
Terminal-native uptime monitoring for developers, configured with YAML and deployed via CLI.
Product memo
Developers who prefer command-line workflows use TermWatch for infrastructure monitoring. It replaces traditional dashboards by defining monitors in YAML and deploying them via CLI. This approach integrates monitoring directly into existing toolchains, fitting directly into version control systems.
For who
Developers monitoring infrastructure
Solves what
Terminal-native uptime monitoring without dashboards
- CLI-based deployment
- YAML monitor configuration
- Alerting via Slack/Discord/email
In their own words
Monitor your infrastructure from the terminal
Define monitors in YAML, deploy from your terminal, get alerted when things break. No dashboards to click through.
No dashboards to click through.
Commercial cues
Model
subscription
Free tier
Yes
Trial
No
Pricing Strategy
- • A free tier provides basic monitoring to drive initial developer adoption.
- • Tiered plans scale limits on monitor count and check frequency.
Operator context
Founded
Mar 2026
HQ
Spain
Platform
API
Audience
Developers
Payments
Stripe
Public footprint
Tech stack
Builder Strategy
- Strategy Type
- Niche Specialist
- Stage
- Pre Revenue
- Effort
- Solo Buildable
About TermWatch Expand
TermWatch provides a unique approach to infrastructure monitoring, specifically for developers who prefer working within the terminal. It eliminates the need for web-based dashboards by allowing users to define monitors through YAML files and deploy them using a command-line interface.
This integration into existing developer workflows, along with support for HTTP, HTTPS, and TCP checks, simplifies how teams manage uptime. The service sends alerts to channels like Slack, Discord, and email, ensuring notifications reach the right people without requiring a separate dashboard login.
