Plans that scale with your Team
All plans include a 14-day trial period, no credit card required and enable all of our core features:
- Unlimited public status pages
- 5 team members
- 500 subscribers
- 10 monitored services
- Any language
- ∞ Public and private pages
- 20 team members
- 1,000 subscribers
- 30 monitored services
- 2 Languages
- Uptime Calendar
- Single sign-on
- ∞ Public and private pages
- 50 team members
- 4,000 subscribers
- 100 monitored services
- 3 Languages
- Uptime Calendar
- Single sign-on
- Multi-provider SSO
- ∞ Public and private pages
- Custom team members
- Custom subscribers
- Custom Monitored Services
- Custom Languages
- Uptime Calendar
- Single sign-on
- Multi-provider SSO
- Audience specific
Are you a Heroku user?
Free StatusPal - Heroku Add-On
If you're a Heroku user, you're in luck; we're giving away a free status page during our Heroku alpha stage! Hurry up. Only 11 free add-ons remain!
Get our free status page Heroku add-on →Frequently asked questions
A public status page will be publicly available to anyone, anybody will be able to access it and subscribe to receive notifications for it.
A private status page can be configured to restrict its access in two ways:
IP Allowlisting: This will restrict its access to only some specified IPs addresses.
Member restricted: This will require authentication (via user/password or SSO) from a team member (admin or viewer) in order to access it and optionally subscribe to.
With "monitored service" we mean a service (or component) in your status page that also comes with support to be monitored either with our Simple Monitoring or by a third party monitoring tool like Pingdom, Datadog, etc.
A monitored service can then be used to automate incident creation and resolution.
You can only have this number of services according to your plan and you can choose to use monitoring on them or not.
A viewer member is a special team member role which only grants access to view and subscribe to a status page, you can create this type of team member if you want to restrict the access to your status page, and they can sign in via SSO.
The difference with a subscriber is that you create viewer members only if you want to restrict the access to your status page (make it private) to some customers, they can still subscribe, so each viewer member also comes with a subscriber seat.
Yes, you can have multiple status pages within your organization and easily switch between them, Statuspal is designed with this in mind.
You can also have multiple organization and group your status pages in them, billing is independent to each organization.