ilert vs OpsGenie
ilert is a European alternative to OpsGenie — same incident management use case, built under EU data-protection law.
By the EU Alternatives team Last updated
- Jurisdiction
- EU / EEA
- GDPR by default
- Yes
- US CLOUD Act exposure
- No
- Open source
- No
- Free tier
- No
OpsGenie — a non-EU product.
- Jurisdiction
- US
- GDPR by default
- Requires DPA + TIA
- US CLOUD Act exposure
- Yes
About ilert
ilert runs incident response for modern IT and DevOps teams — combining AI-driven alerting, on-call scheduling, ChatOps orchestration, and public status pages in a single platform. Positioned as the EU-native alternative to PagerDuty and Opsgenie, it ensures the right responder is paged within seconds via push, SMS, voice call, or messenger, and uses an AI SRE agent to investigate logs and metrics before a human ever wakes up.
The platform ingests alerts from 100+ monitoring and ticketing tools — Prometheus, Datadog, Grafana, Jira, ServiceNow — and drives response through Slack, Microsoft Teams, and Google Chat. Automated rotations, escalation policies, and call routing ensure coverage around the clock, while a Terraform provider and full API let platform teams manage on-call infrastructure as code alongside the rest of their stack.
Key benefits:
- AI SRE agent that investigates incidents and proposes root causes
- Multi-channel alerting via push, SMS, phone call, Slack, and Teams
- On-call scheduling with rotations, overrides, and escalation policies
- 100+ integrations for monitoring, ticketing, and chat platforms
- Public status pages with subscriber notifications and uptime history
- Terraform provider for managing schedules and services as code
ilert is headquartered in Cologne, Germany, founded in 2011, and operates entirely on EU-based infrastructure with full data residency. The company is ISO 27001 certified, GDPR compliant, and processes on-call data exclusively within German and European datacenters — a decisive difference for banks, public sector, and regulated enterprises that cannot send incident metadata through US-headquartered providers.
Why choose ilert over OpsGenie?
The decisive argument is data jurisdiction. OpsGenie is headquartered in US, which means personal data processed through it can be subject to non-EU legal regimes — the US CLOUD Act, FISA 702, or similar laws depending on the provider. After the 2020 Schrems II ruling, EU organisations must carry out a transfer impact assessment for every such data flow.
ilert removes that overhead. As a Germany-based provider, it operates natively under GDPR, and data stays inside the EU/EEA by default. For regulated sectors — health, public administration, finance — that's not a nice-to-have but a requirement. For everyone else, it's concentration-risk insurance: you avoid depending on a single non-EU jurisdiction that can change the rules without warning.