efficiency, reduce manual errors, and speed up the overall testing process, especially in large and complex software environments. Compare and read user reviews of the best Test Automation Frameworks currently available using the table below. This list is updated regularly.

  • 1
    TAST

    TAST

    SIPSA

    TAST, Test Automation System Tool is a comprehensive cloud test automation framework that enables businesses to maximize their test automation across the complete testing process from an End User´s perspective. It is easy to use and its graphical interface defines the automated test cases across technological platforms. TAST automates: *Cross Browser testing *Mobile testing *Desktop applications testing *DDBB testing: Oracle, PostgreSQL, MySQL, Db2. *File testing: txt, pdf, word, excel, csv, xml. *Mainframe testing: AS400, Host *APIs testing *Interface testing. *Remote Server testing. Types of tests you can automate with TAST: *Integration *Functional *System: Regressive, stress, load, parallel *Acceptance *A/B.
  • 2
    Selenium

    Selenium

    Software Freedom Conservancy

    Selenium automates browsers. That's it! What you do with that power is entirely up to you. Primarily it is for automating web applications for testing purposes, but is certainly not limited to just that. Boring web-based administration tasks can (and should) also be automated as well. If you want to create robust, browser-based regression automation suites and tests, scale and distribute scripts across many environments, then you want to use Selenium WebDriver, a collection of language specific bindings to drive a browser - the way it is meant to be driven. If you want to create quick bug reproduction scripts, create scripts to aid in automation-aided exploratory testing, then you want to use Selenium IDE; a Chrome and Firefox add-on that will do simple record-and-playback of interactions with the browser. If you want to scale by distributing and running tests on several machines and manage multiple environments from a central point.
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