Every uptime monitoring tool has a free tier. But they're not all equal — and the gaps between "free" and "useful in production" vary a lot.
Here's an honest breakdown of what free monitoring actually covers, and when you genuinely need to upgrade.
What every free tier includes
Most free uptime monitoring plans — including Uptraq's — cover the basics:
- HTTP/HTTPS checks — ping your URL, check for a 2xx response
- Dashboard access — see current status of all monitors
- SSL expiry tracking — see how many days remain on each certificate
- Uptime history — see past availability over 7–30 days
This is enough for a side project where you check the dashboard occasionally and downtime isn't business-critical.
Where free tiers fall short
No instant alerts
This is the big one. Uptraq's free plan doesn't send alerts — you only find out about downtime by opening the dashboard. UptimeRobot's free plan sends email alerts but with a 5-minute delay. Neither is acceptable for a production service with real users.
The first time a customer emails you asking why your site is down and you had no idea, you'll upgrade.
5-minute check intervals
At 5-minute intervals, a 4-minute outage can go completely undetected. For an API that processes payments or handles real-time data, that window is too wide.
No AI analysis
Free plans give you the ping result. Paid plans tell you why the ping failed and what to do about it. For experienced developers this matters — for developers on call at 2 AM, it matters even more.
When to stay on free
- Personal portfolio sites with no SLA
- Internal tools where occasional downtime is tolerable
- Side projects you're still validating
When to upgrade (and to what)
Any production service with users → Hobby ($7/mo). You get 1-minute checks, Telegram/Slack/Discord alerts, AI incident analysis, webhooks, and a public status page. The $7 pays for itself the first time it wakes you up before a customer complains.
Team of 2+ people → Pro ($19/mo). Adds team member access, keyword checks (catch 200-OK errors), AI fix steps, and more monitors.
Agency or high-volume → Business ($59/mo). 30-second checks with 2-region confirmation, REST API access, white-label status pages, and up to 25 team members.
Bottom line
Free monitoring is fine for learning and low-stakes projects. Once you have real users, the $7/month for instant alerts is the cheapest insurance you'll buy. The question isn't really "free vs. paid" — it's "do I want to know about downtime before my users do?"