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Uptime Monitoring comparison · 2026
New Relic (81) and Checkly (79) are closely matched — this is one of the tightest Uptime Monitoring comparisons in our database, with just 2 points separating them overall. New Relic leads on Dashboards (88 vs 75), while Checkly has the edge on Price / Value (80 vs 60). The two are closest on Check Coverage, where the gap is just 5 points. Both offer a free tier, making either a low-risk starting point. Use the radar chart and dimension table below to find which fits your specific priorities best.
New Relic
Full-stack observability beyond simple uptime checks
81/100
Checkly
Monitoring as code for API and browser checks
79/100
Radar comparison
New Relic
81
Checkly
79
Developer UX
Setup speed, dashboard clarity, and check configuration.
Alerting
Escalation policies, on-call routing, and notification channels.
Check Coverage
Check frequency, global check locations, and protocol support.
Price / Value
Free tier check limits and cost per additional monitor.
Integrations
Slack, PagerDuty, status pages, and incident management.
Dashboards
Public status pages and historical uptime reporting.
Overall Score
Based on our independent scoring across 6 dimensions, New Relic scores 81/100 overall versus Checkly's 79/100 — a 2-point margin. New Relic leads on Integrations in particular. That said, Checkly may still be the right choice if the dimensions where it scores higher match your specific priorities — the radar chart above shows the full profile side by side.
Both New Relic and Checkly offer a free tier, so entry-level cost is not a differentiating factor. Compare the feature and usage limits of each free plan to see which gives you more headroom before a paid upgrade is needed.
New Relic scores higher on Integrations — 95/100 versus 78/100 for Checkly. If integrations is your primary decision criterion, New Relic is the stronger choice in this head-to-head.
Switching between uptime monitoring tools is generally possible but involves migration effort: exporting your data or configuration from New Relic, re-importing or reconfiguring in Checkly, and updating any API integrations or environment variables in your codebase. The effort scales with how deeply embedded the tool is in your stack. Test Checkly on a non-production project first before migrating.
New Relic (81/100) is the better fit for teams who prioritise integrations — its strongest dimension — and who want a free entry point. Checkly (79/100) is the better fit for teams who prioritise developer ux and want a free entry point. If both dimensions matter equally, the overall score winner (New Relic) is the safer default choice.
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