I've been using UptimeRobot for years. It's free, it works, and nearly every developer I know uses it. So when I started evaluating alternatives, I wasn't expecting much of a difference.
What I found changed how I think about uptime monitoring entirely.
The Alert Fatigue Problem
After about a year of running UptimeRobot across a microservices setup, I noticed something: I was getting 2-3 false alerts per week. Not many, but enough that I started ignoring them during off-hours.
The root cause: UptimeRobot checks from a single location. If their probe server has a routing hiccup, a DNS blip, or temporary packet loss — you get paged. The service is fine. The alert is noise. But you don't know that until you check.
This is the single-point-of-failure problem in monitoring. You're using a monitor to detect outages, but the monitor itself has the same architectural flaw you're trying to catch.
How Multi-Region Consensus Monitoring Works
Vigilmon takes a different approach: it checks from multiple regions simultaneously and only fires an alert when a majority of regions agree the service is down.
Here's what that looks like in practice:
Check interval: 1 minute
Regions: US-East, EU-West, Asia-Pacific
Scenario A (false positive):
US-East = DOWN, EU-West = UP, Asia-Pacific = UP
→ No alert. Only 1/3 regions see failure.
Scenario B (real outage):
US-East = DOWN, EU-West = DOWN, Asia-Pacific = DOWN
→ Alert fired. Genuine outage confirmed.
This eliminates "single probe had a bad day" false alarms entirely. A false positive now requires the majority of distributed probes to fail simultaneously — which only happens during a real outage.
Two Months Running Both in Parallel
I ran UptimeRobot and Vigilmon side-by-side for two months on the same set of production services. Here's what I observed:
False alerts per month:
- UptimeRobot: ~10 false alerts
- Vigilmon: 0 false alerts
This sounds dramatic, but the math checks out. Vigilmon requires consensus from multiple independent probes before firing. A false positive requires multiple geographically distributed probes to all have network issues at the same moment — highly unlikely.
Detection time for real outages:
- Both tools detected genuine outages within 1-2 minutes. No meaningful difference here.
SSL monitoring:
- UptimeRobot (free): Not included
- Vigilmon (free): SSL expiry alerts included, multi-region check
Public status pages:
- UptimeRobot: Paid feature
- Vigilmon: Included free
Pricing Comparison
| Feature | UptimeRobot Free | Vigilmon Free |
|---|---|---|
| Monitors | 50 | 3 |
| Check interval | 5 min | 5 min |
| Multi-region checks | No | Yes |
| SSL monitoring | No | Yes |
| Public status page | No (paid) | Yes |
| Alert channels |
UptimeRobot wins on raw monitor count: 50 vs. 3. If you're monitoring dozens of internal services, that matters.
But for production-facing services where alert quality matters more than quantity, the Vigilmon free tier covers the essential use case with better signal.
The Hidden Cost of False Alerts
Here's the cost that often goes uncalculated:
- Developer woken at 3 AM, spends 45 minutes investigating, finds nothing → lost sleep + half a morning of context switching
- After enough false alarms, the team starts treating all alerts as "probably nothing" → real outage goes undetected for 20+ minutes
- The monitoring Slack channel becomes noise → everyone stops looking
Alert fatigue is an operational problem that compounds quietly. Multi-region consensus monitoring is the architectural fix.
Should You Switch?
Stay on UptimeRobot if:
- You need to monitor more than 3 services for free
- You're monitoring internal/staging services where false alerts don't wake anyone
- You've already built a large setup and migration effort outweighs the benefit
Consider switching to Vigilmon if:
- You're monitoring production services and on-call alerts matter
- False alerts are causing alert fatigue on your team
- You want SSL monitoring without paying extra
- You want a public status page without upgrading
Making the Switch
The migration is straightforward. Vigilmon's setup mirrors UptimeRobot: add your URLs, configure notification channels, done.
# Your UptimeRobot config → Vigilmon equivalent
# 1. Go to vigilmon.online and sign up free
# 2. Add monitor → enter URL → select type (HTTP/HTTPS/TCP/ping)
# 3. Set check interval (5 min on free)
# 4. Configure email notifications
# 5. Done — you're monitoring with consensus now
The architectural difference is invisible in the setup. It only becomes obvious the first time a probe has a bad day and you don't get paged.
The Takeaway
UptimeRobot is a solid tool and a natural starting point. But the single-probe architecture has a ceiling: it can't distinguish between "the service is down" and "the probe is having a moment."
Multi-region consensus monitoring removes that ambiguity. For the services that actually matter — the ones where a 3 AM page is a real problem — that distinction is worth the lower monitor count.
Start free at vigilmon.online — 3 monitors, multi-region checks, SSL monitoring, no credit card required.
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