Retail Pro Prism's REST API is self-hosted: each retailer runs it on their own server behind an instance login with a per-server api-explorer. There is no central cloud endpoint or public documentation, and single-tenant installs mean the schema drifts from one deployment to the next.
Retail Pro scores D on the API Report Card. Retail Pro Prism's REST API is self-hosted: each retailer runs it on their own server behind an instance login with a per-server api-explorer. There is no central cloud endpoint or public documentation, and single-tenant installs mean the schema drifts from one deployment to the next.
Without a usable official API, teams fall back on manual exports, file drops, or one-off vendor integrations. The other option is an unofficial API layer like Supergood that automates the authenticated web app directly.
Retail Pro International (retailpro.com) - specialty retail POS and inventory management platform. Flagship: Retail Pro Prism (web/multi-device POS); ~9,000 customers operating 54,000 stores across 130+ countries. Customers include Aesop, Oakley, Puma, Rimowa, Under Armour, Victorinox.
Grades measure one thing: can a customer's engineering team get their own data out programmatically? We check six things (whether a real API exists, how access is gated, data coverage, auth quality, docs and developer experience, and stability) and roll them into a letter grade. Grades get re-verified, and they only move on evidence.
Yes. Supergood maintains an unofficial Retail Pro API and MCP server so AI agents and internal tools can read and write Retail Pro data. See the Retail Pro integration docs at supergood.ai/docs/retail-pro-api.