# Why Free Uptime Monitors Aren't as Reliable as You Think > Free uptime monitoring sounds great until you miss a critical outage. Here's why free tiers cut corners and what it costs you. *Source: https://monitoristic.com/blog/why-free-uptime-monitors-arent-reliable* --- Free uptime monitoring is one of the most appealing offers in the developer toolbox. Zero cost, basic functionality, peace of mind. What's not to like? Quite a lot, actually. Free monitoring tools have real limitations that most teams don't think about until something goes wrong. Here's what you're trading away when you choose "free." ## The 5-Minute Problem Most free monitoring tiers check your site every 5 minutes. That sounds frequent enough — until you do the math. A 5-minute interval means your site could be down for nearly 5 full minutes before the first failed check even fires. Add notification delivery time and human response time, and you're looking at 7-10 minutes of downtime before anyone starts investigating. Now multiply that by the number of visitors your site gets per minute. For a site with modest traffic — say 20 visits per minute — a 10-minute outage means 200 people hit a broken site. With faster checks — even 2-minute intervals — you detect the problem significantly sooner. Those minutes matter. ## Feature Gating Free tiers exist for one reason: to get you onto the paid plan. That means the features you actually need are usually locked behind a paywall: - **Status pages** — Want to show your users that you're aware of an outage? Pay up. - **Maintenance windows** — Need to suppress alerts during planned maintenance? That's a paid feature. - **Faster checks** — 1-minute intervals are almost always premium-only. - **More monitors** — Free plans cap you at a handful of endpoints. - **Better notifications** — SMS, Slack, or webhook integrations often require upgrading. You end up with a monitoring tool that technically works but doesn't do the things you need when it matters most — during an actual incident. ## Infrastructure Compromises Running a monitoring service costs money. Servers, bandwidth, and engineering time aren't free. When a company offers a free tier, something has to give. Common compromises on free tiers: - **Shared infrastructure** — Your checks compete with thousands of other free users for resources. - **Lower priority** — When the monitoring service itself is under load, free accounts are often the first to be deprioritized. - **Fewer check locations** — Your site might be checked from a single region, missing regional outages entirely. - **Slower alert delivery** — Free tier notifications may be queued behind paid users. You won't notice any of this during normal operation. You'll notice it during the one moment monitoring matters: when something is actually down. ## The False Sense of Security The biggest risk of free monitoring isn't what it misses — it's what it makes you believe. "We have monitoring set up" gives teams confidence that they'll know about problems. But if that monitoring checks every 5 minutes from a single location with basic notifications, you're only catching the most obvious, prolonged outages. Intermittent issues, partial outages, slow degradation, regional problems — these slip through the gaps of a basic free monitor. And because you believe you're covered, you don't investigate further. ## When Free Actually Makes Sense Free monitoring isn't always wrong. It makes sense in specific situations: - **Side projects** you don't monetize and where downtime doesn't cost you anything - **Development and staging environments** where you just want a basic health check - **Initial validation** before you decide what monitoring tool to invest in - **Personal websites** where you're the only user and you'll notice problems yourself If any real users, revenue, or reputation depends on your uptime, free monitoring is a false economy. For a side-by-side look at how free and paid tools compare across features, pricing, and limitations, see our [alternatives comparison](/alternatives). If you're a solo developer weighing the trade-off, our guide on [monitoring with a minimal setup](/blog/monitoring-for-solo-developers) covers exactly what you need without overcomplicating things. ## What Reliable Monitoring Costs Paid monitoring doesn't have to be expensive. Monitoristic starts at $5 per month — less than a coffee — and includes: - Check intervals from 5 minutes down to 1 minute (by plan) - Status pages included on every plan - Incident tracking and maintenance windows - Telegram and webhook notifications - 30-day data retention (90 days on Pro and Business) That $5 buys you faster detection, better tools for incident response, and the confidence that your monitoring actually works when you need it. ## The Bottom Line Free monitoring tools serve a purpose, but they're not built for production workloads. The limitations — slower checks, fewer features, lower priority infrastructure — are exactly the kind of compromises that hurt most during a real incident. If your site matters to your business, invest in monitoring that matches. The cost of a monitoring tool is negligible compared to the cost of [downtime you didn't catch](/blog/how-much-does-website-downtime-cost). Not sure where to start? See how the [best uptime monitoring tools for small teams](/blog/best-uptime-monitoring-tools-for-small-teams) compare across features, pricing, and free tiers.