While PagerDuty remains the industry standard for enterprise incident response, its per-user licensing fees can escalate rapidly as engineering organizations scale, creating significant budgetary friction. For financial planners and engineering leads seeking to optimize operational expenditure, these compounding subscription costs make evaluating a self-hosted, open-source alternative like Cabot a highly compelling exercise.
PagerDuty Official Pricing Plans (2026)
PagerDuty structures its licensing primarily around per-user subscription fees. The table below outlines the official pricing tiers as of June 2026:
| Tier | Monthly Billing (per user/mo) | Annual Billing (per user/mo) | Included Users & Features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Free | $0 | $0 | Up to 5 users; basic on-call scheduling, SMS/email/push incident alerting, limited third-party integrations. |
| Professional | $25 | $21 | Unlimited users; unlimited international SMS/voice notifications, over 700 integrations, basic routing/escalation rules, email & chat support. |
| Business | $49 | $41 | Unlimited users; advanced incident response workflows, basic AIOps & alert noise reduction, enterprise integrations, round-robin scheduling. |
| Enterprise | Custom | Custom | Unlimited users; custom SLA, advanced Event Orchestration, full AIOps suite, premium support, advanced compliance, and enterprise-grade SSO. |
The Hidden Costs of PagerDuty
Organizations often overlook the secondary costs associated with PagerDuty that lie beyond the base seat-license fee:
- AIOps and Event Orchestration Gatekeeping: While basic noise reduction is included in the Business tier, advanced Event Orchestration and automated incident diagnostics require expensive, separate add-on licenses.
- Siloed Automation Tooling: Runbook Automation (formerly Rundeck) is managed under an entirely separate pricing model, meaning automated remediation workflows require double-paying for tooling.
- The “SSO Tax”: Modern corporate security policies mandate Single Sign-On (SAML/OIDC) and advanced compliance tracking (such as SOC 2 auditing). PagerDuty restricts these features to its custom-priced Enterprise tier, forcing mid-sized organizations to upgrade prematurely.
- Passive Stakeholder Licensing: Product managers, customer success reps, and executives who only need to monitor incident status must be provisioned paid seats to access the platform, artificially bloating the seat count.
Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) Analysis: Cabot
Cabot is a free, MIT-licensed, self-hosted alerting and monitoring alternative written in Python and easily deployed via Docker. While it eliminates software licensing fees entirely, it introduces infrastructure and operational maintenance costs.
1. Hosting & Server Resource Requirements
Unlike SaaS, Cabot must be hosted on your own cloud infrastructure (e.g., AWS, GCP, or DigitalOcean):
- Small Teams (5–20 users): Can run reliably on a single virtual machine (e.g., AWS
t3.mediumwith 2 vCPUs, 4GB RAM). Cost: ~$20 to $35/month. - Medium Teams (20–100 users): Requires redundant application servers, a managed database (PostgreSQL), and a cache layer (Redis) for reliability. Cost: ~$150 to $300/month.
- Large Teams (100+ users): Demands highly available, multi-region container deployments (such as AWS ECS/EKS) alongside dedicated database replication. Cost: ~$500 to $800/month.
2. Maintenance & Engineering Support (The “Labor Tax”)
Deploying open-source software shifts the operational burden onto your Site Reliability Engineering (SRE) or DevOps teams:
- Setup/Onboarding: Requires an initial 10–20 hours of engineering labor to configure SMTP, configure SMS/voice providers (like Twilio), and establish alerting pipelines.
- Ongoing Maintenance: Budgeting roughly 4 hours/month for regular OS security patches, Docker image updates, database backups, and certificate rotations. At an average internal SRE fully burdened rate of $100/hour, this equates to $400/month in indirect labor costs.
Comparative TCO Table: PagerDuty vs. Cabot (Annualized)
| Cost Category | PagerDuty (Business Tier) | Cabot (Self-Hosted Open Source) |
|---|---|---|
| Software Licenses | $492 / user / year | $0 |
| Infrastructure Hosting | Included ($0) | $240 – $9,600 / year (Scales with redundancy) |
| Internal SRE Support Labor | Minimal (< 5 hours/year) | ~$4,800 – $10,000 / year (Patching & maintenance) |
| Telephony Gateways (SMS/Voice) | Included ($0) | Variable ($100 – $2,000/year via Twilio APIs) |
Financial Scenarios: Team Cost Comparisons
Scenario A: The 5-User Startup
- PagerDuty (Free Tier): $0/year. Offers exactly what a small team needs (basic on-call schedules and SMS alerts).
- Cabot (Self-Hosted): ~$2,600/year (Infrastructure + SRE setup time).
- Verdict: PagerDuty wins. There is zero financial or operational reason to self-host at this scale.
Scenario B: The 20-User Engineering Team
- PagerDuty (Business Tier, Billed Annually): 20 users × $41 × 12 = $9,840/year.
- Cabot (Self-Hosted): $360 (Basic VPS Hosting) + $1,200 (Twilio/SMTP API costs) + $4,800 (SRE labor) = $6,360/year.
- Verdict: Cabot is cheaper on paper, but the cost delta (~$3,500/year) is narrow enough that most engineering leads will prefer PagerDuty to avoid diverting SREs from core product development.
Scenario C: The 100-User Mid-Market Enterprise
- PagerDuty (Business Tier, Billed Annually): 100 users × $41 × 12 = $49,200/year (Note: If SSO/SAML is mandated by security, they must upgrade to the Enterprise tier, pushing this cost to $70,000+).
- Cabot (Self-Hosted High-Availability): $3,600 (AWS multi-AZ cluster) + $3,000 (Twilio API fees) + $6,000 (Dedicated SRE maintenance) = $12,600/year.
- Verdict: Cabot wins significantly, saving over $36,000 to $57,000 annually. At this scale, the financial savings more than justify dedicating a small fraction of SRE time to maintaining the internal alerting stack.
When Does Paying for PagerDuty Actually Save Money?
Despite the high licensing costs, PagerDuty is the more cost-effective choice in several key operational climates:
- Severe Talent Constraints: If your SRE/DevOps team is operating at capacity, pulling them off core product development or infrastructure scaling to troubleshoot a custom Cabot deployment represents a high opportunity cost.
- Hard Uptime SLAs: If your business faces financial penalties for missed client SLAs, PagerDuty’s multi-region redundant telephony networks and guaranteed 99.9% platform availability act as an essential insurance policy.
- Complex, Fragmented Ecosystems: If your stack relies on dozens of disparate tools (e.g., Datadog, Prometheus, New Relic, Jira, Slack, AWS CloudWatch), PagerDuty’s library of over 700 native, out-of-the-box integrations will save hundreds of custom development hours compared to writing manual webhook handlers in Cabot.
Final Purchasing Recommendation
- Choose PagerDuty if you have fewer than 15 developers, require strict Enterprise SSO compliance, lack dedicated SRE resources, or need advanced AI noise reduction features to combat massive alert volumes. Start on the Free tier and transition to the Professional tier as your team crosses the 5-user threshold.
- Choose Cabot if you have more than 30 developers, are already running containerized internal tooling via Kubernetes or Docker, and have comfortable in-house Python/SRE expertise. The licensing savings at scale are substantial, and because Cabot runs entirely within your VPC, it keeps your system architecture highly secure and self-contained.
Cost and pricing analysis verified as of 2026-06-28. Self-hosting costs are estimates based on standard cloud providers.