Selenium and Sumo Logic are often evaluated together by teams building out their reliability stack. Selenium (the battle-tested open-source browser automation framework, founded 2004) is typically a fit for QA Engineers, SDETs, and Enterprise Teams, while Sumo Logic (cloud-based log analytics, metrics, and security analytics for enterprise teams, founded 2010) leans toward Enterprise SRE, Security Operations, and DevOps Teams. Both cover 2 of the same core capabilities, so the decision usually comes down to where they diverge.
The battle-tested open-source browser automation framework
Pricing: Free and open source
Founded: 2004
Best for: QA Engineers, SDETs, Enterprise Teams
Cloud-based log analytics, metrics, and security analytics for enterprise teams
Pricing: Free tier 1GB/day, paid plans start around $108/mo, enterprise quote-based
Founded: 2010
Best for: Enterprise SRE, Security Operations, DevOps Teams
| Feature | Selenium | Sumo Logic |
|---|---|---|
| Synthetic Monitoring | ||
| Real User Monitoring | ||
| API & Browser Testing | ||
| Self-Healing Tests | ||
| AI-Powered | ||
| Uptime Monitoring | ||
| Alerting | ||
| Slack Integration | ||
| CI/CD Integration | ||
| Multi-Location Checks | ||
| SSL Monitoring | ||
| Status Page | ||
| Open Source | ||
| On-Premise / Self-Host | ||
| Free Tier | ||
| API Access | ||
| Dashboards | ||
| Incident Management |
Pros
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Pros
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Sumo Logic covers more unique ground in this comparison, notably Real User Monitoring, AI-Powered, Uptime Monitoring, and Alerting, among others. That said, Selenium (Free and open source) is the better choice when API & Browser Testing and Open Source is a priority.
Selenium is the battle-tested open-source browser automation framework, while Sumo Logic is cloud-based log analytics, metrics, and security analytics for enterprise teams. Selenium adds API & Browser Testing, Open Source, and On-Premise / Self-Host on top of the shared feature set. Sumo Logic brings Real User Monitoring, AI-Powered, and Uptime Monitoring that Selenium does not.
Selenium pricing: Free and open source. Sumo Logic pricing: Free tier 1GB/day, paid plans start around $108/mo, enterprise quote-based. Evaluate against your check volume and team size; entry pricing rarely reflects total cost at scale.
Selenium is designed with QA Engineers, SDETs, and Enterprise Teams in mind, whereas Sumo Logic targets Enterprise SRE, Security Operations, and DevOps Teams. If your team matches the former profile, Selenium is usually the closer fit.
ObserveOne combines synthetic monitoring with AI browser checks that adapt as your UI changes. It offers a free tier, so you can benchmark it against Selenium and Sumo Logic directly.
ObserveOne combines AI browser checks with uptime, API, and SSL monitoring on per-run pricing. The free tier is enough to benchmark it against Selenium and Sumo Logic directly.
Each tool has its own alternatives page too, not just this matchup.