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Explore the key features that make Scale Rapid powerful for testing & quality workflows.
Scale Rapid is used for self-serve data annotation. Scale's Rapid documentation says users upload data, select use cases, create a taxonomy, write labeling instructions, launch calibration batches, review feedback from Scale labelers, and then scale to production batches. It is most relevant for teams that need labeled data for model training, evaluation, or validation rather than a lightweight prompt-testing dashboard.
Yes. The Rapid documentation describes feedback from Scale labelers during calibration batches and recommends auditing tasks, creating examples, and improving instructions before scaling to larger production batches. That human-in-the-loop workflow is central to Rapid's value for annotation quality.
Scale Rapid is best suited for machine learning engineers, AI researchers, and data teams that need production-quality labels across images, videos, text, documents, or audio. Because the documentation says Rapid has no minimums and is self-serve, it can fit experimental and research projects as well as teams preparing for larger production labeling volumes.
Scale's Rapid pricing documentation says Rapid charges per completed task, but it does not publish a single universal Rapid task price in dollars. The exact dollar amount for a Rapid task is shown in the Rapid dashboard Price Estimator and depends on task setup, the labeler's response, and project setting multipliers based on batch configuration. Scale's public pricing page also lists Self-Serve Data Engine options with the first 1,000 labeling units at $0 and the first 10,000 uploaded images for data management at $0.
Narrower AI evaluation tools often focus on prompt testing, tracing, model monitoring, or regression evaluation inside a developer workflow. Scale Rapid is more focused on generating and improving labeled data through taxonomy setup, annotation instructions, calibration batches, labeler feedback, and production batches. It is a better fit when the quality problem is labeled data creation rather than only application-level evaluation tracking.
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Tutorial updated March 2026