Compare the Top Free Code Coverage Tools as of November 2025 - Page 2

  • 1
    Cobertura

    Cobertura

    Cobertura

    Cobertura is a free Java tool that calculates the percentage of code accessed by tests. It can be used to identify which parts of your Java program are lacking test coverage. It is based on jcoverage. Cobertura is free software. Most of it is licensed under the GNU GPL, and you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. Please review the file LICENSE.txt included in this distribution for further details.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 2
    Gcov

    Gcov

    Oracle

    Gcov is an open-source code-coverage tool.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 3
    Coverlet

    Coverlet

    Coverlet

    It works with .NET Framework on Windows and .NET Core on all supported platforms. Coverlet supports coverage for deterministic builds. The solution at the moment is not optimal and need a workaround. If you want to visualize coverlet output inside Visual Studio while you code, you can use the following addins depending on your platform. Coverlet also integrates with the build system to run code coverage after tests. Enabling code coverage is as simple as setting the CollectCoverage property to true. The coverlet tool is invoked by specifying the path to the assembly that contains the unit tests. You also need to specify the test runner and the arguments to pass to the test runner using the --target and --targetargs options respectively. The invocation of the test runner with the supplied arguments must not involve a recompilation of the unit test assembly or no coverage result will be generated.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 4
    Coverage.py

    Coverage.py

    Coverage.py

    Coverage.py is a tool for measuring code coverage of Python programs. It monitors your program, noting which parts of the code have been executed, then analyzes the source to identify code that could have been executed but was not. Coverage measurement is typically used to gauge the effectiveness of tests. It can show which parts of your code are being exercised by tests, and which are not. Use coverage run to run your test suite and gather data. However you normally run your test suite, and you can run your test runner under coverage. If your test runner command starts with “python”, just replace the initial “python” with “coverage run”. To limit coverage measurement to code in the current directory, and also find files that weren’t executed at all, add the source argument to your coverage command line. By default, it will measure line (statement) coverage. It can also measure branch coverage. It can tell you what tests ran which lines.
    Starting Price: Free
  • 5
    Coveralls

    Coveralls

    Coveralls

    We help you deliver code confidently by showing which parts of your code aren’t covered by your test suite. Free for open-source repositories. Pro accounts for private repositories. Instant sign-up through GitHub, Bitbucket, and Gitlab. Maintaining a well-tested codebase is mission-critical. Figuring out where your tests are lacking can be painful. You're already running your tests on a continuous integration server, so shouldn't it be doing the heavy lifting? Coveralls works with your CI server and sifts through your coverage data to find issues you didn't even know you had before they become a problem. If you're just running your code coverage locally, you won't be able to see changes and trends that occur during your entire development cycle. Coveralls lets you inspect every detail of your coverage with unlimited history. Coveralls takes the pain out of tracking your code coverage. Know where you stand with your untested code. Develop with confidence that your code is covered.
    Starting Price: $10 per month