Use case
Website Uptime Monitoring
Pulsy is a fully-managed uptime monitor for your websites. It checks each site over HTTP on a schedule, measures response time, watches the TLS certificate, and alerts you the moment a page goes down or slows — with no infrastructure to run yourself.
The problem
- You find out your site is down from a customer, not from a tool.
- Per-monitor pricing punishes teams that run more than a handful of sites.
- Free tiers cap the number of monitors and lock the status page behind a paid plan.
How Pulsy helps
- Schedules HTTP GET/HEAD/POST checks against every URL and records up, down, degraded, and response time.
- Groups repeated failures into incidents so one flaky deploy does not flood your inbox.
- Watches TLS certificate expiry so a lapsed certificate never quietly takes the site offline.
- Publishes a status page on your own domain and alerts via email, webhook, Slack, Discord, or Telegram.
Frequently asked questions
- What is website uptime monitoring?
- It is the practice of checking a website at regular intervals to confirm it is reachable and responding correctly. Pulsy does this over HTTP, records response time and status, tracks TLS expiry, and alerts you when a site goes down or recovers.
- How often can Pulsy check my website?
- You set the interval per monitor, along with the request method, expected status code, timeout, and how many consecutive failures trigger an incident.
- How much does website monitoring cost?
- Pulsy has a free tier, and paid plans start at $12/mo with flat pricing — not billed per monitor — so you can watch every site you run.
Start monitoring in minutes
Fully-managed uptime monitoring — every channel, status pages, and TLS-expiry alerts included. Start free.