Never miss downtime again.
Monitor websites, APIs, and cron jobs in minutes.
Get instant alerts via email, Slack, or SMS.
Set up in 60 seconds
From “create” to “alerting” to “share”—without a complex setup.
Create a monitor
Add an HTTP/API, keyword, ping/port, or heartbeat monitor.
Choose alerts
Route incidents to email, Slack, SMS, or phone—per monitor.
Share a status page
Publish a clean status page for customers and teammates.
Core features
Everything you need to monitor uptime—without enterprise complexity.
Active monitors
Catch downtime before users do.
- HTTP/API checks
- Keyword + content validation
Heartbeats
Know when scheduled jobs fail silently.
- Cron/job watchdogs
- Missed-run alerts
Status pages
Communicate clearly during incidents.
- Public pages
- Maintenance updates
Alert routing
Reach the right person fast.
- Email, Slack, SMS
- Escalation-ready workflows
Integrations
Connect your stack in minutes.
- WordPress & more
- OpenClaw agent workflow
Reporting
Track uptime trends over time.
- Uptime history
- Incidents overview
Let your agent create and manage monitors.
Install the Watch.dog skill for OpenClaw to create monitors for websites/APIs and cron jobs, manage resources, and publish status pages—hands-free.
User: Monitor https://api.example.com every 60s. Agent: Created an HTTP monitor (60s). Alerts: email + Slack. Agent: Created a status page and shared the public link.
Product preview
Charts, monitors, heartbeats, and a clean public status page.
Monitors + charts
See status, latency, and incidents at a glance.
Active + heartbeats
HTTP/API, keyword, ping/port, and cron job monitoring.
Status pages
Communicate incidents and maintenance with confidence.
Simple plans
Start free. Upgrade when you need faster checks and more channels.
- Up to 10 monitors
- Checks every 60s
- Email alerts included
- Up to 100 monitors
- Checks every 30s
- Email + Slack + SMS alerts
FAQ
Quick answers to common questions.
Start monitoring your infrastructure in minutes.
Create your first monitor, set alerts, and share a status page—without a heavy setup.