UptimeRobot alternative

SiteAudit vs UptimeRobot

UptimeRobot is a well-known monitoring tool. SiteAudit is built for teams that want a cleaner route from basic uptime checks to faster intervals, team alerts, and customer-facing status pages without turning monitoring into another system to manage.

Competitor pricing checked from public UptimeRobot pricing on 15 June 2026. Verify current pricing before buying.

Live monitor

checkout.siteaudit.io

Operational

Interval

30s

Regions

5

Alerts

3

92ms
118ms
84ms
141ms
96ms
75ms
109ms
88ms

Comparison

Where SiteAudit fits better

Choose SiteAudit when you want the essentials to stay obvious: who gets alerted, how often checks run, which monitors matter, and what customers see during an incident.

Decision point
SiteAudit
UptimeRobot
Fast checks
30-second checks on Business and Agency.
30-second checks are listed on Enterprise tiers.
Team access
Paid plans include unlimited team members.
Team and Enterprise include login seats, with more seats available as add-ons.
Monitor growth
Agency includes unlimited monitors for a fixed listed price.
Public pricing scales by monitor tier up to enterprise volumes.
Alert routing
Email, Slack, and webhooks are grouped by plan so teams can keep operations simple.
Many integrations are available, with plan-specific integration limits.
Status pages
Built for public and private customer communication inside the same monitoring workflow.
Status page limits and features vary by plan.

Pricing

A simpler pricing angle for teams leaving UptimeRobot

UptimeRobot has a generous free monitor count. SiteAudit is aimed at teams that value predictable paid-plan limits, UK pricing, and faster checks without jumping into a high-volume enterprise tier.

UptimeRobot Free

$0/month

Public pricing lists 50 monitors with 5-minute checks. Strong for hobby projects where the free monitor count matters most.

SiteAudit Business

£19/month

50 monitors, 30-second checks, Slack and webhook alerts, and unlimited team members on the listed Business plan.

UptimeRobot Enterprise

from $69/month

Public annual pricing lists 200 monitors, 30-second checks, and included login and notify seats.

Migration plan

Move from UptimeRobot without rebuilding your monitoring

Treat the switch as a controlled operations change: copy monitors first, prove alerts next, then move status communication after the team trusts the signal.

1

Export your monitor list

Start with URLs, expected status codes, check intervals, and escalation owners.

2

Recreate critical monitors first

Move revenue, login, checkout, and API endpoints before lower-risk pages.

3

Mirror alert channels

Add email, Slack, and webhook destinations before disabling any existing UptimeRobot alerts.

4

Run both tools briefly

Compare incidents and response times for a short overlap period before switching the source of truth.

5

Publish status pages

Point customers at SiteAudit public or private status pages once the team is comfortable.

6

Retire old monitors

Disable duplicate UptimeRobot monitors only after alert ownership is clear.

Frequently asked questions

Is SiteAudit cheaper than UptimeRobot?

It depends on monitor count and interval needs. UptimeRobot has a larger free monitor allowance. SiteAudit becomes compelling when you want 30-second checks, predictable UK pricing, and unlimited team members on paid plans.

Can I migrate gradually?

Yes. Run both tools in parallel for your most important endpoints, compare alerts, then retire duplicate monitors when the team trusts the new setup.

Is this a full UptimeRobot replacement?

For HTTP uptime monitoring, response time tracking, team alerts, and status pages, SiteAudit is designed to cover the common operational workflow. Specialist monitor types should be checked against your own requirements before switching.

Ready to compare against your current monitors?

Create your SiteAudit account, add your most important URLs, and run both services side by side before you make the switch.