Competitive

Best Free Status Page Alternatives in 2026

StatusRay Team
11 min read
Last updated: February 12, 2026
Best Free Status Page Alternatives in 2026

Atlassian Statuspage has a free tier — but it caps at 100 subscribers, 2 team members, and no monitoring. The moment you need more, you're looking at $29-99/month for the status page alone, plus a separate monitoring tool on top.

For growing SaaS teams, that math doesn't work. The good news: there are solid Statuspage alternatives — some fully free, some open source, some with free tiers generous enough that you may never need to upgrade.

This guide compares the best free status page alternatives available in 2026 — with honest trade-offs so you can pick the right one for your team.

Quick Comparison

Tool Free Tier Paid From Built-in Monitoring Self-Hosted Best For
StatusRay Yes — 5 monitors, custom domain $20/mo Yes No SaaS teams wanting all-in-one
Instatus Yes — 15 monitors, unlimited subscribers $20/mo Yes No Teams wanting a generous free tier
Upptime Yes — fully free Free Yes (GitHub Actions) Yes (GitHub) Developers comfortable with GitHub
Cachet Yes — fully free Free No Yes Teams wanting full control
HetrixTools Yes — 15 monitors $8/mo Yes No Monitoring-first teams
Hund.io 30-day trial only $29/mo Yes No Compliance-focused teams
Statuspal 14-day trial only $46/mo Yes No Multi-language, enterprise

1. StatusRay — Best All-in-One for Small Teams

StatusRay combines a status page with built-in uptime monitoring in one tool. No need to pay for a separate monitoring service and a separate status page — it's both, starting at $0.

Free plan includes:

  • Public status page
  • Up to 3 automatic monitors (HTTP, keyword, SSL)
  • Email notifications to subscribers
  • Incident management and history
  • Basic customization

Paid plans:

  • Pro ($20/mo): 10 automatic monitors, 3-minute intervals, team management, multiple status pages
  • Plus ($50/mo): Private status pages with password/IP protection, priority support

Strengths:

  • Cheapest all-in-one in the market ($20/mo vs $29-46/mo for competitors)
  • Private status pages at $50/mo (vs $79/mo on Statuspage.io)
  • No per-subscriber pricing — notify as many people as you want
  • Setup takes under 10 minutes
  • Monitoring and status page in one dashboard
  • Unlimited manual monitors in all tiers
  • Free migration from Statuspage.io

Limitations:

  • Newer product — smaller community than established tools
  • No SMS notifications yet (email only)

Best for: Growing SaaS teams (5-30 people) who want monitoring + status page without managing two tools or paying enterprise prices.

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2. Instatus — Most Generous Free Tier

Instatus offers one of the most generous free tiers in the status page market. You get 15 monitors and unlimited subscribers at $0/month — hard to beat on paper.

Free plan includes:

  • 15 monitors
  • 5 team members, 2 on-call members and 200 subscribers
  • API access
  • Public status page

Paid plans:

  • Pro: More monitors, 50 team members, 20 on-call members, 5000 subscribers
    • 20$/mo - public status page
    • 50$/mo - private status page
    • 100$/mo - status page for selected audience
  • Business ($300/mo): SSO, higher limits

Strengths:

  • Clean, modern UI
  • Used by well-known companies (Sketch, Deno)

Limitations:

  • Pricing on paid tiers is opaque — feature limits not always clear
  • Jump from $20 to $300 is steep
  • Monitoring is more basic than dedicated monitoring tools

Best for: Teams who want the most features at $0 and don't mind limited customization.

3. Upptime — Best Free Open-Source Option

Upptime is a fully free, open-source status page that runs entirely on GitHub — using GitHub Actions for monitoring, GitHub Issues for incidents, and GitHub Pages for hosting. Zero infrastructure cost.

Features:

  • 5-minute monitoring intervals via GitHub Actions
  • Automatic incident creation from GitHub Issues
  • Response time tracking with historical graphs
  • Hosted on GitHub Pages (free)
  • Slack notifications
  • PWA-ready status page

Strengths:

  • Truly free — no paid tier, no limits
  • No server to manage (runs on GitHub's infrastructure)
  • Fully transparent — all data is committed to git
  • Active community (18,000+ GitHub stars)

Limitations:

  • Requires comfort with GitHub, YAML config, and git workflows
  • Customization requires editing code
  • 5-minute monitoring intervals only (GitHub Actions limitation)
  • Not suitable for non-technical teams
  • Status page design is basic

Best for: Developer teams already using GitHub who want zero-cost monitoring with no vendor dependency.

4. Cachet — Self-Hosted, Full Control

Cachet is an open-source status page you host on your own server. It gives you complete control over your data and appearance, but requires technical setup and ongoing maintenance.

Features:

  • Component-based status display
  • Incident management with updates
  • Metrics tracking
  • Multi-language support
  • REST API for automation

Strengths:

  • Complete control over data and hosting
  • No vendor lock-in
  • Extensive customization (it's your server)
  • Large community (15,000+ GitHub stars)

Limitations:

  • Development has been slower in recent years — v3 rebuild has been in progress for a while, though there was activity in 2025
  • Requires PHP, a database, and a web server to run
  • You're responsible for uptime of the status page itself (ironic if your status page goes down during an outage)
  • No built-in monitoring — you need a separate tool
  • Ongoing maintenance burden (security patches, updates, server costs)

Best for: Technical teams with DevOps capacity who need self-hosting for compliance or data residency reasons.

5. HetrixTools — Monitoring-First With a Status Page

HetrixTools is primarily a monitoring service that includes a status page as a feature. If your priority is monitoring depth and the status page is secondary, it's worth considering.

Free plan includes:

  • 15 uptime monitors
  • 1-minute check intervals
  • Public status page
  • Email, sms, phone calls, telegram and more alerts
  • Blacklist monitoring

Paid plans:

  • From $9,95/mo for additional monitors and features

Strengths:

  • 1-minute monitoring intervals on free tier (faster than most)
  • Blacklist and server monitoring included
  • Affordable paid plans

Limitations:

  • Status page is basic — limited customization
  • The product is monitoring, not status pages
  • Less polished status page UI compared to dedicated tools

Best for: Teams whose primary need is monitoring, with a simple status page as a bonus.

6. Hund.io — Best for Compliance

Hund.io is a hosted status page with strong automation and compliance credentials. No free tier, but worth mentioning for teams that need SOC 2 or ISO 27001 compliance.

Pricing:

  • From $29/mo (20 components, unlimited users)
  • Add-ons for private pages, managed email subscribers
  • Enterprise SSO: $100/mo add-on

Strengths:

  • SOC 2 and ISO 27001 certified
  • Automated monitoring integration
  • Unlimited team users on all plans
  • API-first design

Limitations:

  • No free tier (30-day trial only)
  • Add-on pricing can get complex
  • $29/mo starting price is higher than StatusRay or Instatus

Best for: Teams with compliance requirements (SOC 2, ISO 27001) who need a certified vendor.

7. Statuspal — Multi-Language and Automation

Statuspal is a more premium status page tool with AI-powered translations and advanced automation. Starting at $46/mo, it's not a budget option — but it fills a niche for international teams.

Pricing:

  • Hobby ($46/mo): 5 team members, 500 subscribers, 10 monitors
  • Startup ($99/mo): 20 team members, 1,000 subscribers, SSO
  • Business ($299/mo): 50 team members, 4,000 subscribers

Strengths:

  • AI translations in 10+ languages
  • Advanced automation (cross-channel incident communication)
  • ISO 27001 certified
  • 40+ integrations

Limitations:

  • Most expensive starting tier in this comparison ($46/mo)
  • Subscriber limits on all plans (even Business caps at 4,000)
  • Overkill for small teams

Best for: International teams needing multi-language status pages and advanced automation.

How to Choose the Right Statuspage Alternative

The right choice depends on three things:

1. Do you need monitoring included?

If yes, your options are StatusRay, Instatus, Upptime, or HetrixTools. If you already have monitoring (Datadog, Pingdom, etc.), any status page tool will work.

Most growing SaaS teams don't want to manage two separate tools. An all-in-one saves time and money.

2. What's your technical capacity?

Team Type Best Fit Avoid
Non-technical founders StatusRay, Instatus Cachet, Upptime
Small dev team (2-10) StatusRay, Instatus, Upptime Statuspal (overkill)
DevOps-heavy team Cachet, Upptime, Hund.io
Enterprise / compliance Hund.io, Statuspal Cachet (self-managed compliance)

3. What's your budget?

Budget Best Option What You Get
$0 (truly free) Upptime or Cachet Full control, but you manage everything
$0 (free tier) Instatus or StatusRay Hosted, no maintenance, some limits
$20/mo StatusRay Pro All-in-one monitoring + status page, no limits on subscribers
$29-50/mo Hund.io or StatusRay Plus Compliance, private pages, advanced features
$46-99/mo Statuspal Multi-language, AI translations, advanced automation

What About Atlassian Statuspage?

Atlassian Statuspage is the market leader, and it's a good product. But it's built for enterprise teams, and the pricing reflects that:

  • Free: 100 subscribers, 25 components, 2 team members, email/Slack/Teams notifications — but no monitoring, limited metrics
  • Hobby ($29/mo): 250 subscribers, 5 team members, 5 metrics
  • Startup ($99/mo): 1,000 subscribers, 10 team members, SMS/webhook notifications
  • Business ($399/mo): 5,000 subscribers, 25 team members
  • Enterprise ($1,499/mo): 25,000 subscribers, 50 team members

No plan includes monitoring. You'll need a separate tool (Pingdom, Datadog, UptimeRobot) which adds $10-50+/month.

Need private status pages for internal teams or enterprise customers? Statuspage charges $79/mo (Starter) for audience-specific pages — and that's their cheapest option. Growth is $249/mo, Corporate is $599/mo. StatusRay offers private status pages with password and IP protection at $50/mo.

For a growing SaaS team, the free plan caps out fast (100 subscribers, 2 team members). The Startup plan at $99/mo + $29/mo for monitoring = $128/mo minimum. Compare that to $20/mo for a tool that includes both — or $50/mo if you need private pages too.

Statuspage makes sense if you're an enterprise team running massive infrastructure with thousands of subscribers. For everyone else, the alternatives in this guide give you what you need at a fraction of the cost.

FAQ

What is the best free alternative to Statuspage.io? For hosted free tiers, Instatus offers the most generous limits (15 monitors, unlimited subscribers). For an all-in-one with monitoring included, StatusRay's free plan covers most small team needs. For fully free with no limits, Upptime is the best option if your team is comfortable with GitHub.

Can I use a free status page for a commercial product? Yes. All tools in this guide allow commercial use on their free tiers. Open-source options (Cachet, Upptime) have no restrictions at all.

Do I need monitoring AND a status page? Ideally, yes. Monitoring detects issues automatically. The status page communicates them to customers. Without monitoring, you're relying on customers telling you something is broken — which means they found out before you did. Tools that bundle both (StatusRay, Instatus, Upptime) save you from managing two separate services.

Should my status page be on a separate domain? Yes — or at minimum a subdomain (status.yourdomain.com). Your status page must stay accessible when your main product goes down. All hosted tools in this guide handle this automatically. If you self-host (Cachet), make sure you host the status page on separate infrastructure.

How do I migrate from Statuspage.io? Most migrations are straightforward: set up your new status page, configure the same components, point your custom domain (status.yourdomain.com) to the new provider, and notify subscribers. The hard part isn't technical — it's remembering to update any documentation or runbooks that reference your old status page URL.

Is open source always better? Not for status pages. Self-hosting means you're responsible for keeping your status page online during incidents — exactly when your infrastructure might be struggling. A hosted service runs on separate infrastructure, so it stays up even when your product doesn't. Self-host only if you have a specific requirement (data residency, compliance) that demands it.

Get Started in 10 Minutes

You don't need to spend weeks evaluating status page tools. Pick one, set it up, and have it ready before your next incident.

StatusRay gives you a professional status page with built-in monitoring — starting free. Custom domain, email notifications, incident management, and uptime history included. No separate monitoring subscription. No per-subscriber charges.

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