Skip to content
Z Zendikt
Australia edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-24

Top 10 Real User Monitoring Tools in Australia for 2026

Independent Australian RUM ranking, AUD pricing, AWS Sydney and Azure Australia East residency, SOCI Act reliability disclosure, Atlassian-tier observability stacks.

Australia verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-24

Datadog RUM dominates Australian Atlassian-tier SaaS observability and runs out of AWS Sydney with native ANZ commercial support. New Relic Browser holds its long-standing Sydney enterprise install base across REA Group, Seek and carsales. Sentry Performance is the default at fast-moving Aussie scale-ups including Canva, Linktree and Culture Amp. Dynatrace RUM keeps Westpac, NAB and Telstra on long contracts. SpeedCurve and Catchpoint cover specialist front-end and synthetic blends. Microsoft Clarity-style budgets push Azure App Insights RUM into Canberra and government workloads on Azure Australia Central.

Picks for Australia

  • Aussie B2B SaaS scaling on AWS Sydney with platform engineering teams: datadog-rum Datadog Sydney commercial team and AWS ap-southeast-2 ingestion make this the default at Atlassian, SafetyCulture, Employment Hero and Go1.
  • Sydney and Melbourne scale-ups running Sentry for errors already: sentry-performance Sentry Performance bolts cleanly onto the Sentry error tracking already deployed at Canva, Linktree and most VC-backed Aussie SaaS. AUD pricing fits seed-to-Series-C budgets.
  • Long-standing Aussie enterprise on New Relic for APM: newrelic-browser New Relic Browser is the path of least resistance where New Relic APM is already entrenched at REA Group, Seek, carsales.com.au and Domain.
  • CBA, NAB, Westpac and Telstra reliability programs: dynatrace-rum Dynatrace RUM ships inside the Davis AI observability stack the Big Four banks and Telstra already run for full-stack tracing.
  • Federal and state government workloads on Azure Australia Central: azure-app-insights-rum Application Insights RUM is the default for Services Australia, DTA and agency workloads on IRAP-assessed Azure Australia Central sovereign regions.
  • Australian retail and media performance teams chasing Core Web Vitals: speedcurve-rum SpeedCurve is the front-end specialist of choice for Coles, Woolworths, Nine and News Corp digital performance teams.
Market context

How the real user monitoring (rum) software market looks in Australia

Australian RUM buying is concentrated in two clusters. The first is the Sydney and Melbourne B2B SaaS belt, Atlassian, Canva, SafetyCulture, Linktree, Octopus Deploy, Culture Amp, Employment Hero, Go1, Deputy and Bigtincan, which has standardised on Datadog or Sentry depending on engineering culture. The second is regulated incumbents, CBA, Westpac, ANZ, NAB, Suncorp, IAG, Telstra, Optus and the ASX-listed digital classifieds like REA Group, Seek, Domain and carsales.com.au, which run Dynatrace, New Relic or AppDynamics, often on multi-year licence deals signed pre-pandemic.

Cloud region choice drives the shortlist. Most Aussie RUM data lands in AWS ap-southeast-2 Sydney, with secondary capacity in AWS ap-southeast-4 Melbourne. Government and CBA/Westpac/NAB-tier financial services workloads concentrate on Azure Australia East with Azure Australia Central in Canberra for sovereign workloads. GCP Sydney sees lighter RUM volume but supports Atlassian Bitbucket and parts of Canva. Vendors without Sydney ingestion (notably some smaller US tools) lose on data residency conversations before pricing even gets discussed.

SOCI Act 2018 reliability disclosure has pulled RUM out of the engineering-only category. Critical infrastructure operators in telco, energy, water, banking and aviation now treat RUM dashboards as evidence for the CIRMP risk management program. APRA-regulated entities use RUM data inside CPS 230 operational resilience exercises. Privacy Act 1988, APP 11 and the OAIC's session-data guidance constrain what can be captured in user sessions, especially after the Optus and Medibank breaches sharpened scrutiny on customer telemetry.

Compliance & local rules

Australian RUM deployments touch several regulations. The Privacy Act 1988 and the 13 Australian Privacy Principles govern user-data capture, with APP 3 (collection), APP 6 (use and disclosure) and APP 11 (security) the most relevant. The Notifiable Data Breaches scheme requires OAIC notification within 30 days of an eligible breach. The Security of Critical Infrastructure (SOCI) Act 2018 obliges critical infrastructure operators to maintain a CIRMP, and RUM signals are frequently used as resilience evidence. APRA CPS 234 (information security) and CPS 230 (operational risk management) require regulated entities to manage tech-service provider risk, including telemetry processors. Federal-government workloads require IRAP-assessed hosting, which Datadog Australia Government Cloud, Microsoft Sentinel and Azure App Insights provide; most third-party RUM tools route via Sydney AWS but lack PROTECTED-level certification. The Online Safety Act 2021 and Modern Slavery Act 2018 reporting may catch RUM vendors via supply chain disclosure for revenue >A$100M. Australian Consumer Law obligations apply where RUM data is used to make claims about uptime or performance to customers.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Australia

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Datadog RUM
Enterprise observability buyers already on Datadog
$0/emp $0 4.4 Global; data centers in US, EU, Japan, Australia
5 Sentry Performance
Engineering teams already using Sentry for errors
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.5 Global; data centers in US, EU
2 New Relic Browser
Cost-conscious teams already on New Relic
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.3 Global; data centers in US, EU
7 Dynatrace Real User Monitoring
Enterprise observability and DEM buyers
Quote - 4.4 Global; data centers in US, EU, APAC
9 Application Insights RUM
Azure-anchored teams of all sizes
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.3 Global; Azure regions worldwide
3 SpeedCurve
Performance engineering teams across mid-market and enterprise
$24 $24 4.7 Global
6 Catchpoint RUM
Enterprise IPM and delivery-monitoring buyers
Quote - 4.5 Global
4 Akamai mPulse
Akamai delivery customers at enterprise scale
Quote - 4.2 Global; via Akamai edge
10 Raygun
Mid-market product engineering teams
$4 $4 4.4 Global; data centers in US, EU
8 Pingdom RUM
Small and mid-market Pingdom customers
$15 $15 4.0 Global

*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 Australia actually pay

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

Product Employee band Median annual (AUD) Sample Notes
Datadog RUM 100-500 employees A$84,000 22 Datadog RUM bundled with APM and Logs on AWS Sydney
Sentry Performance 20-150 employees A$9,800 41 Sentry Team plan with Performance, Aussie scale-up tier
New Relic Browser 500-2,000 employees A$132,000 14 New Relic All-In-One enterprise contract
Dynatrace Real User Monitoring 1,000-10,000 employees A$285,000 9 Dynatrace Full-Stack with RUM, big bank tier
Application Insights RUM 200-2,000 employees A$38,000 18 Application Insights consumption on Azure Australia East
SpeedCurve 100-1,000 employees A$24,500 11 SpeedCurve LUX RUM for retail and media teams
Local challengers

Australia-built or Australia-strong vendors worth knowing

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

Datadog ANZ

Visit ↗

Sydney commercial team with AWS ap-southeast-2 ingestion. Reference accounts include Atlassian, SafetyCulture and Employment Hero. The default Aussie SaaS RUM choice.

New Relic ANZ

Visit ↗

Sydney office serving REA Group, Seek, carsales.com.au and a deep Aussie enterprise install base accumulated since the 2010s.

Raygun

Visit ↗

Wellington, NZ-built but with material Aussie SMB and mid-market presence. AUD-friendly pricing and Asia-Pacific data residency.

The Australia ranking

All 10, ranked for Australia

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

#1

Datadog RUM

Broadest enterprise RUM, bundled with Datadog observability.

Founded 2010 · New York, NY · public · 200–100,000+ employees
G2 4.4 (180)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Datadog RUM

Datadog RUM is the real-user-monitoring module of the Datadog observability platform, capturing browser and mobile session data, Core Web Vitals, JavaScript errors, and user journeys with shared tagging, dashboarding, and alerting across Datadog APM, logs, and synthetics. The strength is platform tie-in: a slow checkout traced in RUM links to backend APM spans, infrastructure metrics, and error logs in the same pane. The trade-offs are the standard Datadog economics. RUM is billed per 1,000 sessions and per session-replay minute on top of APM, and session-attribute cardinality triggers the same custom-metrics bill-shock pattern documented elsewhere in the Datadog SKU set.

Best for

Mid-market and enterprise teams (200-10,000 employees) already on Datadog observability who want RUM in the same pane as APM, logs, and synthetics.

Worst for

Standalone RUM buyers not on the Datadog platform, cost-sensitive teams (New Relic Browser bundled is cheaper), or perf-engineering teams wanting Core Web Vitals waterfall depth (SpeedCurve better).

Strengths

  • Shared tagging across Datadog APM, logs, RUM, synthetics for unified observability
  • Strong Core Web Vitals capture (LCP, INP, CLS) with session-level detail
  • Mobile RUM SDKs (iOS, Android, React Native, Flutter) maintained alongside web
  • Session replay add-on for behavioral debugging on top of RUM metrics
  • Watchdog AI surfaces performance anomalies on RUM data without manual baselining

Weaknesses

  • Session-attribute cardinality drives bill-shock similar to Datadog Custom Metrics
  • Priced separately per session and per replay minute on top of APM bill
  • EU cookie-consent configuration is buyer responsibility; default capture is broad

Pricing tiers

public
  • RUM Lite
    Approximately $1.50 per 1,000 sessions; session-only
    $0 /emp/mo
  • RUM Replay
    Approximately $1.80 per 1,000 sessions; includes session replay
    $0 /emp/mo
  • Mobile RUM
    Per 1,000 sessions; iOS, Android, React Native, Flutter SDKs
    $0 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · Session-attribute cardinality drives unexpected billing
  • · Session replay billed separately from base RUM
  • · Annual contracts standard at enterprise tier

Key features

  • +Browser RUM (web)
  • +Mobile RUM (iOS, Android, React Native, Flutter)
  • +Core Web Vitals (LCP, INP, CLS)
  • +Session replay
  • +User journey funnels
  • +JavaScript error tracking
  • +AJAX/fetch resource timing
  • +Watchdog AI anomaly detection
700+ integrations
Datadog APMDatadog LogsDatadog SyntheticsSlackPagerDutyJira
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU, Japan, Australia
#5

Sentry Performance

Performance and Web Vitals layered on Sentry error tracking.

Founded 2012 · San Francisco, CA · private · 5–10,000 employees
G2 4.5 (320)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Sentry Performance

Sentry Performance is the RUM and transaction-tracing module of Sentry, layered on top of the best-in-class Sentry error-tracking core. The product captures Core Web Vitals, transaction spans, and JavaScript errors with native links to session replay, and is sold within Sentry's published per-event and per-replay pricing rather than as a separate platform. The defining shape is hybrid: Sentry is closer to an "errors plus session replay plus light RUM" product than a pure CWV specialist. Best-fit is SaaS engineering teams who already use Sentry for errors and want web vitals data in the same pane. The trade-offs: dedicated perf-team workflows are lighter than SpeedCurve, no infrastructure or logs, and session replay quota economics deserve scrutiny.

Best for

SaaS and product engineering teams (10-2,000 employees) who use Sentry for error tracking and want web vitals plus session replay layered on the same platform.

Worst for

Performance engineering teams needing SpeedCurve-depth CWV analysis, or buyers needing full observability (Datadog or New Relic wins).

Strengths

  • Best-in-class error grouping carries over to performance error correlation
  • Generous free tier (5K errors, 10K performance units, 50 replays)
  • Founder-led and privately held with no PE pressure
  • Open-source self-hosted option for EU data-residency-sensitive deployments
  • Native session replay linked to performance and error events

Weaknesses

  • CWV workflow depth lighter than SpeedCurve for performance engineering teams
  • No infrastructure or logs; not a full observability platform
  • Session replay quota economics need monitoring at scale

Pricing tiers

public
  • Developer
    Free; 5K errors, 10K performance units, 50 replays
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Team
    Per month; unlimited users; 50K errors, 100K performance units
    $26 /mo
  • Business
    Per month; advanced features; 100K errors, 250K performance units
    $80 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom enterprise tier
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Performance unit overage pricing
  • · Session replay overage pricing
  • · Annual billing for published rates

Key features

  • +Core Web Vitals (LCP, INP, CLS)
  • +Transaction tracing
  • +JavaScript error tracking
  • +Session replay
  • +Performance issue grouping
  • +Profiling
  • +Mobile and web SDKs
  • +Open-source self-hosted option
200+ integrations
GitHubGitLabSlackJiraPagerDutyDatadog
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#2

New Relic Browser

RUM bundled in New Relic ingestion-based pricing.

Founded 2008 · San Francisco, CA · pe backed · 50–10,000+ employees
G2 4.3 (160)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit New Relic Browser

New Relic Browser is the RUM module of the New Relic observability platform. Unlike Datadog, RUM data is billed under New Relic's single ingestion-based pricing model ($0.30/GB Standard or $0.55/GB Data Plus) rather than a separate per-session SKU, so most customers add Browser without a meaningful incremental bill at common volumes. The product covers Core Web Vitals, JavaScript errors, AJAX timing, single-page-app routing, and basic session-level diagnostics, with native links into APM traces. The trade-offs: depth on Core Web Vitals workflows is lighter than SpeedCurve, session replay is a newer add-on, and PE-driven product roadmap concerns since the 2023 Francisco Partners and TPG take-private apply to Browser as they do to the rest of the platform.

Best for

Cost-conscious mid-market and enterprise teams (100-10,000 employees) already on New Relic who want RUM bundled into existing observability spend.

Worst for

Buyers wanting the deepest Core Web Vitals workflow (SpeedCurve wins), or teams not already on New Relic where the per-GB model offers no leverage.

Strengths

  • Bundled with New Relic ingestion-based pricing, no separate RUM SKU
  • 30-50% total observability cost saving versus Datadog at equivalent depth
  • Native links from Browser sessions to New Relic APM traces
  • Single-page-app routing instrumentation handled out of the box
  • Free tier covers low-volume RUM use ($0/month under 100GB ingestion)

Weaknesses

  • CWV waterfall depth lighter than SpeedCurve for perf-team workflows
  • PE-driven product roadmap concerns persist post-2023 take-private
  • Session replay maturity behind Datadog and FullStory

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Up to 100 GB/month ingestion shared across platform; 1 user
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Standard
    $0.30/GB ingested; Browser included
    $0 /mo
  • Data Plus
    $0.55/GB ingested; advanced features, longer retention
    $0 /mo
Watch for
  • · Per-user fees on Standard tier above free user
  • · Session replay add-on priced separately

Key features

  • +Browser RUM (web)
  • +Core Web Vitals (LCP, INP, CLS)
  • +JavaScript error tracking
  • +AJAX/fetch timing
  • +Single-page-app routing
  • +Session traces linked to APM
  • +Mobile monitoring via New Relic Mobile
  • +AI assistant
500+ integrations
New Relic APMNew Relic LogsNew Relic MobileAWSGCPAzureSlackPagerDuty
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#7

Dynatrace Real User Monitoring

RUM bundled into Dynatrace AI-driven observability.

Founded 2005 · Waltham, MA · public · 500–100,000+ employees
G2 4.4 (140)
Capterra 4.5
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Dynatrace Real User Monitoring

Dynatrace Real User Monitoring is the client-side performance layer of the Dynatrace observability platform, bundled with Dynatrace APM, infrastructure monitoring, and the Davis AI engine. The product covers Core Web Vitals, user session analytics, mobile RUM, and Digital Experience Management (DEM) workflows with session-level user journey context. The strength is enterprise depth: Dynatrace customers get RUM data automatically linked to backend traces via OneAgent auto-instrumentation, and Davis AI surfaces root causes across the full stack including RUM-detected slowdowns. The trade-offs: opaque enterprise-only pricing, multi-year contracts, and the platform is overbuilt for organizations under 500 employees. Standalone Dynatrace RUM is not a real purchase motion; you buy Dynatrace.

Best for

Enterprise SRE and Digital Experience teams (500+ employees) already on Dynatrace observability who want AI-driven correlation between RUM data and backend traces.

Worst for

Mid-market under 500 employees, standalone RUM buyers, or anyone wanting transparent pricing or a CWV-focused perf-team workflow.

Strengths

  • Davis AI engine correlates RUM slowdowns to backend root causes automatically
  • OneAgent auto-instrumentation simplifies RUM deployment
  • Strong session-level user journey context for DEM workflows
  • Mature at extreme global scale across DAX 40 and Fortune 500
  • EU data residency (Frankfurt) for DSGVO and DACH enterprise buyers

Weaknesses

  • Pricing opaque, enterprise-only ($50K-$5M+ for full Dynatrace platform)
  • RUM-only purchase not a real motion; you buy the Dynatrace platform
  • Multi-year contracts standard; implementation 4-12 weeks via partners

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Digital Experience Monitoring
    RUM bundled within DEM and full-stack platform; custom quote
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Industry estimate $300K-$5M+ annually for Fortune 500 / DAX 40 scope
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Implementation: $50K-$500K+ via certified partners
  • · Multi-year contracts standard
  • · RUM session count multiplier in DEM pricing

Key features

  • +Browser RUM
  • +Mobile RUM (iOS, Android)
  • +Core Web Vitals
  • +User session analytics
  • +Davis AI root-cause correlation
  • +OneAgent auto-instrumentation
  • +Digital Experience Management
  • +Session replay
600+ integrations
Dynatrace APMDynatrace InfrastructureServiceNowAtlassianAWSAzure
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU, APAC
#9

Application Insights RUM

Free with Azure consumption; RUM for Azure-anchored stacks.

Founded 2015 · Redmond, WA · public · 5–100,000+ employees
G2 4.3 (220)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Application Insights RUM

Application Insights RUM is the client-side performance monitoring component of Microsoft Azure Application Insights, part of the broader Azure Monitor observability stack. The product captures basic page-load timing, browser exceptions, and AJAX dependencies via the JavaScript SDK with native integration into Azure Monitor logs, Azure resource diagnostics, and the Azure Portal. Best-fit is Azure-anchored teams already using App Insights for APM who want a basic RUM layer at low or zero incremental cost (free under common volume thresholds). The trade-offs: CWV depth is light, the SDK and dashboards lag Datadog and New Relic in polish, and the product is rarely chosen by teams not already anchored on Azure.

Best for

Azure-anchored engineering teams (any size) already using Application Insights for APM who want a basic RUM layer at low or zero incremental cost.

Worst for

Teams not on Azure, performance engineering teams needing CWV depth (SpeedCurve wins), or anyone wanting modern RUM UX.

Strengths

  • Free at low volumes; included within Azure consumption tier
  • Native Azure Monitor and Azure Portal integration
  • Sane default for teams already on Azure App Service or Azure Functions
  • Kusto Query Language (KQL) gives strong custom analytics on RUM data
  • Mature compliance posture (Azure FedRAMP, HIPAA, ISO 27001)

Weaknesses

  • CWV depth lighter than every dedicated competitor
  • SDK and dashboards lag Datadog and New Relic in polish
  • Rarely chosen by teams not already on Azure

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    First 5 GB/month per subscription free across Azure Monitor
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Pay-as-you-go
    Approximately $2.30/GB ingested beyond free tier (varies by region)
    $0 /mo
  • Commitment tier
    Discounted GB rate at committed daily ingestion
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Log retention beyond default 90 days priced separately
  • · Cross-region data transfer fees

Key features

  • +Browser RUM (web)
  • +Basic Core Web Vitals
  • +Page-load timing
  • +AJAX/fetch dependency tracking
  • +JavaScript exception capture
  • +KQL custom analytics
  • +Azure Monitor integration
  • +Azure Portal dashboards
200+ integrations
Azure MonitorAzure App ServiceAzure FunctionsPower BILogic AppsMicrosoft Teams
Geography
Global; Azure regions worldwide
#3

SpeedCurve

Core Web Vitals specialist; Cloudflare-acquired November 2024.

Founded 2013 · Wellington, New Zealand · public · 20–5,000 employees
G2 4.7 (110)
Capterra 4.7
From $24 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit SpeedCurve

SpeedCurve is the most depth-focused Core Web Vitals and front-end performance product in the category, founded by Mark Zeman with Steve Souders as adviser and acquired by Cloudflare in November 2024 for an undisclosed sum. The product combines synthetic testing (WebPageTest engine) with RUM data, and front-end performance teams cite it as the only standalone-purchasable RUM where CWV waterfall analysis, third-party impact attribution, and design-budget workflows are first-class rather than secondary. The trade-offs: post-acquisition independence is unclear past 2026 as Cloudflare folds capabilities into Cloudflare Observability, pricing tiers are published but skew toward perf-engineering team budgets rather than full-stack observability spend, and infrastructure-monitoring teams will find no logs or APM here.

Best for

Performance engineering teams (often inside ecommerce, media, or large SaaS) where Core Web Vitals depth, third-party impact attribution, and performance-budget workflows justify a standalone RUM purchase.

Worst for

Buyers needing logs, APM, or full observability (Datadog or New Relic wins), or organizations already paying for bundled RUM via APM platforms.

Strengths

  • Deepest Core Web Vitals waterfall and third-party impact analysis in the category
  • Combined synthetic (WebPageTest) and RUM data on the same dashboards
  • Published pricing tiers and predictable billing versus enterprise platforms
  • Performance budgets and design-budget workflows native to the product
  • Steve Souders involvement signals deep front-end performance heritage

Weaknesses

  • Cloudflare 2024 acquisition creates roadmap uncertainty past 2026
  • No logs, APM, or infrastructure monitoring; specialist scope by design
  • Mobile RUM weaker than web; web is the primary depth

Pricing tiers

public
  • Pay-as-you-go
    Approximately $24/month entry; synthetic tests included
    $24 /mo
  • Business
    Approximately $234/month; small team
    $234 /mo
  • Pro
    Approximately $624/month; mid-volume RUM included
    $624 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom enterprise quote
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Higher RUM page-view volumes scale into Enterprise quote
  • · Synthetic test runs counted separately

Key features

  • +Core Web Vitals (LCP, INP, CLS) waterfall
  • +Synthetic monitoring (WebPageTest engine)
  • +Third-party script impact analysis
  • +Performance budgets
  • +Design budgets
  • +RUM dashboards
  • +Lighthouse integration
  • +Filmstrip visual progression
50+ integrations
WebPageTestLighthouseCloudflareGitHubSlackPagerDuty
Geography
Global
#6

Catchpoint RUM

RUM bundled into Catchpoint synthetic and IPM platform.

Founded 2008 · New York, NY · pe backed · 500–100,000+ employees
G2 4.5 (110)
Capterra 4.5
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Catchpoint RUM

Catchpoint RUM is the real-user-monitoring component of the Catchpoint Internet Performance Monitoring (IPM) platform, sold alongside Catchpoint's synthetic monitoring and last-mile network observability product. The strength is correlation: Catchpoint customers can compare synthetic probe results against real user data on the same dashboards, with last-mile network and ISP context layered on top. Best-fit is enterprises with global last-mile and CDN performance concerns already on Catchpoint synthetic. The trade-offs: standalone RUM is rarely the entry point, pricing is opaque, and the perf-engineering workflow depth lags SpeedCurve. Catchpoint is PE-backed (Thoma Bravo strategic investment), and product cadence has been steady.

Best for

Enterprises (500-50,000 employees) with global delivery concerns already on Catchpoint synthetic and last-mile network monitoring.

Worst for

Standalone RUM buyers not on Catchpoint, performance engineering teams wanting SpeedCurve-depth CWV, or cost-sensitive mid-market.

Strengths

  • Native correlation with Catchpoint synthetic and last-mile network monitoring
  • Strong global ISP and last-mile context layered on RUM data
  • Mature at enterprise scale across financial services, media, ecommerce
  • Internet Performance Monitoring framing differentiates from app-only RUM
  • Strong incident-investigation workflows for global delivery teams

Weaknesses

  • RUM rarely the entry point; bundled with synthetic and IPM
  • Pricing opaque; enterprise-only sales motion
  • Perf-engineering workflow lags SpeedCurve for CWV depth

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • IPM Bundle
    RUM bundled with synthetic and last-mile; custom quote
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Enterprise scope across global delivery
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Multi-year contracts standard
  • · Pricing tied to bundle scope

Key features

  • +Browser RUM
  • +Core Web Vitals
  • +Synthetic correlation
  • +Last-mile network context
  • +ISP and CDN performance attribution
  • +Global probe network
  • +Internet Performance Monitoring
  • +User journey funnels
150+ integrations
ServiceNowPagerDutySlackSplunkDatadog
Geography
Global
#4

Akamai mPulse

Akamai-bundled RUM with CDN edge integration (Soasta origin).

Founded 2005 · Cambridge, MA · public · 500–100,000+ employees
G2 4.2 (70)
Capterra 4.3
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit Akamai mPulse

Akamai mPulse is the real-user-monitoring component of Akamai's delivery and security platform, originating from Akamai's 2017 acquisition of Soasta. The product captures Core Web Vitals, page-load timing, and conversion funnel data with native integration into Akamai CDN edge logic, edge-rendered third-party tags, and Akamai Image and Video Manager. Best-fit is straightforward: Akamai delivery customers wanting RUM bundled into their existing contract. The trade-offs: mPulse is rarely chosen on its own outside Akamai accounts, the standalone perf-team workflow lags SpeedCurve, and product investment has been steady rather than aggressive since the original Soasta integration.

Best for

Akamai delivery and security customers (large ecommerce, media, financial services) wanting RUM bundled with their existing CDN contract.

Worst for

Buyers not on Akamai delivery, perf-team workflows needing SpeedCurve-depth CWV analysis, or modern cloud-native teams on Cloudflare or Fastly.

Strengths

  • Native integration with Akamai CDN edge logic and delivery configuration
  • Bundled within Akamai delivery contracts; no separate procurement
  • Strong at conversion impact correlation (page speed to revenue) for ecommerce
  • Mature at extreme global traffic scale via Akamai edge infrastructure
  • Soasta heritage gives deep page-load and Core Web Vitals capture

Weaknesses

  • Rarely chosen standalone outside Akamai delivery accounts
  • Perf-team workflow depth lags SpeedCurve
  • Product investment cadence steady rather than aggressive post-Soasta

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • Bundled with Akamai delivery
    Pricing typically negotiated alongside CDN contract
    Quote
  • Standalone mPulse
    Available but rarely sold outside Akamai accounts
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Multi-year delivery contracts standard
  • · Pricing typically tied to overall Akamai spend

Key features

  • +Browser RUM
  • +Core Web Vitals
  • +Conversion impact analytics
  • +Edge integration with Akamai CDN
  • +Akamai Image and Video Manager integration
  • +A/B test impact analysis
  • +Synthetic correlation
  • +Page-load waterfall
100+ integrations
Akamai CDNAkamai Bot ManagerAkamai Image ManagerAdobe AnalyticsGoogle Analytics
Geography
Global; via Akamai edge
#10

Raygun

Mid-market RUM plus crash reporting plus light APM.

Founded 2007 · Wellington, New Zealand · private · 10–500 employees
G2 4.4 (130)
Capterra 4.5
From $4 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Raygun

Raygun is the New Zealand-headquartered mid-market RUM and crash-reporting product, combining browser RUM, mobile crash reporting, and a lightweight APM module in a single published-pricing offering. The defining shape is mid-market accessibility: published per-event tier pricing, no enterprise sales gating, and a feature set that covers the common needs of product engineering teams without the breadth (or cost) of Datadog or New Relic. Best-fit is small and mid-market teams (10-500 employees) who want RUM plus crash reporting in one tool with predictable bills. The trade-offs: CWV depth lags SpeedCurve, the platform is not a full observability suite, and global enterprise references are thinner than the larger vendors.

Best for

Small and mid-market product engineering teams (10-500 employees) who want RUM plus crash reporting plus light APM in one tool with predictable published pricing.

Worst for

Performance engineering teams wanting SpeedCurve-depth CWV, enterprise observability buyers (Datadog or New Relic wins), or anyone needing logs and infrastructure on the same platform.

Strengths

  • Published per-event pricing tiers with no enterprise sales gating
  • Combined RUM, crash reporting, and APM in a single tool
  • Strong mobile crash reporting (iOS, Android, React Native, Xamarin)
  • Predictable bills versus enterprise platforms
  • NZ-headquartered with independent ownership and steady product cadence

Weaknesses

  • CWV depth lags SpeedCurve for perf-engineering team workflows
  • Not a full observability platform; no logs, no infrastructure metrics
  • Global enterprise reference base thinner than larger vendors

Pricing tiers

public
  • Startup
    Approximately $4/month entry; RUM starter volume
    $4 /mo
  • Small
    Approximately $79/month; mid-volume RUM and crash
    $79 /mo
  • Medium
    Approximately $219/month; expanded volume across RUM, crash, APM
    $219 /mo
  • Large
    Approximately $689/month; high volume
    $689 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom enterprise scope
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Event overage pricing
  • · APM module billed alongside RUM

Key features

  • +Browser RUM
  • +Mobile crash reporting (iOS, Android, React Native, Xamarin)
  • +Core Web Vitals
  • +JavaScript error tracking
  • +Light APM module
  • +User-level session breakdown
  • +Deployment tracking
  • +Alerting
80+ integrations
SlackJiraGitHubPagerDutyMicrosoft TeamsBitbucket
Geography
Global; data centers in US, EU
#8

Pingdom RUM

Legacy RUM bundled with Pingdom uptime monitoring.

Founded 2005 · Austin, TX · public · 5–500 employees
G2 4.0 (80)
Capterra 4.3
From $15 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Pingdom RUM

Pingdom RUM is the real-user-monitoring add-on to the SolarWinds Pingdom uptime monitoring product. Pingdom was acquired by SolarWinds in 2014 and the RUM module has been a steady, lightly-invested offering since. The product covers basic Core Web Vitals, page-load timing, and visitor analytics with native links to Pingdom uptime alerts. Best-fit is straightforward: existing Pingdom uptime customers wanting basic RUM bundled into their existing tooling. The trade-offs: feature depth lags every other product in this list, perf-engineering workflows are absent, and SolarWinds brand momentum has not recovered to where it was pre-2020 SUNBURST incident, even though Pingdom itself was not directly affected.

Best for

Small and mid-market teams already using Pingdom uptime monitoring who want basic RUM bundled into their existing tooling without adding a new vendor.

Worst for

Performance engineering teams (SpeedCurve wins), full observability buyers (Datadog or New Relic wins), or anyone wanting deep CWV analysis.

Strengths

  • Bundled with Pingdom uptime monitoring; no separate procurement
  • Simple setup; low-friction for existing Pingdom customers
  • Predictable published pricing within Pingdom tier structure
  • Basic Core Web Vitals capture sufficient for marketing-led teams
  • Native links to Pingdom uptime alerts and incident workflows

Weaknesses

  • Feature depth lags every other product in this list
  • Perf-engineering workflows absent; not a serious CWV product
  • SolarWinds brand momentum has not fully recovered post-2020 SUNBURST

Pricing tiers

public
  • Starter
    Per month entry; basic uptime + light RUM
    $15 /mo
  • Advanced
    Per month; expanded RUM page-view allowance
    $85 /mo
  • Professional
    Per month; higher RUM page-view allowance
    $185 /mo
Watch for
  • · Page-view overage pricing
  • · Annual billing standard for published rates

Key features

  • +Browser RUM
  • +Basic Core Web Vitals
  • +Page-load timing
  • +Visitor analytics
  • +Pingdom uptime integration
  • +Geographic performance breakdown
  • +Browser breakdown
  • +Email and Slack alerts
60+ integrations
Pingdom uptimeSlackPagerDutyWebhook
Geography
Global

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Does RUM data leaving Australia create a Privacy Act issue?
Cross-border transfer is permitted under APP 8 if the overseas recipient is bound by substantially similar protections or the user has consented. Most US RUM vendors ingest in AWS Sydney first, then back-haul aggregates to the US for analytics. Document this in your APP 5 collection notice and APP 1 privacy policy. The Optus and Medibank breaches have made the OAIC more aggressive on session-data transfer, so vendors with confirmed Sydney processing (Datadog, New Relic, Dynatrace, Azure App Insights) reduce APP 8 risk meaningfully.
How does the SOCI Act affect RUM tooling selection?
Critical infrastructure operators across telco, energy, water, finance, food and aviation must maintain a Critical Infrastructure Risk Management Program. RUM data feeds into that program as evidence of customer-facing reliability. The Department of Home Affairs has not mandated specific RUM tools, but vendors with documented Sydney data residency and Australian incident response are easier to defend in CIRMP audits. APRA CPS 230 adds parallel requirements for banks, insurers and superannuation funds.
Sentry vs Datadog for an Aussie 50-person SaaS?
Sentry if errors are the bigger pain than performance, your team already runs Sentry for backend errors, and AUD budget is tight. Datadog if you want unified RUM, APM, logs and infrastructure in one pane, you are on AWS Sydney, and the engineering team accepts the higher floor cost. Most Aussie 20-150 person SaaS firms run Sentry first and add Datadog after Series B.
Do federal accounts require IRAP-assessed RUM?
PROTECTED-level workloads at Services Australia, DTA, ATO and Defence require IRAP-assessed hosting. Azure App Insights on Azure Australia Central is the safest path. Datadog Government Cloud has selective IRAP coverage. Most other third-party RUM tools route through Sydney AWS commercial regions and are restricted to OFFICIAL-tier workloads. State government and council use is less constrained.
What is the difference between RUM, APM, synthetic monitoring, and session replay?
RUM (Real User Monitoring) captures performance and behavior data from actual end-user sessions, browser and mobile, page-load timing, Core Web Vitals, JavaScript errors, real network and device context. APM (Application Performance Monitoring) is the server-side complement, tracing requests across backend services. Synthetic monitoring runs scripted probes from controlled locations to detect uptime and predictable performance issues, but tells you nothing about real users. Session replay records video-like reconstructions of user sessions for behavioral debugging. Modern platforms blur the boundary: Datadog, New Relic, and Dynatrace include all four; Sentry, FullStory, and LogRocket combine RUM and session replay; SpeedCurve focuses on RUM plus synthetic; standalone session replay (FullStory, LogRocket) is a separate category covered in our session-replay listicle.
Are Core Web Vitals still a Google ranking signal in 2026?
Yes. Google's Page Experience signal remains an active component of search ranking in 2026, with Core Web Vitals (Largest Contentful Paint, Interaction to Next Paint, Cumulative Layout Shift) as the measurable inputs. The 2024 transition from First Input Delay (FID) to Interaction to Next Paint (INP) as the responsiveness metric is in full effect. Performance impact on rankings is not linear and is one signal among many, but SEO-conscious teams continue to treat CWV as a baseline operational requirement. This sustains commercial relevance for RUM products with CWV depth, particularly SpeedCurve and the bundled RUM in Datadog, New Relic, and Sentry.
When does a standalone RUM purchase actually make sense in 2026?
Rarely. Most enterprise buyers already get RUM bundled with their observability or APM platform: Datadog RUM, New Relic Browser, Dynatrace RUM, Sentry Performance, and Pingdom RUM all ship as modules of existing platforms. The dedicated-RUM purchase case is narrow: (1) performance engineering teams who need Core Web Vitals waterfall depth, third-party impact attribution, and performance-budget workflows that bundled RUM modules do not provide, where SpeedCurve is the canonical choice; (2) mid-market teams not on a larger observability platform who want predictable RUM-plus-crash-reporting pricing, where Raygun fits. Outside these two patterns, the rational default is to use the RUM already included with your existing observability platform.
Will Datadog RUM trigger the same bill-shock pattern as Datadog Custom Metrics?
It can, and the mechanism is the same. Session-attribute cardinality (the number of unique combinations of session attributes like user ID, feature flag, A/B variant, country, device, and custom tags) drives billing in Datadog RUM in a way structurally similar to Datadog Custom Metrics elsewhere in the platform, see the Datadog entry in our APM listicle for the broader pattern. The practical guidance: audit custom session attributes before turning RUM on at scale, configure consent-mode and PII sanitization before deployment, and negotiate cost caps with Datadog at renewal. New Relic Browser does not have this pattern because it bills on ingestion volume rather than session-attribute cardinality.
What does the Cloudflare acquisition of SpeedCurve mean for buyers in 2026?
Cloudflare acquired SpeedCurve in November 2024 with the publicly stated intention of continuing SpeedCurve as a standalone product near-term and integrating capabilities into Cloudflare Observability over time. As of mid-2026 the standalone product continues to be sold and supported, and the published roadmap remains active. The integration path into Cloudflare's broader observability suite is not yet detailed publicly, which creates a genuine planning uncertainty for buyers signing multi-year SpeedCurve contracts. The pragmatic stance: SpeedCurve remains the best Core Web Vitals specialist available in 2026 and is worth purchasing, but buyers should negotiate annual rather than multi-year terms and watch for Cloudflare Observability product announcements through 2026 and 2027.
How does RUM differ between web and mobile?
Web RUM is mature: every product in this list captures Core Web Vitals, page-load timing, JavaScript errors, and AJAX timing via a JavaScript SDK injected on each page. Mobile RUM is less consistent. Datadog Mobile RUM and Dynatrace mobile RUM offer SDK coverage across iOS, Android, React Native, and Flutter; Raygun is strong on mobile crash reporting (iOS, Android, React Native, Xamarin); Sentry has strong mobile SDKs but treats them as part of the broader Sentry SDK family; SpeedCurve mobile coverage lags its web depth. For mobile-heavy products, validate SDK feature parity, app-launch time capture, mobile crash symbolication, and offline event buffering before signing. Mobile RUM also intersects with mobile app analytics (Firebase, Mixpanel, Amplitude) and dedicated mobile observability (Embrace, Bitrise Trace), which are adjacent categories.
What is the GDPR and cookie-consent reality for RUM scripts in 2026?
RUM scripts execute JavaScript on user browsers and typically collect IP addresses, user-agent strings, session identifiers, and (depending on configuration) custom user attributes, all of which are personal data under GDPR. Executing a RUM script that captures personal data under non-consenting EU traffic is technically a CNIL (France) and DSGVO (Germany) violation, and CNIL has issued enforcement actions against tag-management and analytics scripts under similar logic. The mitigation most vendors offer is consent-mode RUM: the SDK loads but does not begin capture until cookie consent is granted, or operates in a consent-aware reduced-capture mode. Datadog, New Relic, Dynatrace, Sentry, Akamai mPulse, and SpeedCurve all expose consent-mode hooks, but the configuration is buyer responsibility. EU buyers should treat consent-mode RUM configuration as a deployment-day requirement, not an optional setting.
Where do products like FullStory and LogRocket fit in the RUM landscape?
They are session-replay-first products that also capture RUM data, sitting on the boundary between this category and our session-replay listicle. FullStory and LogRocket capture Core Web Vitals, page-load timing, and JavaScript errors alongside their primary session-replay video reconstruction. For buyers whose primary need is behavioral debugging and session reconstruction, FullStory or LogRocket is the right starting point and they happen to also cover light RUM. For buyers whose primary need is page-load performance, Core Web Vitals depth, and front-end performance engineering workflows, the RUM products in this list (especially SpeedCurve, Datadog RUM, and New Relic Browser) are the right starting point. The two categories overlap by design, and Sentry Performance is the closest hybrid product in our top 10.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Real User Monitoring (RUM) Software ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-24. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.