Pulsy
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.