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Uptime.com Alternatives for Website Monitoring (2026)

Uptime.com Alternatives for Website Monitoring (2026)

What Uptime.com Does Well

Before listing alternatives, it is worth acknowledging what Uptime.com gets right. It is one of the more complete monitoring platforms available, and if it fits your budget, there are real reasons to use it.

Full-featured monitoring suite. Uptime.com offers HTTP(S), ping, DNS, TCP, UDP, SMTP, POP3, and IMAP checks. It also supports multi-step API monitoring and transaction checks that simulate real user flows. Most monitoring tools cover the basics; Uptime.com covers the edges too.

Real user monitoring (RUM). Uptime.com collects performance data from actual visitors loading your pages, not just synthetic probes. If you care about real-world page load times broken down by geography, browser, and device, this is valuable. Not many competitors outside Pingdom and Datadog offer RUM in the same package as uptime monitoring.

SLA reporting. This is Uptime.com's quiet strength. You can generate custom SLA reports for stakeholders, clients, or internal teams that show uptime percentages over configurable time windows. If you have contractual SLA obligations, this feature alone can justify the subscription.

API monitoring with multi-step checks. You can chain API calls together -- authenticate, hit an endpoint, validate the response, then call a second endpoint using data from the first. This goes beyond basic "is the endpoint returning 200?" checks.

Good status pages. Uptime.com includes customizable status pages on paid plans. They are clean, functional, and support scheduled maintenance windows.

Responsive support. Multiple reviews cite Uptime.com's support team as fast and genuinely helpful. For a monitoring tool -- something you lean on hardest during outages -- that matters more than it might for other SaaS products.

Where Teams Look for Alternatives

Despite its strengths, there are patterns in why teams start evaluating other options.

Expensive at scale. Uptime.com pricing starts at around $20/month for a basic plan. That is reasonable for a small number of monitors. But once you are running 50+ endpoints across staging, production, APIs, and internal services, costs climb quickly. Teams running 100+ monitors can find themselves paying several hundred dollars a month for monitoring alone -- before incident management, before status pages from other vendors.

No built-in incident management. When Uptime.com detects an outage, it sends you an alert. That is where its responsibility ends. There is no on-call scheduling, no escalation policies, no acknowledgment tracking. You need PagerDuty, Opsgenie, or a similar tool to handle the response workflow. That is another $20-30/month per user on top of your monitoring bill.

No escalation policies. This is related but worth calling out separately. If the first responder does not acknowledge an alert, there is no built-in way to automatically escalate to a backup. You are relying on external tools to handle that logic.

No third-party dependency monitoring. Your application depends on AWS, Stripe, Cloudflare, Twilio, and dozens of other services. When one of them has an outage, you need to know whether the problem is yours or theirs. Uptime.com does not track third-party status pages or correlate upstream outages with your own monitors. You are left checking status pages manually during every incident.

Per-monitor pricing adds friction. When adding a new monitor requires mental math about your monthly bill, teams tend to under-monitor. They skip staging environments, skip individual API endpoints, skip health checks on internal services. That is the wrong tradeoff.

None of this makes Uptime.com a bad product. It is a strong monitoring tool with genuine differentiators in RUM and SLA reporting. But if you need incident management, escalation, or dependency monitoring, you are looking at a multi-tool stack where Uptime.com is one piece of a more expensive puzzle.

5 Uptime.com Alternatives Worth Evaluating

1. Alert24 -- Monitoring, Incidents, and Status Pages in One Platform

Alert24 combines uptime monitoring, incident management, and status pages into a single product. The pitch is straightforward: instead of paying for three separate tools, you get all three in one.

Where it wins:

  • Third-party dependency monitoring. Alert24 tracks 2,000+ third-party status pages -- AWS, Stripe, Cloudflare, GitHub, SendGrid, Vercel, and more -- and correlates their outages with yours. When your checkout flow breaks because Stripe is down, Alert24 tells you the root cause is upstream. AI-powered custom provider parsing also lets you add any service with a public status page. This is the single biggest feature gap in Uptime.com, and Alert24 fills it well.
  • Incident management with escalation. On-call schedules, escalation policies, and acknowledgment tracking are built in. If the first responder does not acknowledge within your threshold, the alert escalates automatically. No PagerDuty subscription required.
  • Auto-updating status pages. When a monitor goes down, your public status page updates without manual intervention. No toggling components while you are firefighting.
  • Multi-channel alerting. Email, SMS, and voice call alerts. Not email-only on the free tier with everything else behind an upgrade.
  • Email-to-incident parsing. Forward alert emails from other tools into Alert24, and it creates structured incidents automatically. Useful during migration from legacy monitoring setups.
  • Free tier available. Start without a credit card and upgrade when you need more monitors or team members.
  • Monitors dependencies and provides your own status page. Alert24 is one of the few tools that both monitors third-party status pages and provides your own auto-updating public status page -- so when a dependency goes down, your page reflects the impact automatically.

Where it falls short:

  • No RUM, no multi-step API monitoring. This is the honest tradeoff. Uptime.com's real user monitoring and multi-step transaction checks are genuine differentiators. Alert24 does not offer synthetic monitoring, RUM, or chained API call validation. If your team relies on these features, you will need to pair Alert24 with a tool like Checkly or Datadog.
  • Fewer check locations. Uptime.com has a broad global probe network. If geographic diversity in your monitoring matters, compare the specific regions.
  • Newer platform. Alert24 has 100+ pre-built webhook integrations (Datadog, Grafana, Prometheus, PagerDuty, Jira, and more), but the ecosystem is not as deep as established platforms. No Terraform provider yet.
  • No SLA reporting. If you need custom SLA reports for clients or stakeholders, Uptime.com is better suited for that today.

Cost comparison: If you are currently paying for Uptime.com plus PagerDuty or Opsgenie plus Atlassian Statuspage, consolidating into Alert24 can reduce your total spend. But if you rely on RUM, multi-step API checks, or SLA reporting, the comparison is not apples-to-apples.


2. Better Stack -- Modern Monitoring with Logging

Better Stack offers monitoring, incident management, on-call scheduling, and log management in one platform. It is the closest competitor to Uptime.com in terms of feature breadth, but trades RUM and SLA reporting for logging and a more modern developer experience.

Where it wins:

  • Integrated log management. If you want monitoring and logging in the same tool, Better Stack is the strongest option in this list.
  • 30-second check intervals on all plans.
  • Beautiful status pages with deep incident management integration.
  • Full on-call scheduling with rotation support and escalation chains.

Where it falls short:

  • Pricing starts at $24/month for 10 monitors. Scaling beyond that gets expensive, though the bundled incident management offsets some of the cost compared to Uptime.com plus a separate incident management tool.
  • No RUM or SLA reporting. If those are must-haves from your Uptime.com setup, Better Stack does not replace them.
  • No third-party dependency monitoring.

3. Pingdom -- The Established Alternative

Pingdom is the most direct competitor to Uptime.com. Similar feature set, similar market position, similar pricing model. If you are leaving Uptime.com but want to stay with a traditional monitoring tool, Pingdom is the natural comparison.

Where it wins:

  • Real user monitoring (RUM) and synthetic transaction checks. Pingdom matches Uptime.com's advanced monitoring features.
  • Extensive global probe network with strong geographic coverage.
  • Backed by SolarWinds' enterprise support organization. Long track record.
  • Well-known brand -- if you are recommending a tool to stakeholders, Pingdom is a name they recognize.

Where it falls short:

  • Same core gap as Uptime.com: no built-in incident management, no escalation policies, no on-call scheduling. You still need a separate tool for the response workflow.
  • Per-monitor pricing starts at $15/month for 10 monitors and scales to $85/month or more at 50 monitors.
  • The UI has not seen a meaningful refresh in years.
  • No third-party dependency monitoring.

If you are switching from Uptime.com because of pricing, Pingdom is not dramatically cheaper. If you are switching because of missing incident management, Pingdom has the same gap.


4. UptimeRobot -- Budget Monitoring with a Free Tier

UptimeRobot is the go-to choice for teams that want basic uptime monitoring without spending much. Its free tier is unmatched, and the paid plans are the cheapest in the category.

Where it wins:

  • 50 free monitors at 5-minute intervals. No other tool matches this.
  • Pro plan at $7/month gets you 1-minute intervals, SMS/voice alerts, and more.
  • Simple, fast interface. No learning curve.
  • Status pages included on all plans.

Where it falls short:

  • No incident management, no escalation policies, no on-call scheduling.
  • No RUM, no synthetic monitoring, no transaction checks. If you use any of Uptime.com's advanced monitoring features, UptimeRobot is a significant downgrade.
  • No SLA reporting.
  • No third-party dependency monitoring.
  • Alert routing is basic. No "page this person during business hours and that person on weekends" logic.

UptimeRobot is a great tool for what it is, but it is a monitoring-only tool with far fewer features than Uptime.com. The switch makes sense if you were only using Uptime.com for basic HTTP checks and want to save money.


5. Checkly -- Developer-First Synthetic Monitoring

If your reason for using Uptime.com is its API monitoring and transaction checks, Checkly is worth a close look. It focuses on synthetic monitoring with a developer experience that traditional tools cannot match.

Where it wins:

  • Monitoring-as-code with a CLI and Terraform provider. Define checks in JavaScript or TypeScript and deploy them from CI.
  • Playwright-based browser checks. Reuse your existing end-to-end tests as monitoring checks.
  • Multi-step API checks with full scripting support. More flexible than Uptime.com's API monitoring.
  • Generous free tier with browser and API checks included.

Where it falls short:

  • Not a general-purpose monitoring tool. No ping checks, no port checks, no DNS monitoring. If you need the full range of Uptime.com's check types, Checkly does not cover them.
  • No incident management or on-call scheduling.
  • No status pages.
  • No RUM or SLA reporting.
  • The developer-first approach means less technical team members may find setup difficult.

Checkly is not a 1:1 Uptime.com replacement. It is a complement or a replacement for the synthetic monitoring piece specifically. Teams often pair Checkly with a broader monitoring and incident management tool.


Comparison Table

Tool Starting Price Status Pages Incident Mgmt RUM API Multi-Step SLA Reporting Dependency Monitoring
Uptime.com ~$20/mo Yes (paid plans) No Yes Yes Yes No
Alert24 Free tier available Yes (included) Yes (included) No No No Yes (2,000+ services)
Better Stack $24/mo Yes (included) Yes (included) No No No No
Pingdom $15/mo No (separate tool) No (separate tool) Yes Yes No No
UptimeRobot Free (50 monitors) Yes (included) No No No No No
Checkly Free tier No No No Yes (scripted) No No

Prices are approximate and based on publicly available pricing pages as of March 2026. Check each vendor's site for current rates.

The Bottom Line

Uptime.com is a genuinely capable monitoring platform. Its combination of RUM, multi-step API monitoring, SLA reporting, and status pages makes it one of the more complete monitoring-only tools available. If those features match your needs and the pricing works, there is no urgent reason to switch.

But the gaps are real. No incident management means you are paying for a second tool to handle the response workflow. No dependency monitoring means you are manually checking upstream status pages during every incident. And per-monitor pricing means costs scale linearly as your infrastructure grows.

Here is the practical breakdown:

  • If you want to consolidate monitoring, incident management, and status pages into one tool: Alert24. You lose RUM and multi-step API checks, but you drop PagerDuty and Statuspage from your stack.
  • If you want monitoring plus logging: Better Stack.
  • If you want the cheapest possible monitoring: UptimeRobot Pro at $7/month or the free tier for side projects.
  • If you want the best synthetic monitoring and API testing: Checkly, potentially paired with another tool for basic uptime monitoring and incidents.
  • If you want the closest 1:1 Uptime.com replacement with RUM: Pingdom, though it has the same incident management gap.

The right choice depends on what you actually use today. If you are paying for Uptime.com's advanced features and using them, a like-for-like replacement is Pingdom or staying put. If you are paying for Uptime.com but only using basic HTTP checks and wishing you had incident management built in, you are overpaying for features you do not use while missing features you need.