Best Grafana Alternatives

    Grafana allows to visualize metrics, logs, and traces from multiple sources like Prometheus, Loki, Elasticsearch, InfluxDB, Postgres and many more.

    You can create dynamic and reusable dashboards with template variables that appear as dropdowns at the top of the dashboard.

    Pros

    Cons

    • The UI is built around metrics and lacks many features when it comes to logs & traces

    Uptrace

    Uptraceopen in new window allows to build custom dashboards to monitor health and performance of your hosts, containers, services, dababase servers, and more. In seconds, you get actionable insights backed by the combined power of traces, logs, and metrics.

    Uptrace

    You can just start sending data and Uptrace will automatically create detailed dashboards for the most popular applications such as PostgreSQL, MySQL, Redis, Nginx, Kafka etc.

    Like Grafana, Uptrace allows to create dynamic parameterized dashboards that appear as filters at the top of the dashboard.

    You can enhance dashboards with monitors that will raise an alarm whenever there is an increase in CPU, memory, disk consumption, or any other metric.

    Pros

    • to play with the product.
    • Full stack monitoring.
    • Ability to analyze and search logs.

    Cons

    • Low number of dashboards.
    • Low number of widgets / visualization types.

    Kibana

    is an open user interface that lets you visualize your Elasticsearch data and navigate the Elastic Stack.

    Kibana allows you to search Elasticsearch data for specific events and visualize them using charts, tables, geographical maps, and more.

    Just like Grafana, Kibana allows to create dashboards that can be customized for any purposes.

    Pros

    • Full stack monitoring.
    • Ability to analyze and search logs.

    Cons

    • Low number of dashboards.
    • Must be used with other products from ELK stack.

    Cyclotron

    Cyclotron provides standard boilerplate and plumbing, allowing non-programmers to easily create and edit dashboards using customizable components. It has a built-in dashboard editor, and hosts the dashboards directly.

    Dashboards are defined declaratively as a JSON document, which contains all the properties required to render the Dashboard.

    Cyclotron allows to retrieve data from multiple data sources like Elasticsearch, Graphite, InfluxDB, Prometheus, and more.

    Pros

    • Vast range of widgets.

    Cons

    • Low number of pre-built dashboards.
    • No built-in interactivity.

    Redash

    allows you to connect and query your data sources, build dashboards to visualize data and share them with your company.

    Redash

    Redash enables SQL users to explore, query, visualize, and share data from any data sources. Redash also allows you to define conditions and be alerted instantly when your data changes.

    Redash is written in Python and provides a web interface in which you can build and share dashboards. It has no extra dependencies.

    Pros

    • More than 35 SQL and NoSQL data sources.
    • Lots of different visualization types.

    Cons

    • Requires writing complex SQL queries.

    Prometheus

    is an open-source monitoring system with flexible query language and real-time alerting. It records metrics in a time series database using a HTTP pull model.

    Prometheus

    Prometheus offers a powerful query language to query and aggregate metrics, for example, you can select a list of running threads sorted by CPU usage.

    You can also configure alerts to be notified when, for example, filesystem usage reaches a certain threshold.

    Most Prometheus components are written in Go, making them easy to build and deploy as static binaries.

    Pros

    • Simple setup and deploy.
    • Limited visualization capabilities. Must be used with Grafana or alternatives.
    • Scaling for high-load can be challenging.

    InfluxDBopen in new window is a scalable datastore for metrics, events, and real-time analytics. InfluxDB does not replace Grafana, but you can use it as a Grafana datasource.

    InfluxDB

    InfluxDB is written in Go, supports pluggable extensions, and comes with clients and libraries for most popular programming languages.

    Pros

    • Powerful query language called InfluxQL.

    Cons

    • No visualization. Must be used with Grafana or alternatives.
    • Requires learning InfluxQL.
    • Somewhat slower than other timeseries databases.

    VictoriaMetrics

    VictoriaMetricsopen in new window is fast, cost-effective monitoring solution and time series database.

    VictoriaMetrics

    VictoriaMetrics can be used as drop-in replacement for Prometheus and Grafana, because it supports Prometheus querying API.

    VictoriaMetrics is written in Go and consists of a single small executable without external dependencies.

    Pros

    • Faster and uses less RAM than Prometheus/InfluxDB.
    • PromQL-based query language.
    • Good vertical and horizontal scalability.

    Cons

    • No visualization. Must be used with Grafana or alternatives.

    Sematext

    Sematextopen in new window allows to detect and troubleshoot production & performance issues with logs, metrics, synthetic and real user monitoring.

    Sematext

    Dashboards and infrastructure metrics (e.g., common databases and NoSQL stores, servers, containers, etc.) come out of the box and can be customized.

    Sematext also provides powerful alerting with anomaly detection and scheduling.

    Pros

    • .
    • Powerful dashboards with Grafana-like UI.
    • Elasticsearch API and Kibana integration.

    Cons

    • Limited query language.
    • No open source version.

    DataDog is a popular full-stack monitoring tool that can be used as an alternative to Grafana. See DataDog Competitors and Alternatives for details.