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Developer · 6 min read

XML vs JSON: Key Differences Explained (With Examples)

A plain-English comparison of XML and JSON — structure, syntax, readability, performance, and when to use each for APIs, configs, and data exchange.

What is XML?

XML (eXtensible Markup Language) is a text-based data format that stores structured information using named tags, similar to HTML. It was designed in 1996 to be both human-readable and machine-parseable, and it became the dominant data exchange format for enterprise systems, SOAP APIs, and configuration files through the 2000s.

  • Uses opening and closing tags: <name>Alice</name>
  • Supports attributes: <user id="42">
  • Can encode any data structure — flat, hierarchical, or mixed
  • Used by: Microsoft Office (.docx is ZIP+XML), RSS feeds, SOAP APIs, SVG

What is JSON?

JSON (JavaScript Object Notation) is a lightweight data format derived from JavaScript object syntax. It was popularised in the early 2000s by Douglas Crockford and is now the standard format for REST APIs, NoSQL databases, configuration files, and frontend-backend communication.

  • Uses key-value pairs: {"name": "Alice"}
  • Supports arrays natively: ["apple", "banana"]
  • Shorter and faster to parse than XML
  • Used by: REST APIs, MongoDB, package.json, GitHub API, Stripe API

XML vs JSON: side-by-side comparison

FeatureXMLJSON
VerbosityHigh (opening + closing tags)Low (key-value pairs)
ReadabilityModerate (tag-heavy)High (clean syntax)
Native data typesStrings only (types via schema)String, number, boolean, null, array, object
CommentsSupported (<!-- comment -->)Not supported natively
AttributesSupportedNot supported (use nested objects)
Schema validationXML Schema (XSD), DTDJSON Schema
Namespace supportYes (xmlns)No
Browser parsingDOMParser, XPathJSON.parse() (built-in)
Typical API usageSOAP, legacy enterpriseREST, modern web APIs
File overhead~30–40% largerBaseline

When to use XML

  • Integrating with legacy enterprise systems that require SOAP
  • Working with document-centric data (Word, OpenDocument, SVG)
  • When you need inline metadata via XML attributes
  • When your data must conform to a strict schema (XSD validation)
  • RSS/Atom feeds for blog and podcast distribution

When to use JSON

  • Building or consuming REST APIs
  • Storing configuration files (package.json, tsconfig.json)
  • NoSQL databases like MongoDB or Firestore
  • Real-time data transfer (JSON is faster to parse)
  • Frontend-to-backend communication in web apps

Frequently asked questions

Is JSON better than XML?

For most modern web development, yes — JSON is simpler, lighter, and faster to parse. But XML is still the right choice for document-centric formats, SOAP APIs, and situations requiring strict schema validation or namespace support.

Can JSON replace XML completely?

No. XML remains essential for legacy enterprise systems, SOAP web services, SVG graphics, and document formats like DOCX. JSON and XML serve different use cases.

Which is faster: JSON or XML?

JSON is typically 20–30% faster to parse because it has a simpler grammar and a native parser (JSON.parse) in every JavaScript runtime. XML parsers are more complex due to namespace support, attributes, and mixed content.

How do I convert XML to JSON online?

Use Free Tool Flow's JSON Formatter — it includes a built-in XML-to-JSON converter. Paste your XML and get clean JSON in one click.

JSON Formatter

No account, no software, no cost. Works in any browser.

JSON Formatter