Atlassian Statuspage and Katalon are often evaluated together by teams building out their reliability stack. Atlassian Statuspage (communicate incidents and build trust with status pages, founded 2013) is typically a fit for DevOps Teams, Customer Success, and Engineering Leaders, while Katalon (low-code test automation for web, api, mobile and desktop, founded 2016) leans toward QA Teams, Manual Testers, and SDETs. Both cover 3 of the same core capabilities, so the decision usually comes down to where they diverge.
Communicate incidents and build trust with status pages
Pricing: Free (100 subs), Hobby $29/mo, Startup $99/mo, Business $399/mo
Founded: 2013
Best for: DevOps Teams, Customer Success, Engineering Leaders
Low-code test automation for web, API, mobile and desktop
Pricing: Free tier; paid from $67/seat/mo (annual)
Founded: 2016
Best for: QA Teams, Manual Testers, SDETs
| Feature | Atlassian Statuspage | Katalon |
|---|---|---|
| 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
Cons
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Katalon covers more unique ground in this comparison, notably API & Browser Testing, Self-Healing Tests, AI-Powered, and CI/CD Integration, among others. That said, Atlassian Statuspage (Free (100 subs), Hobby $29/mo, Startup $99/mo, Business $399/mo) is the better choice when Alerting and Status Page is a priority.
Atlassian Statuspage is communicate incidents and build trust with status pages, while Katalon is low-code test automation for web, api, mobile and desktop. Atlassian Statuspage adds Alerting, Status Page, and Incident Management on top of the shared feature set. Katalon brings API & Browser Testing, Self-Healing Tests, and AI-Powered that Atlassian Statuspage does not.
Atlassian Statuspage pricing: Free (100 subs), Hobby $29/mo, Startup $99/mo, Business $399/mo. Katalon pricing: Free tier; paid from $67/seat/mo (annual). Evaluate against your check volume and team size; entry pricing rarely reflects total cost at scale.
Atlassian Statuspage is designed with DevOps Teams, Customer Success, and Engineering Leaders in mind, whereas Katalon targets QA Teams, Manual Testers, and SDETs. If your team matches the former profile, Atlassian Statuspage is usually the closer fit.
No. It does a different job. On-call and status tools decide who gets paged and what customers see, but they need a detection layer feeding them. ObserveOne is that layer: scheduled synthetic checks on your critical journeys that catch the outage and hand it to your incident process.
On-call and status tools decide who gets paged and what customers see, but they need a detection layer feeding them. ObserveOne is that layer: scheduled synthetic checks on your critical journeys that catch the outage and hand it to your incident process. The free tier covers enough to try it on one critical journey.
Each tool has its own alternatives page too, not just this matchup.