Uptimia vs Pingdom
Uptimia is a European alternative to Pingdom — same uptime monitoring 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
Pingdom by SolarWinds.
- Jurisdiction
- US
- GDPR by default
- Requires DPA + TIA
- US CLOUD Act exposure
- Yes
About Uptimia
Uptimia watches websites continuously for downtime, slow responses, and security issues — offering uptime monitoring across HTTP, DNS, TCP, UDP, and email protocols and real-browser speed testing using Chrome. Currently monitoring over 100,000 websites, the service pings from 171 global locations as frequently as every 30 seconds and alerts through the channels teams already use.
The platform spans six continents with dual-datacenter redundancy, eliminating single points of failure in the monitoring infrastructure itself. Alerts route through Slack, Microsoft Teams, PagerDuty, WhatsApp, Telegram, Discord, and webhooks, while multi-step transaction monitoring verifies checkout flows, logins, and form submissions end-to-end — catching issues before real users do.
Key benefits:
- 171 global checkpoints monitoring from six continents
- 30-second check intervals for near real-time detection
- Real-browser speed tests powered by headless Chrome
- Transaction monitoring for multi-step forms and checkouts
- SSL and domain expiry alerts preventing silent outages
- Wide alert routing across Slack, Teams, PagerDuty, and webhooks
Uptimia is headquartered in Berlin, Germany, founded in 2015, and operates from dual EU datacenters under full GDPR compliance. As a German-owned monitoring platform under EU jurisdiction, it serves as a sovereign European alternative to Pingdom, UptimeRobot, and Datadog Synthetics for teams that want their monitoring data to stay in Europe.
Why choose Uptimia over Pingdom?
The decisive argument is data jurisdiction. Pingdom 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.
Uptimia 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.