WCF Rest 01.To use WCF as WCF Rest service you have to enable webHttpBindings. 02.It support HTTP GET and POST verbs by [WebGet] and [WebInvoke] attributes respectively. 03.To enable other HTTP verbs you have to do some configuration in IIS to accept request of that particular verb on .svc files 04.Passing data through parameters using a WebGet needs configuration. The UriTemplate must be specified 05.It support XML, JSON and ATOM data format. Web API 01.This is the new framework for building HTTP services with easy and simple way. 02.Web API is open source an ideal platform for building REST-ful services over the .NET Framework. 03.Unlike WCF Rest service, it use the full featues of HTTP (like URIs, request/response headers, caching, versioning, various content formats) 04.It also supports the MVC features such as routing, controllers, action results, filter, model binders, IOC container or dependency injection, unit testing that makes it more simple and robust. 05.It can be hosted with in the application or on IIS. 06.It is light weight architecture and good for devices which have limited bandwidth like smart phones. 07.Responses are formatted by Web API’s MediaTypeFormatter into JSON, XML or whatever format you want to add as a MediaTypeFormatter. To whom choose between WCF or WEB API 01.Choose WCF when you want to create a service that should support special scenarios such as one way messaging, message queues, duplex communication etc. 02.Choose WCF when you want to create a service that can use fast transport channels when available, such as TCP, Named Pipes, or maybe even UDP (in WCF 4.5), and you also want to support HTTP when all other transport channels are unavailable. 03.Choose Web API when you want to create a resource-oriented services over HTTP that can use the full features of HTTP (like URIs, request/response headers, caching, versioning, various content formats). 04.Choose Web API when you want to expose your service to a broad range of clients including browsers, mobiles, iphone and tablets.