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Canada edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-27

Top 10 Incident Management Software in Canada for 2026

Canadian incident management ranking with CAD pricing, OSFI B-13 reporting reality, Shopify and bank deployment patterns, Bill C-26 critical-infrastructure rules.

Canada verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-27

Canadian incident management is dominated by PagerDuty at modern SaaS (Shopify, Wealthsimple, 1Password, Hootsuite, Vidyard, Top Hat, Ada, League, Coveo) and at several Big 5 bank platform teams. Opsgenie (Atlassian) is the default at Canadian shops on Atlassian stack (Jira, Confluence). incident.io is winning modern Canadian SaaS post-2023 with strong Slack-native experience. FireHydrant covers runbook automation at enterprise. Better Stack Uptime (formerly Better Uptime) combines monitoring and incident management at Canadian SMB. Squadcast, Rootly compete at cost-sensitive tiers. OSFI B-13 incident notification 'within reasonable delay' drives Big 5 bank tooling depth.

Picks for Canada

  • Canadian SaaS or scale-up wanting the industry default: pagerduty PagerDuty is the default at Shopify, Wealthsimple, 1Password, Hootsuite, Vidyard, Top Hat, Ada, League, Coveo and several Big 5 bank platform teams. Native integrations to Datadog, New Relic, Sentry. Strong OSFI B-13 vendor risk track record at Canadian banks. CAD via direct billing.
  • Modern Canadian SaaS wanting Slack-native incident management: incident-io incident.io is winning modern Canadian SaaS post-2023 with the strongest Slack-native experience in the category. Channel-per-incident, automated communications, post-incident reviews. Used at Toronto-Waterloo SaaS scale-up tier.
  • Canadian team on Atlassian stack (Jira, Confluence): opsgenie Opsgenie (Atlassian) is the default at Canadian shops already on Jira and Confluence. Native Jira incident creation, Confluence post-incident review templates. Bundled in Atlassian enterprise pricing at scale.
  • Canadian enterprise needing runbook automation: firehydrant FireHydrant covers runbook automation at Canadian enterprise wanting structured incident response with status pages, runbooks, post-incident analytics. Strong fit at Big 5 bank platform engineering and mid-large telco.
  • Canadian SMB wanting monitoring plus incident in one: better-stack-uptime Better Stack (formerly Better Uptime) combines uptime monitoring, status pages and incident management in one platform. Strong fit for Canadian SMB and Series A SaaS wanting consolidated tooling. CAD via direct billing.
Market context

How the incident management & on-call software market looks in Canada

Canadian incident management is dominated by PagerDuty at modern SaaS (Shopify, Wealthsimple, 1Password, Hootsuite, Vidyard, Top Hat, Ada, League, Coveo) and at several Big 5 bank platform teams. PagerDuty Canada has Toronto sales presence and AWS ca-central-1 deployment option at enterprise tier. PagerDuty's strong integration to Datadog, New Relic, Sentry, Splunk and ServiceNow makes it the default modern Canadian SaaS choice.

Opsgenie (Atlassian) is the default at Canadian shops already on Atlassian Jira and Confluence including most Canadian fintech, gaming and several Big 5 bank platform teams. Bundled in Atlassian enterprise pricing at scale.

incident.io is winning modern Canadian SaaS deployments post-2023 with the strongest Slack-native incident management experience. Channel-per-incident, automated communications, post-incident review automation. Toronto and Vancouver SaaS scale-up tier adoption.

FireHydrant covers runbook automation at Canadian enterprise wanting structured incident response. Rootly competes at modern SaaS. Better Stack Uptime combines monitoring and incident at Canadian SMB. Squadcast and Spike.sh fill cost-sensitive tiers.

OSFI Guideline B-13 (Technology and Cyber Risk Management, in force 2024) at Canadian federally regulated FIs requires technology and cyber risk incident reporting to OSFI 'within reasonable delay' which is interpreted as 24-72 hours for material incidents. This drives tooling investment at Canadian Big 5 banks, Manulife, Sun Life and other federally regulated entities. Bill C-26 (CCSPA) phases in 2026 with cyber incident reporting to CCCS for designated operators (telco, finance, energy, transport) within 72 hours.

Quebec Law 25 requires breach notification to the CAI within reasonable delay; incident management tooling must support consistent breach categorisation. PIPEDA breach notification 'real risk of significant harm' standard at federal level.

Compliance & local rules

OSFI Guideline B-13 (Technology and Cyber Risk Management, in force 2024) requires Canadian federally regulated FIs to report technology and cyber risk incidents to OSFI 'within reasonable delay' which is interpreted as 24-72 hours for material incidents. Incident management tooling must support consistent severity classification (typically SEV1/2/3/4 mapped to OSFI material/non-material), audit trail, post-incident analysis and root-cause documentation. OSFI B-10 third-party risk management requires reporting third-party (vendor) incidents affecting bank operations. Bill C-26 (Critical Cyber Systems Protection Act) phases in 2026 with cyber incident reporting to Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (CCCS) within 72 hours for designated operators (telco, finance, energy, transport). PIPEDA breach notification at federal level requires notification to the OPC and affected individuals 'as soon as feasible' where the breach poses a 'real risk of significant harm.' Quebec Law 25 (Loi 25, in full force September 2023) requires breach notification to the CAI 'within reasonable delay' and to affected individuals where there is a serious risk of harm. Bill 96 requires French communication of incidents to Quebec users where the incident affects them. Provincial health privacy laws (PHIPA Ontario, HIA Alberta, others) have parallel breach notification rules. Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) NI 51-102 and continuous disclosure requirements for TSX-listed entities; material cyber incidents may trigger continuous disclosure obligations. ITSG-33 federal security controls for federal incident response. CCCS Cyber Centre Top 10 IT security actions. Data residency: PagerDuty, Opsgenie, incident.io, FireHydrant all offer Canadian or US deployment with documented controls; PagerDuty offers ca-central-1 at enterprise tier.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Canada

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 PagerDuty
Mid-market and enterprise with complex on-call geometry
$21/emp $210 4.5 Global; data centers in US, EU, AU
2 incident.io
High-velocity software shops; mid-market through upper mid-market
$19/emp $190 4.8 Global; data centers in US, EU
3 Opsgenie
Atlassian-anchored teams
$0/emp $0 4.4 Global; data centers in US, EU, AU
4 FireHydrant
Mid-market formalizing incident response process
$0/emp $0 4.7 Global; data centers in US, EU
5 Squadcast
Cost-conscious mid-market; India / APAC-anchored
$0/emp $0 4.6 Global; strongest in India, APAC, US
6 Rootly
Slack-native engineering teams
$0/emp $0 4.8 Global; data centers in US, EU
7 Better Stack
SMB SaaS; small engineering teams
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.8 Global; data centers in US, EU
8 Spike.sh
Very small teams; cost-sensitive SMB
$0/emp $0 4.7 Global; data centers in US, EU
9 AlertOps
Mid-market with complex routing; traditional ITops
$9/emp $90 4.6 Global; strongest in US, EU
10 ilert
European mid-market with data residency requirements
$0/emp $0 4.7 Global; strongest in DACH (Germany, Austria, Switzerland), broader EU; data centers in EU, US

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in Canada actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in CAD. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (CAD) Sample Notes
PagerDuty Canadian Series A SaaS (10-25 engineers) CA$8,400 78 PagerDuty Professional; CAD via direct billing
PagerDuty Canadian mid-market (50-200 engineers) CA$42,000 32 PagerDuty Business; CAD
PagerDuty Big 5 bank or large enterprise CA$285,000 11 PagerDuty Digital Operations + ca-central-1; CAD
Opsgenie Canadian Atlassian stack mid-market CA$18,000 28 Opsgenie Standard; CAD via Atlassian Canada
incident.io Canadian modern SaaS Series B-C CA$30,000 22 incident.io Pro; CAD via direct billing
FireHydrant Canadian enterprise platform team CA$48,000 14 FireHydrant Business; CAD via USD
Better Stack Canadian SMB or Series A SaaS CA$3,600 38 Better Stack Team; CAD via direct billing
Local challengers

Canada-built or Canada-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Canada buyers and worth a shortlist.

PagerDuty Canada (Shopify deployment pattern)

Visit ↗

Not Canadian-built but the canonical Canadian SaaS pattern at Shopify and most Toronto-Waterloo SaaS. AWS ca-central-1 deployment at enterprise tier, OSFI B-13 vendor risk track record at Canadian Big 5 banks.

incident.io (Canadian post-2023 adoption)

Visit ↗

Not Canadian-built but winning Canadian modern SaaS deployments post-2023 with strong Slack-native incident management. Channel-per-incident automation reduces incident commander overhead. Used at Toronto and Vancouver SaaS scale-up tier.

Excluded for Canada

Global picks that don't fit here

  • Spike.sh
    Spike.sh has limited Canadian commercial presence. Canadian buyers should evaluate PagerDuty, incident.io or Opsgenie first.
  • AlertOps
    AlertOps has limited Canadian deployment. Canadian buyers should evaluate PagerDuty, Opsgenie or Squadcast first.
  • ilert
    ilert is European-headquartered with limited Canadian presence. Evaluate PagerDuty, incident.io or Better Stack first.
The Canada ranking

All 10, ranked for Canada

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Canada market.

#1

PagerDuty

Market leader on alert routing depth; enterprise default.

Founded 2009 · San Francisco, CA · public · 50–100,000+ employees
G2 4.5 (1,240)
Capterra 4.6
From $21 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit PagerDuty

PagerDuty is the incident management market leader, founded 2009 and public since 2019 (NYSE: PD). The product spans alert routing, on-call scheduling, escalation policies, incident response automation, status pages, runbook automation (via Rundeck acquisition 2020), and AIOps event correlation. Best-in-class for enterprises with complex on-call geometry across hundreds of services and teams. The trade-offs in 2026: pricing has escalated meaningfully through 2024 (15-20% renewal increases reported widely), per-user fees compound as teams scale, and customer churn to incident.io accelerated through 2024-2025 as high-velocity software shops prefer the modern Slack-native paradigm. PagerDuty AI Operations (Bits AI) has caught up on the AI-incident-response feature checklist, but velocity perception still favors incident.io.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise (200-50,000 employees) with complex on-call geometry across many teams and services who need the broadest integration ecosystem and battle-tested reliability.

Worst for

High-velocity software shops who want Slack-native AI-first workflow (incident.io wins), small teams (Spike.sh or Better Stack 70-80% cheaper), or buyers prioritizing modern UX over breadth.

Strengths

  • Industry-leading alert routing and on-call depth
  • 700+ integrations (broadest in category)
  • Public company financial transparency
  • Battle-tested at extreme scale (Stripe, Slack, Salesforce historically)
  • AIOps event correlation reduces alert noise
  • Runbook automation via Rundeck for response orchestration
  • Strong mobile apps with iOS/Android push reliability

Weaknesses

  • Pricing escalated 15-20% on renewals through 2024
  • Per-user pricing compounds painfully at scale (200+ engineers)
  • Customer churn to incident.io accelerating since 2024
  • AI feature velocity perceived as trailing incident.io
  • UI feels older than incident.io or Rootly
  • ChatOps-first workflows feel bolted-on vs native

Pricing tiers

public
  • Professional
    Per user/month, billed annually; basic on-call
    $21 /emp/mo
  • Business
    Per user/month; full incident response
    $41 /emp/mo
  • Digital Operations
    Custom; AIOps + runbook automation
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, audit logs, SLA guarantees
    Quote
Watch for
  • · 15-20% renewal price increases reported widely through 2024
  • · AIOps event correlation often a separate add-on
  • · Status pages and customer service modules priced separately
  • · Annual contracts standard; multi-year discounts require negotiation

Key features

  • +Alert routing and escalation policies
  • +On-call scheduling with overrides
  • +Incident response automation
  • +AIOps event correlation
  • +Runbook automation (Rundeck)
  • +Status pages
  • +Postmortem templates
  • +Mobile apps (iOS/Android)
  • +700+ integrations
700+ integrations
DatadogNew RelicSplunkSlackMicrosoft TeamsJiraServiceNowAWS CloudWatchGitHubZendesk
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU, AU
#2

incident.io

Modern AI-first incident response; fastest product velocity in category.

Founded 2021 · London, UK · private · 20–10,000 employees
G2 4.8 (480)
Capterra 4.8
From $19 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit incident.io

incident.io is the modern challenger that has captured the high-velocity software shop in 2024-2026. Founded 2021 by ex-Monzo engineers, raised a $62M Series C in October 2024 led by Index Ventures, and has been the fastest-growing platform in the category for two consecutive years. The product's defining characteristics: Slack-native (incidents are declared and managed in Slack with the same fluency as a normal channel), AI-driven triage and postmortem drafting (Catalog + AI-suggested actions), and product velocity that genuinely outpaces PagerDuty. On-Call (the paging product) shipped late 2023 and has matured rapidly. Trade-offs: smaller integration ecosystem (~250 vs PagerDuty 700), enterprise scale less battle-tested for >5,000-engineer organizations, and pricing not the cheapest (positioned as premium-but-fair).

Best for

High-velocity software shops (50-5,000 engineers) who want a modern Slack-native AI-first incident workflow and are willing to pay fair-but-not-cheap pricing for product quality.

Worst for

Mega-enterprise (>10,000 engineers) needing battle-tested reliability (PagerDuty), Atlassian-anchored teams (Opsgenie/JSM bundle), or buyers who need the broadest possible integration count.

Strengths

  • Slack-native (and Teams-native) workflow genuinely better than competitors
  • AI-driven triage, suggested actions, and postmortem drafting
  • Fastest product velocity in the category
  • On-Call product matured rapidly post-2023 launch
  • Catalog (service ownership graph) genuinely useful
  • Strong UX and onboarding consistently praised
  • Founder-led with strong VC backing (Index Ventures, Point Nine)

Weaknesses

  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~250 vs PagerDuty 700)
  • Enterprise scale less battle-tested for >5,000-engineer orgs
  • Not the cheapest option (premium-but-fair positioning)
  • Some advanced PagerDuty features (deep AIOps event correlation) less mature
  • Series C-stage; commercial scale less proven than PagerDuty

Pricing tiers

public
  • Team
    Per user/month; basic incident management
    $19 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per user/month; full incident response + on-call
    $39 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, audit logs, SLAs, dedicated support
    Quote
Watch for
  • · On-Call (paging) priced as part of Pro+ tiers
  • · Workflows, Catalog included in Pro
  • · Annual contracts standard

Key features

  • +Slack-native incident declaration and management
  • +AI-suggested actions and triage
  • +AI-drafted postmortems
  • +On-Call paging with escalations
  • +Catalog (service ownership graph)
  • +Workflows (custom automation)
  • +Status pages
  • +Customizable severity levels
  • +Postmortem templates
250+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsDatadogSentryGrafanaJiraLinearGitHubPagerDuty (migration)Statuspage
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#3

Opsgenie

Atlassian-bundled paging in managed decline.

Founded 2012 · Sydney, Australia · public · 10–10,000 employees
G2 4.4 (880)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Opsgenie

Opsgenie was acquired by Atlassian in September 2018 for $295M and bundled with the Jira and Atlassian Cloud ecosystem. The product has historically been the second-tier alternative to PagerDuty with reasonable feature parity at meaningfully lower per-user pricing for Atlassian-anchored teams. The reality in 2026: Atlassian announced phased migration paths to Jira Service Management (JSM), and the standalone Opsgenie roadmap has visibly slowed since 2023. Opsgenie remains useful as a bundled alerting layer for teams already on JSM, but it is the textbook "managed decline" product in this category, buyers should weigh switching costs against the multi-year sunset risk. Not a 2026 default for new buyers; included here because of installed-base scale and continued Atlassian commitments.

Best for

Atlassian-anchored teams already on Jira / JSM who want bundled alerting and accept the multi-year migration trajectory toward JSM.

Worst for

High-velocity software shops (incident.io wins on velocity), greenfield buyers (PagerDuty or incident.io for active roadmap), or any team uncomfortable with Atlassian sunset signals.

Strengths

  • Tight integration with Jira, JSM, and Atlassian Cloud
  • Mature alerting and on-call scheduling
  • Per-user pricing meaningfully cheaper than PagerDuty
  • Strong existing customer base and integrations
  • Free tier for very small teams (up to 5 users)
  • Available in EU and US data residency

Weaknesses

  • Atlassian announced migration paths to JSM; standalone roadmap slowing
  • Product velocity has stalled since 2023
  • Customer churn to incident.io and JSM both
  • No genuine AI-incident-response features yet (vs incident.io, PagerDuty)
  • ChatOps integrations feel dated
  • Brand momentum visibly faded post-2022

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 5 users; basic alerting
    $0 /emp/mo
  • Essentials
    Per user/month; basic on-call
    $9 /emp/mo
  • Standard
    Per user/month; full incident management
    $19 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Per user/month; SSO, audit, advanced reporting
    $29 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · Atlassian sunset risk should be priced into multi-year contracts
  • · JSM bundle pricing differs from standalone Opsgenie
  • · Annual billing for published rates

Key features

  • +Alert routing and escalation
  • +On-call scheduling
  • +Incident response basics
  • +Postmortem templates
  • +Status pages (via Statuspage.io, separately)
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Atlassian Cloud integration
  • +~200 integrations
200+ integrations
JiraJira Service ManagementConfluenceSlackMicrosoft TeamsDatadogNew RelicSplunkAWS CloudWatch
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU, AU
#4

FireHydrant

Mid-market response orchestration with runbook depth.

Founded 2019 · Brooklyn, NY · private · 50–5,000 employees
G2 4.7 (240)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 /employee/mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit FireHydrant

FireHydrant is the mid-market response orchestration platform, founded 2019 in Brooklyn. The product's differentiator: depth of incident response runbooks and orchestration (auto-create Jira tickets, post status pages, kick off Slack channels, run remediation workflows) rather than just paging. Best fit for organizations 100-2,500 employees that have outgrown PagerDuty's alerting-first paradigm and want formalized incident response process. FireHydrant added Signals (their own paging product) in 2024 to compete head-to-head with incident.io On-Call. Trade-offs: brand awareness lower than incident.io, growth slower, and the response-orchestration depth that is the core differentiator can feel over-engineered for smaller teams.

Best for

Mid-market organizations (100-2,500 employees) formalizing incident response process beyond paging, who want runbook-driven orchestration as a first-class capability.

Worst for

Small teams under 50 engineers (orchestration is overkill, Spike.sh or Better Stack better), pure paging buyers (PagerDuty or Opsgenie better), or shops prioritizing AI velocity (incident.io wins).

Strengths

  • Best-in-class response orchestration runbooks
  • Works for organizations formalizing incident response process
  • Signals (paging) added 2024, full-stack incident platform
  • Status pages, postmortems, retros all native
  • Reliable mid-market positioning (200-2,500 employees)
  • Slack and Teams ChatOps integration mature

Weaknesses

  • Brand awareness lower than incident.io
  • Growth pace slower than incident.io
  • Response orchestration depth can feel over-engineered for smaller teams
  • AI features less mature than incident.io
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~150)
  • Pricing positioned mid-market but not the cheapest

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Starter
    Free for up to 10 responders
    $0 /emp/mo
  • Essentials
    Per user/month; basic incident management
    $20 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per user/month; full orchestration + Signals paging
    $36 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, advanced reporting, SLAs
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Signals (paging) included in Pro tier; separate add-on for Essentials
  • · Annual contracts at higher tiers

Key features

  • +Incident response runbooks
  • +Signals (paging and on-call)
  • +Status pages
  • +Postmortem and retro templates
  • +Service catalog (Functionality)
  • +Slack and Teams ChatOps
  • +Workflow automation
  • +Approximately 150 integrations
150+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsDatadogPagerDuty (migration)JiraGitHubStatuspageLinearSentry
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#5

Squadcast

India-built mid-market alternative at fairer pricing.

Founded 2017 · San Francisco, CA / Bengaluru, India · private · 20–5,000 employees
G2 4.6 (380)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Squadcast

Squadcast is the India-built incident management alternative, founded 2017 in Bengaluru with US headquarters in SF. The product covers the full incident lifecycle, alerting, on-call, incident response, postmortems, status pages, at meaningfully lower per-user pricing than PagerDuty (typically 40-60% cheaper at equivalent feature depth). Raised a Series B in 2023 from Battery Ventures and others. Best fit for cost-conscious mid-market (100-2,000 employees) wanting a full-stack incident platform without enterprise pricing. Trade-offs: brand awareness lower outside India and APAC, integration ecosystem smaller (~200), and AI features have shipped but trail incident.io in maturity.

Best for

Cost-conscious mid-market (100-2,000 employees) wanting full incident lifecycle at 40-60% PagerDuty pricing, especially India / APAC-anchored shops.

Worst for

Mega-enterprise (>10,000 users) needing battle-tested scale (PagerDuty), high-velocity shops prioritizing AI velocity (incident.io wins), or buyers requiring deepest integration count.

Strengths

  • 40-60% cheaper than PagerDuty at equivalent feature depth
  • Full incident lifecycle (alerting through postmortems)
  • India / APAC market leadership
  • Reliable Slack and Teams ChatOps integration
  • AI-driven runbook suggestions launched 2025
  • Series B-backed (Battery Ventures); financial stability
  • Status pages native

Weaknesses

  • Brand awareness lower outside India / APAC
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~200)
  • AI features less mature than incident.io
  • Customer support coverage variable in non-business-hours
  • Enterprise scale (>5,000 users) less battle-tested

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 10 users; basic features
    $0 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per user/month; basic incident management
    $13 /emp/mo
  • Premium
    Per user/month; full incident response
    $23 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, audit logs, SLAs
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for published rates
  • · Some advanced features locked to Premium+

Key features

  • +Alert routing and escalation
  • +On-call scheduling
  • +Incident response and runbooks
  • +Postmortems
  • +Status pages
  • +AI-driven runbook suggestions
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Slack and Teams ChatOps
  • +~200 integrations
200+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsDatadogNew RelicSplunkJiraGitHubAWS CloudWatchStatuspage
Geography
Global; strongest in India, APAC, US
#6

Rootly

Slack-native lightweight incident management.

Founded 2020 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50–5,000 employees
G2 4.8 (280)
Capterra 4.8
From $0 /employee/mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Rootly

Rootly is the Slack-native incident management platform, founded 2020 by ex-Instacart engineers. The product's defining bet: incidents happen in Slack, so the management layer should be Slack-first rather than a separate web UI. Workflows, runbooks, postmortems, and status pages are all driven from Slack slash commands. Best fit for engineering teams (50-2,000 engineers) that already live in Slack and want incident management to feel native to their existing communication surface. Rootly added an AI-driven incident summarizer in 2024 and an on-call paging product in 2025. Trade-offs: weaker outside Slack (web UI feels secondary), Microsoft Teams support exists but lags Slack, smaller integration ecosystem (~150), and competition with incident.io is direct and intense.

Best for

Engineering teams (50-2,000 engineers) deeply committed to Slack as primary communication surface, wanting Slack-native incident management without a separate web UI as the daily driver.

Worst for

Microsoft Teams-anchored shops (incident.io better Teams support), large enterprises (PagerDuty better scale), or buyers needing the broadest integration count.

Strengths

  • Slack-first workflow genuinely native
  • Made for engineering teams that live in Slack
  • AI-driven incident summarizer GA
  • On-call paging product launched 2025
  • Postmortems, runbooks, status pages all Slack-driven
  • Founder-led; strong VC backing (Renegade, Gradient)
  • Reasonable pricing for mid-market

Weaknesses

  • Weaker outside Slack (web UI secondary)
  • Microsoft Teams support lags Slack
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~150)
  • Direct competition with incident.io is intense
  • Enterprise scale less battle-tested
  • Brand awareness lower than PagerDuty / incident.io

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Starter
    Free for small teams; basic features
    $0 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per user/month; full incident management
    $18 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, audit, on-call paging, SLAs
    Quote
Watch for
  • · On-call paging product priced as Pro+ tier or Enterprise
  • · Annual contracts at Enterprise tier

Key features

  • +Slack-native incident declaration and management
  • +Workflows and runbooks via slash commands
  • +On-call paging (2025)
  • +AI-driven incident summarizer
  • +Postmortem templates
  • +Status pages
  • +Service catalog
  • +~150 integrations
150+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsDatadogPagerDuty (migration)JiraLinearGitHubSentryStatuspage
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#7

Better Stack

Uptime monitoring + on-call + status pages bundled for SMB SaaS.

Founded 2019 · Prague, Czech Republic · private · 5–500 employees
G2 4.8 (480)
Capterra 4.8
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Better Stack

Better Stack (formerly Better Uptime, renamed 2023 when the company unified Uptime, Logs, and Telemetry into one platform) is the SMB-focused bundle that combines uptime monitoring, on-call paging, status pages, and log management in a single product. Founded 2019 in Prague. Best fit for SMB SaaS teams (5-100 engineers) that want monitoring and incident management bundled without buying separate Datadog + PagerDuty + Statuspage tools. Trade-offs: not a full-stack incident management platform (lighter on incident response runbooks, postmortems vs FireHydrant or incident.io), best-fit narrowed below 100 engineers, and the bundle proposition stops being competitive at scale where best-of-breed wins.

Best for

SMB SaaS teams (5-100 engineers) wanting uptime monitoring + on-call paging + status pages bundled in a single product without buying separate best-of-breed tools.

Worst for

Mid-market and enterprise needing full incident response (incident.io / FireHydrant better), best-of-breed buyers (Datadog + PagerDuty better at scale), or shops needing deepest integration count.

Strengths

  • Uptime + on-call + status pages bundled in one product
  • Right call for SMB SaaS under 100 engineers
  • Generous free tier (10 monitors, basic on-call)
  • Modern UX consistently praised
  • European-built; GDPR-native
  • Founder-led; profitable; no PE pressure
  • Logs and telemetry product launched 2024

Weaknesses

  • Not a full incident management platform (lighter on runbooks, postmortems)
  • Best-fit narrows above 100 engineers
  • AI features less mature than incident.io
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~100)
  • Brand awareness primarily European

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    10 monitors; basic on-call
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Freelancer
    Per month; 50 monitors; basic on-call
    $24 /mo
  • Team
    Per month; 100 monitors; full on-call
    $49 /mo
  • Business
    Per month; 500 monitors; full incident management
    $159 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, SLAs, dedicated support
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Monitor overage pricing
  • · Logs ingestion priced separately
  • · Annual billing for discount

Key features

  • +Uptime monitoring (HTTP, ping, port, etc.)
  • +On-call paging and escalations
  • +Status pages
  • +Log management (Telemetry product)
  • +Heartbeat monitoring
  • +SSL and DNS monitoring
  • +Slack and Teams integration
  • +~100 integrations
100+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsDiscordDatadogAWS CloudWatchGitHubJiraZapier
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#8

Spike.sh

Affordable on-call and incident alerting for very small teams.

Founded 2018 · San Francisco, CA · private · 5–100 employees
G2 4.7 (180)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Spike.sh

Spike.sh is the budget-end on-call and incident alerting platform, founded 2018. The product's positioning is clear and narrow: lowest published pricing in the category ($9-$24/user/mo), basic but reliable on-call paging, and a target buyer that is replacing email-based alerts with their first real on-call tool. Best fit for very small teams (5-50 engineers) on tight budgets. Trade-offs: not a full incident management platform (lighter on incident response, postmortems, runbooks), AI features minimal, integration ecosystem narrow (~75), and the product stops scaling well above 100 engineers. Spike.sh is the right answer for "we need on-call paging and have $200/month to spend", and the wrong answer for almost everything else.

Best for

Very small teams (5-50 engineers) on tight budgets ($100-$500/mo) replacing email-based alerts with their first real on-call paging tool.

Worst for

Mid-market and enterprise (PagerDuty / incident.io better breadth), shops needing full incident response platform (FireHydrant / incident.io better), or anyone above 100 engineers.

Strengths

  • Lowest published pricing in category ($9-$24/user/mo)
  • Works for very small teams replacing email alerts
  • Clear, narrow positioning (paging + alerting, not full platform)
  • Free tier for very small teams (up to 5 users)
  • Reliable mobile push for paging
  • Bootstrapped; profitable; no PE pressure

Weaknesses

  • Not a full incident management platform
  • AI features minimal
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~75)
  • Stops scaling well above 100 engineers
  • Brand awareness very low
  • Customer support coverage limited (small team)

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 5 users; basic alerting
    $0 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per user/month; basic on-call
    $9 /emp/mo
  • Premium
    Per user/month; advanced on-call
    $18 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Per user/month; SSO, audit logs
    $24 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · Add-on for status pages
  • · Annual billing for published rates

Key features

  • +Alert routing and escalation
  • +On-call scheduling
  • +Mobile push paging
  • +Slack and Teams integration
  • +Basic incident timeline
  • +Status pages add-on
  • +~75 integrations
75+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsDatadogNew RelicAWS CloudWatchGitHubJiraZapier
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#9

AlertOps

Mid-market with strong rule engine and routing flexibility.

Founded 2014 · Bloomingdale, IL · private · 50–5,000 employees
G2 4.6 (240)
Capterra 4.7
From $9 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit AlertOps

AlertOps is the quiet but capable mid-market alternative, founded 2014. The product's differentiator: a strong rule engine and routing flexibility that genuinely competes with PagerDuty for organizations with complex alert routing logic across many teams and on-call rotations. Best fit for mid-market (200-2,500 employees) wanting PagerDuty-like routing depth without PagerDuty pricing. Trade-offs: brand awareness very low (rarely on shortlists), UX feels older than incident.io or Rootly, AI features less mature than the leaders, and growth has been slower than the broader category. AlertOps is the answer to "we need routing flexibility, we are not on Slack-first, and we want fairer pricing than PagerDuty", a narrower but real wedge.

Best for

Mid-market (200-2,500 employees) with complex routing logic across many teams who want PagerDuty-like routing depth at fairer pricing, especially traditional ITops and NOC environments.

Worst for

High-velocity software shops (incident.io wins on velocity), Slack-native teams (Rootly better), or buyers prioritizing modern UX over routing depth.

Strengths

  • Strong rule engine and routing flexibility
  • Competes with PagerDuty on routing depth
  • Fairer pricing than PagerDuty at equivalent depth
  • Mature on-call scheduling and escalation
  • Reliable for traditional ITops and NOC environments
  • No PE pressure; founder-led

Weaknesses

  • Brand awareness very low (rarely on shortlists)
  • UX feels older than incident.io or Rootly
  • AI features less mature than leaders
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~150)
  • Growth pace slower than broader category
  • ChatOps integration feels secondary

Pricing tiers

public
  • Standard
    Per user/month; basic on-call
    $9 /emp/mo
  • Premium
    Per user/month; full incident management
    $19 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Per user/month; advanced rule engine, SSO
    $27 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for published rates
  • · Add-on for advanced reporting

Key features

  • +Strong rule engine for complex routing
  • +On-call scheduling and escalation
  • +Incident management
  • +Postmortem templates
  • +Slack and Teams integration
  • +Reliable mobile apps
  • +~150 integrations
150+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsDatadogNew RelicSplunkServiceNowJiraAWS CloudWatch
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU
#10

ilert

German-built ChatOps-first incident management for European mid-market.

Founded 2013 · Cologne, Germany · private · 20–2,000 employees
G2 4.7 (180)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit ilert

ilert is the German-built incident management platform, founded 2013 in Cologne. The product's positioning: ChatOps-first workflow, GDPR-native compliance with EU data residency, and strong fit for European mid-market organizations with data residency or sovereignty requirements. Covers alerting, on-call, incident response, status pages, and added an AI assistant in 2025. Best fit for European mid-market (50-2,000 employees) prioritizing data residency, GDPR compliance, and ChatOps. Trade-offs: brand awareness very low outside Europe, integration ecosystem smaller (~120), AI features behind incident.io, and the product stops being the obvious choice for North American buyers without data residency needs.

Best for

European mid-market (50-2,000 employees) with GDPR, EU data residency, or data sovereignty requirements wanting ChatOps-first incident management from a European vendor.

Worst for

North American buyers without data residency requirements (incident.io / PagerDuty better recognition), shops needing deepest integration ecosystem, or AI-velocity buyers (incident.io wins).

Strengths

  • ChatOps-first workflow (Slack, Teams, Mattermost)
  • GDPR-native; EU data residency
  • Made for European mid-market with sovereignty requirements
  • Founder-led; no PE pressure
  • Mature alerting and on-call scheduling
  • AI assistant launched 2025
  • Reasonable pricing for mid-market

Weaknesses

  • Brand awareness very low outside Europe
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~120)
  • AI features behind incident.io
  • North American support coverage limited
  • Enterprise scale less battle-tested
  • Marketing presence limited outside DACH region

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 5 users; basic alerting
    $0 /emp/mo
  • Pro
    Per user/month; basic on-call
    $9 /emp/mo
  • Premium
    Per user/month; full incident management
    $21 /emp/mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; SSO, audit, on-prem option
    Quote
Watch for
  • · On-prem deployment available at Enterprise tier (rare for category)
  • · Annual billing for discount

Key features

  • +Alert routing and escalation
  • +On-call scheduling
  • +Incident response and runbooks
  • +Postmortems
  • +Status pages
  • +AI assistant
  • +ChatOps (Slack, Teams, Mattermost)
  • +~120 integrations
  • +On-prem deployment available
120+ integrations
SlackMicrosoft TeamsMattermostDatadogGrafanaPrometheusJiraGitHubAWS CloudWatch
Geography
Global; strongest in DACH (Germany, Austria, Switzerland), broader EU; data centers in EU, US

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

PagerDuty vs incident.io for a Canadian Series C SaaS?
PagerDuty wins on integration breadth (Datadog, New Relic, Sentry, Splunk, ServiceNow native), enterprise procurement readiness (OSFI B-13 track record), Canadian residency at enterprise tier and on-call scheduling depth. incident.io wins on Slack-native incident response experience, post-incident review automation and faster time-to-deploy for product-led teams. For a Canadian Series C SaaS planning to scale past 200 engineers and considering enterprise sales, PagerDuty is the lower-friction default. For a Series B-C SaaS heavy on Slack with relatively small platform team, incident.io's Slack-native UX often wins.
Does OSFI B-13 require specific incident management tooling at Canadian banks?
OSFI B-13 does not mandate a specific tool but requires Canadian federally regulated FIs to report technology and cyber risk incidents to OSFI within reasonable delay (interpreted as 24-72 hours for material incidents). Incident management tooling must support consistent severity classification, audit trail, post-incident analysis and root-cause documentation. Most Canadian Big 5 banks use PagerDuty for on-call and notification combined with ServiceNow IT Operations Management for incident lifecycle and OSFI notification workflow. The combination satisfies B-13 audit requirements. Opsgenie is the alternative at banks heavy on Atlassian.
Does Bill C-26 affect incident management tooling?
Yes for designated operators. Bill C-26 (Critical Cyber Systems Protection Act) phases in from 2026 with cyber incident reporting to Canadian Centre for Cyber Security (CCCS) within 72 hours for designated operators in telco (Bell, Rogers, Telus, Videotron), finance (Big 5 banks), energy (Enbridge, TransCanada, others) and transport. Incident management tooling must capture cyber incident details supporting the C-26 report including incident timeline, affected systems, threat actor indicators where known and mitigation actions. PagerDuty, FireHydrant and ServiceNow ITOM all support C-26-compatible incident records.
PagerDuty vs incident.io, which one in 2026?
PagerDuty if you need the broadest integration ecosystem (700 vs 250), have battle-tested enterprise scale requirements (>5,000 engineers), or are already deeply embedded with PagerDuty AIOps and runbook automation. incident.io if you are a high-velocity software shop, want Slack-native AI-first workflow, value product velocity over breadth, and are willing to pay fair-but-not-cheap pricing for product quality. The 2024-2026 churn pattern is real, high-velocity shops are leaving PagerDuty for incident.io, while large traditional enterprises are largely staying. At 200-2,000 engineers, evaluate both seriously; at >5,000 engineers, PagerDuty incumbency advantages still matter.
How much should I budget for incident management software?
For startups (under 25 engineers): Free tiers (Better Stack, Spike.sh, Opsgenie) or $200-$1,000/mo. 25-100 engineers: $5K-$25K annually (Squadcast, Better Stack, Spike.sh). 100-500: $25K-$150K (incident.io, FireHydrant, Rootly, PagerDuty Professional). 500-2,000: $150K-$500K (PagerDuty Business, incident.io Pro). 2,000+: $500K-$3M+ (PagerDuty Enterprise, incident.io Enterprise). The biggest cost variable is per-user pricing, at 1,000 engineers, a $20/user/mo difference is $240K annually.
Is Opsgenie still a safe pick given Atlassian sunset signals?
Only as a managed-decline pick. Atlassian announced phased migration paths to Jira Service Management in 2025, the standalone Opsgenie roadmap has visibly slowed since 2023, and customer churn to incident.io and JSM is accelerating. Opsgenie still works and Atlassian has not announced a sunset date, but new buyers in 2026 should weigh the multi-year migration risk and likely end up either embracing JSM (if Atlassian-anchored) or evaluating incident.io / PagerDuty (if not).
What is ChatOps and why does it matter for incident management?
ChatOps is the practice of running incident response inside chat tools (Slack, Microsoft Teams) rather than separate web UIs, declaring incidents, paging on-call, running runbooks, and writing postmortems all from chat slash commands. It matters in 2026 because engineering teams already live in Slack/Teams, and switching surfaces during a high-stress incident adds coordination overhead. incident.io and Rootly were built ChatOps-first; PagerDuty added ChatOps later and the integration feels more bolted-on. If your team uses Slack heavily, ChatOps quality should weigh meaningfully in your evaluation.
How does AI fit into incident management in 2026?
In 2026, AI in incident management means: (1) Auto-triage, LLMs read incoming alerts, group related ones, and suggest severity (incident.io, Rootly, PagerDuty Bits AI). (2) Suggested runbooks, AI surfaces relevant past incidents and remediation steps (incident.io, Squadcast). (3) AI-drafted postmortems, saves 1-3 hours per incident (incident.io, Rootly, FireHydrant, Squadcast, ilert). (4) Natural-language incident search, "show me all auth-related incidents in the last quarter" (incident.io, PagerDuty). incident.io is currently the AI-velocity leader; PagerDuty has caught up on the feature checklist but velocity perception still favors incident.io.
Should I use my APM/monitoring vendor's built-in incident features or a dedicated tool?
Dedicated tools win for organizations with non-trivial on-call complexity. APM-vendor incident features (Datadog Incident Management, New Relic, Sentry) handle basic alerting and incident timeline, but lack the depth of escalation policies, runbook automation, status pages, and postmortem workflow that dedicated platforms provide. Rule of thumb: under 25 engineers and one monitoring vendor, the built-in features may suffice. Above 25 engineers or with multiple monitoring sources, a dedicated tool (PagerDuty, incident.io, Squadcast) repays itself in a month.
How long does incident management implementation take?
Spike.sh, Better Stack, Squadcast: hours to days. Rootly, incident.io: 1-2 weeks for basic deployment. PagerDuty, FireHydrant, AlertOps, Opsgenie: 2-4 weeks for full on-call schedules, escalation policies, and integrations. Enterprise PagerDuty rollouts with AIOps and Rundeck automation: 4-12 weeks. Implementation depth scales with on-call complexity and number of monitoring sources you integrate.
Can I evaluate via free trial?
Free tiers permanent: Better Stack (10 monitors), Spike.sh (5 users), Opsgenie (5 users), Squadcast (10 users), incident.io (Starter tier), ilert (5 users), FireHydrant (10 responders). Free trial 14 days: PagerDuty, incident.io, Squadcast, AlertOps, ilert. We strongly recommend running a 2-week pilot with real on-call shifts and at least one simulated incident, paging reliability and ChatOps fluency are hard to evaluate on a sales call.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Incident Management & On-Call Software ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-27. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.