Use case
Public Status Page & Uptime Monitoring
Pulsy pairs uptime monitoring with a built-in public status page. Monitor your services, then publish their live status on your own domain — no separate status-page subscription and no third-party branding, all from one managed tool.
The problem
- Status-page SaaS products bill separately from monitoring and add their own branding.
- Teams want status on their own domain, not a vendor subdomain.
- Keeping a status page in sync with actual monitoring usually means wiring two tools together.
How Pulsy helps
- Status pages are built in — the same monitors you check power the public page automatically.
- Custom-domain support serves status on your own hostname.
- Overall operational / degraded / outage state plus recent incidents render without any extra setup.
- One managed tool covers both the monitoring and the status page, so they never drift apart.
Frequently asked questions
- Can I publish a public status page with Pulsy?
- Yes. Pulsy includes public status pages driven by your own monitors, with custom-domain support and no separate subscription.
- Does the status page update automatically?
- Yes. The status page reflects the live results of your Pulsy monitors and their incidents, so it stays in sync with actual uptime without manual updates.
- Can I put the status page on my own domain?
- Yes. Pulsy status pages support custom domains so you can serve status on a hostname you control.
Start monitoring in minutes
Fully-managed uptime monitoring — every channel, status pages, and TLS-expiry alerts included. Start free.