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Reviews from AWS customer

3 AWS reviews

External reviews

643 reviews
from and

External reviews are not included in the AWS star rating for the product.


    RobertVergeer

Monitoring expertise has reduced setup time and now supports thousands of on-prem devices efficiently

  • January 12, 2026
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

I am an internal system administrator using LogicMonitor. Most of what we do with LogicMonitor involves on-premises hardware such as servers, network equipment, firewalls, and storage devices.

We do not utilize the Dynamic Service Insights feature for real-time visibility. We only use plain monitoring and do not use cloud monitoring such as Office 365 because it is too expensive. We exclusively use network monitoring equipment and server monitoring.

LogicMonitor is deployed on-premises in our organization. We have agents on-premises for servers at our customer sites, and they report back to our LogicMonitor instance.

I have not used LogicMonitor's AIOps for diagnosing root causes and orchestrating remedies.

What is most valuable?

The most valuable features of LogicMonitor are the company's knowledge about monitoring devices and their expertise in what to monitor. They excel at telling you what is performing well and what is performing poorly. LogicMonitor provides thresholds with explanations of what they mean, whereas a lot of monitoring software captures thresholds and data without knowing exactly what those metrics mean. If needed, you can get help with solving the problem causing the threshold to be triggered. LogicMonitor knows when something is going wrong. For example, when a disk threshold exceeds 90%, you receive a warning. However, that is straightforward, and many software solutions do that.

When you encounter Active Directory thresholds for concurrent connections or open connections, those are more difficult to set correctly. The main reason I appreciate LogicMonitor is that we do not have to set those thresholds ourselves. LogicMonitor does that for us.

LogicMonitor has positively impacted our organization by allowing us to implement it for 1,200 clients or 1,200 endpoints within three months, which went very well. The software has enabled us to operate with one fewer full-time employee because it works exceptionally well and does exactly what we need it to do. Our deployment process was reduced from one day to embed a customer in our settings and workflow to just one hour with LogicMonitor. That is a significant improvement in speed. Additionally, because LogicMonitor is cloud-based software, we do not have to perform any maintenance on the platform itself. All maintenance is automated by LogicMonitor, which saves us considerable time.

LogicMonitor affects our team's mean time to resolve incidents because we perform a lot of troubleshooting with it, particularly performance troubleshooting and configuration management, and those capabilities help us reduce the time to resolve problems significantly. For example, when a switch goes down, we have the latest configuration of the switch available in LogicMonitor.

What needs improvement?

I do not think there are areas of LogicMonitor that could be improved or enhanced other than the price. We do not have a lot of contact with LogicMonitor because the software usually works as it should.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been working with LogicMonitor since 2017.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

LogicMonitor has not been down in the years we have used it. It has consistently remained operational. I cannot remember the last time LogicMonitor sent me an email about an error or when I visited the website and encountered an error.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

LogicMonitor is very much scalable, stable, and reliable.

How are customer service and support?

I sometimes communicate with LogicMonitor's technical support. For example, a few years ago, we wanted to monitor a specific firewall and have its configuration displayed in LogicMonitor. This capability was not included in the default packages, so I asked whether LogicMonitor could provide that functionality. Within one day, I received a script, and LogicMonitor was able to provide the firewall configuration in LogicMonitor on the same day I submitted the request.

Based on my experience with LogicMonitor's support, I would rate them nine out of ten, with ten being the best support, primarily because of the price.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

How was the initial setup?

I participated in the initial setup of LogicMonitor.

The initial setup process of LogicMonitor involved testing several software options. We tested LogicMonitor, Kaseya Traverse, and another option that I do not recall at this moment. LogicMonitor was the solution we selected. We had a connection between our CEO and LogicMonitor for pricing discussions, and after they completed the pricing process, we performed some pre-configuration on the customer side to make LogicMonitor implementation easier. After that, we spent about one month with three people converting everything from the monitoring software we were using previously, which was Zenos, similar to Zabbix. We completed the conversion to LogicMonitor within that one month. We then spent one month troubleshooting the events that were generated, and we used the final month for cleaning up all remaining elements. We made a complete transition to LogicMonitor within three months without any interruption to monitoring.

What other advice do I have?

The challenges I faced in gaining complete visibility across my infrastructure involve combining on-premises devices such as laptops, on-premises users who sometimes transition to another device, mobile devices, or work from home or from another location, and gathering all alerts and then consolidating them into a single usable alert to solve real-time issues with account hacks and other security concerns. However, that has nothing to do with LogicMonitor.

Dynamic Service Insights does not affect my understanding and management of digital services in my organization.

I would rate this product nine out of ten overall.


    Ankar Aung

Unified monitoring has reduced incident noise and enables rapid resolution across networks

  • January 08, 2026
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

LogicMonitor is used to monitor all security network appliances and system appliances, including servers, Linux systems, networks, appliances, firewalls, routers, and switches. It also monitors cloud infrastructure, including VNet, cloud services, and cloud connectivity solutions such as Azure ExpressRoute, and extends down into individual configurations such as BGP sessions and IPsec tunnels. This monitoring capability serves multiple sectors through a managed service provider model, providing services to finance, real estate, and other industries.

What is most valuable?

The LogicMonitor alert UI is valuable because it correlates alerts, preventing unnecessary panic by allowing me to review the alert dashboard instead of logging into each individual device or relying on unreliable monitoring tools. LogicMonitor is very reliable compared to many other monitoring tools I have used. Each individual BGP session, IPsec tunnel, and interface is captured accurately, and the logs are highly reliable.

The impact of LogicMonitor on management of service health and business risks is significant. In my previous company, after implementing LogicMonitor, most issues were resolved within one hour without requiring senior engineer intervention, as junior engineers could resolve issues by reviewing the alert information and understanding what occurred.

What needs improvement?

The remediation functionality could be improved. Given the power of the tool, implementing a one-click option to change configurations via SSH or API access to appliances would be beneficial. The remediation component could also include automation capabilities.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been working with LogicMonitor for one and a half years.

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Before LogicMonitor, I used a different tool for log search, though I cannot recall the name. The main differences between previous tools I used, such as SolarWinds, and LogicMonitor are that previous tools do not display everything in one dashboard. They typically show a number of devices and alerts, and to see alert details, I had to click through to see more information. LogicMonitor displays everything in one comprehensive dashboard, which prevents me from forgetting what I see when navigating away from a link.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

I researched the pricing of LogicMonitor, and it costs around ten dollars per device per month, which is somewhat expensive compared to other products. Some monitoring tools such as Zabbix are free resources but not as powerful as LogicMonitor. For small businesses that want to utilize LogicMonitor and are just starting out with limited customers, a pricing model targeted to this segment would be beneficial, perhaps at three or two dollars per device per month.

What other advice do I have?

LogicMonitor has advanced AI and AIOps capabilities for diagnosing root causes that I have not yet utilized. LogicMonitor has positively impacted my team's MTTR for incidents. When one switch goes down, multiple alerts trigger not only from that switch but also from peer switches. Suddenly, a hundred alerts may appear, but the issue can be narrowed down by identifying the down device instead of processing all the noise. One switch showing as red means I can ignore the other alerts coming from other switches, which is very helpful as the entire team can see this information in one dashboard. I rate this product a ten out of ten.


    Anshuman Thakur

Monitoring has reduced downtime and now enables proactive alerts across cloud workloads

  • January 02, 2026
  • Review from a verified AWS customer

What is our primary use case?

My main use case with LogicMonitor is monitoring the health of our EC2 instances and applications, such as my Kubernetes clusters, and the metrics which AWS does not provide, like memory management, memory utilization, and many other information points which AWS does not provide by default. LogicMonitor handles all of that.

I use LogicMonitor to monitor the EC2 CPU, memory, disk, and network metrics and set up threshold-based alerts. I am notified immediately if an instance spikes in usage or shows signs of performance degradation.

I use LogicMonitor to alert me when an EC2 instance CPU stays above 80% for 10 minutes, so I can quickly investigate whether it is a workload spike, a stuck process, or if we need to scale the instance. We have LogicMonitor integrated with Slack where we get alerts if anything goes wrong for an instance, the Kubernetes cluster, or anything similar.

What is most valuable?

The best feature according to me with LogicMonitor is that it is easy to configure. All the alerts are very easy to configure. It has a clean dashboard that is very intuitive. It has really strong EC2 cloud integrations. You do not have to install the agent. It is agentless, so that is the biggest advantage that I find because in other tools like Rapid7, you have to install the Rapid7 agent inside the instance. Here, we just need to have an instance in our VPC, and it will automatically scan all the instances and give me the stats for those instances.

What stands out most is how quickly I can spot issues, get notified with the right context on Slack, and track trends over time without a lot of manual steps.

The agentless setup reduces a lot of time because we do not need to add any code. We do not need to add any specific code in order to monitor that instance. Any instance that spins up in my AWS account which is in the same VPC as the LogicMonitor collector instance will automatically get picked up and all the statistics will be there. It is very easy with no setup. The only setup effort that I have to do is setting up one instance per VPC. Once that is done, we do not need to worry about it ever.

Another thing which I prefer about LogicMonitor is the flexibility. I can customize dashboards and alert thresholds based on what actually matters for our workloads. The historical data makes it very easy to spot patterns and prevent repeated issues.

LogicMonitor helps because there are two phases of alerts in any application. One is when the application is actually down. That happens when you have your monitoring system on your website or application level. However, that is too late to find out whether the application is down because at that time, it will be impacting the customers. LogicMonitor can give a kind of forecast when it comes to your servers because it will tell beforehand that particular servers are getting heavy on usage or CPU load. We can then go and either reduce its load or add another instance to share the load. This helps in prevention of any downtimes. It has helped significantly in our downtimes to prevent downtimes.

LogicMonitor has actually helped reduce our downtimes. When talking about the statistics, it has helped us reduce downtime to about 40 to 50% because without LogicMonitor, we used to know about the downtime only when the application was actually down. With it, the downtime has been reduced to 40 to 50%. That is a huge improvement when it comes to our applications.

What needs improvement?

When it comes to the improvement of LogicMonitor, I think there are a few points that can be improved. The first one is alert tuning, which takes time. It requires effort when trying to understand it for the first time. The defaults do not always match our workload patterns, so I have to adjust the thresholds to reduce noise and avoid alert fatigue. While the dashboards are solid, I sometimes wish that the UI was a bit more intuitive when drilling down quickly during an incident. There are many options and finding the exact view where I can identify the exact problem takes a few extra clicks. When an alert comes and I click on a LogicMonitor alert, it takes time to understand what the alert actually is and to go through the data points. The alert page specifically could be better. The alert tuning part can also be made more simple.

The first area that could be better is alert clarity and routing. Sometimes alerts do not include enough immediate context, so I still have to spend a few minutes correlating data across views. Adding more actionable details directly in the alert would make the response even faster. LogicMonitor sometimes gives false alerts as well. For example, if an EC2 instance is down, it will not determine whether the EC2 instance has been deliberately turned off or if it is actually not responding. At that time, it will give false alerts. The clearing of alerts is also an issue. Once an issue is fixed, the alert should be cleared, but it takes a little time for that alert to be cleared. Another improvement that would be helpful is simpler customization for complex dashboards. It is powerful, but building highly tailored dashboards, especially across multiple environments, can feel heavy and time-consuming. I would also appreciate a stronger out-of-the-box AWS correlation, such as automatically grouping related issues across EC2, EBS, and ALBs in a way that reads as a single incident story. This would reduce the mental overhead during outages. Grouping incidents together, such as all the EC2 alerts, all the EBS alerts, or all the load balancer alerts would be beneficial. Overall, none of these are blockers, just some improving areas.

There could be smarter anomaly detection out of the box that can catch unusual but important behavior without manual tuning of every threshold. Better tagging and dynamic grouping for EC2 instances would also be helpful. Cleaner alert de-duplication so a single underlying issue does not generate multiple redundant alerts would improve the system. More guided root cause workflows would be beneficial, such as providing the most likely causes based on correlated metrics. Faster search navigation across devices, dashboards, and alerts during incidents would also improve the platform.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using LogicMonitor for the past three years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

LogicMonitor is very stable. I have never seen the UI down or any alerts or anything when it comes to the LogicMonitor side. It has been very stable for us. The platform is reliable, alerts are consistent, and once collectors and integrations are in place, monitoring runs smoothly with minimal disruption. Any issues we have seen are usually related to configuration or tuning, not the stability of the tool itself.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

LogicMonitor is pretty good at scaling things when it comes to monitoring AWS infrastructure because I can see that it scales very well for us. It handles growth in the number of EC2 instances and services without major performance issues. It is straightforward to onboard new resources as environments expand. The main scaling challenge is not the platform itself, but making sure alerting and grouping stays organized as the infrastructure grows. Apart from that, there are no other challenges.

How are customer service and support?

The customer support is very reliable. I can send emails to them and they will reply within 24 hours. It has been solid for us.

When it comes to customer support, I would rate it as a 7 because the option to call LogicMonitor support is not yet available. They do not give us the option to connect over a call. That can be a little bit of a hassle, but apart from that, it is solid.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

Before LogicMonitor, we were using CloudWatch and a mix of manual dashboards, but it did not give us the same centralized visibility or alerting consistency. We had to go into each AWS account and open CloudWatch in that particular region. That was very tedious and cumbersome. We switched to LogicMonitor because it provides stronger end-to-end monitoring, better dashboards, and faster and more actionable alerts across our infrastructure. It is easy to view the alerts across all of our AWS accounts and regions. That is a big help for us.

How was the initial setup?

There were a few challenges which I faced while setting up LogicMonitor with my AWS infrastructure. The first one was the initial discovery and onboarding, which took some effort. I needed to ensure the right AWS permissions, collectors, and access policies because that instance needs to access some sort of data while keeping in mind the security aspect so that the instance does not have every access. We give limited permissions to that particular instance and the IAM role associated with it. The next challenge was tuning alerts, which was the biggest time investment early on. The default thresholds did not always match our workload behavior. I had to adjust to reduce noise. Getting dashboards just right required some trial and error, especially when grouping EC2 instances by environment, tags, or services. Making sure the coverage was complete across hybrid components took time. We also have our servers in a vSphere infrastructure. I had to first identify all of our infrastructure and then carefully install a collector instance in each of the VPCs. That took time and effort, but it was all initial.

What was our ROI?

There has been definitely a return on investment when it comes to LogicMonitor. Previously, due to the downtimes, we used to have more infrastructure running because we were concerned about unexpected downtimes. Because of LogicMonitor, we have reduced our EC2 infrastructure significantly, which has helped us reduce costs by 20%. The time which is saved is significant. The incident response is better because there are no incidents and we are always preventing the incidents before they happen. The incident response time has also reduced significantly. When an alert comes, we also check LogicMonitor to see whether there was a warning there or not. This helps us pinpoint the issue. We can give a conservative percentage of 40 when it comes to the time saved. Fewer employees are needed now, so we used to have three to four people managing all the AWS infrastructure and the alerting part, which was reduced significantly because now only one person can look at the dashboard and the UI, which is very intuitive and easy to understand. It has also helped us reduce employees.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

There were a few options which we considered before going with LogicMonitor. They included DataDog, New Relic, or staying fully on CloudWatch. We went with LogicMonitor because it gave us the right balance of infrastructure visibility, flexible alerting, and centralized monitoring without needing a lot of custom work and making it very useful in our day-to-day DevOps lifecycle.

What other advice do I have?

If asked about LogicMonitor, I would simply say that if someone wants to consider LogicMonitor, they can definitely go for it. The only things that will need to be done is spending time upfront on alert tuning, setting up the collector instances, and giving them permissions. Apart from that, once that is done, it will be smooth sailing. There is no need to do anything as it is agentless. One just adds infrastructure, expands infrastructure, and it will automatically detect and discover. The alerting part is also very good. I would rate LogicMonitor with a review rating of 8 out of 10.

LogicMonitor is a solid end-to-end tool when it comes to monitoring AWS infrastructure. It is agentless, easy to set up, and easy to monitor.

Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

Private Cloud

If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?

Amazon Web Services (AWS)


    Anto M.

Efficient Monitoring but Needs Better Support and Pricing

  • January 02, 2026
  • Review provided by G2

What do you like best about the product?
I like LogicMonitor for its monitoring capabilities, especially for our business website where it updates each and every page. I found the feature for monitoring dynamic servers inside very useful, helping to maintain our uptime. Additionally, I appreciate being immediately notified if anything is up or down, which is crucial for us. The setup was very easy for me, which was a big plus.
What do you dislike about the product?
I said the pricing and they enable to automation something like that. LogicMonitor is very hard to reach for support.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
LogicMonitor updates everything on our website, monitoring each page and providing immediate DNS filtering alerts if anything goes up or down, which is major for us.


    Warren S.

Much better products out there for cheaper

  • December 22, 2025
  • Review provided by G2

What do you like best about the product?
Not a lot, if our 3rd party support didn't insist on us using it we wouldn't have it
What do you dislike about the product?
to monitoring everything you'd like to monitor is expensive
As we're going through a 3rd party provider, we cannot have a monitoring account as it now requires MFA
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
None, we have to have as part of our support contract with a 3rd party


    Krishna S.

Simplifies Cloud Services with Fast Support

  • December 20, 2025
  • Review provided by G2

What do you like best about the product?
I find LogicMonitor easier for coding compared to AWS or Azure. The support is generally faster than others, and I find it easy to explain to DevOps.
What do you dislike about the product?
It is affected by outages in the other vendors like CrowdStrike, so that has been an issue sometimes.
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
LogicMonitor makes coding easier compared to AWS or Azure. Support is generally faster and it's easy to explain to DevOps.


    Computer & Network Security

Useful Monitoring, But Lacks Full Coverage

  • November 28, 2025
  • Review provided by G2

What do you like best about the product?
Easy to install, add devices and customize as per your needs
What do you dislike about the product?
Do not monitor all the required things from all the vendors
What problems is the product solving and how is that benefiting you?
Replaced the existing monitoring tool and providing more in-dept analysis


    John Knopick

Has reduced false positives and enabled real-time insights during global events

  • November 24, 2025
  • Review from a verified AWS customer

What is our primary use case?

The main use for LogicMonitor at Universal Music and the other organizations I'm working for is infrastructure-based monitoring. The goal is to move everything off of Dynatrace and other sources and into LogicMonitor as the main point of contact for all data, logs, filters, and infrastructure monitoring.

LogicMonitor monitors everything from servers to wireless access points to applications. Universal Music has sites all over the world on every continent outside of Antarctica. The offices have infrastructure devices such as Cisco switches, access points, servers, and VMware devices, all being monitored by LogicMonitor.

What is most valuable?

The challenges we faced with LogicMonitor were getting everybody up to speed, setting up training, and encouraging people to play around in the sandbox we built. The granularity of LogicMonitor has been a huge win, being able to create filters, set thresholds, dashboards with real-time monitoring, heat maps, and customize everything site by site.

The best features LogicMonitor offers include the ability to set up filters using Groovy scripts and Python. As a scripting person who loves doing things by code and automations, setting things up via scripts has been a huge benefit. The dashboarding feature and the different types of reports available are excellent, allowing us to get as granular as possible to provide only the pertinent data needed and filter out the white noise.

We set up filters to track dead devices and devices that haven't been reporting in for 90 and 180 days, built through a Groovy script that runs constantly and sends out a daily report. We also have reports built inside Python with Groovy scripting to help determine the top 10 most frequent sites having the biggest issues and break down what issues are coming in. There has been a lot of customization and many options in this space.

LogicMonitor has positively impacted our organization by cutting down white noise and false positives. With Dynatrace and AKIPS, we were getting a lot more white noise, and LogicMonitor allows our team to be more proactive than reactive, which cuts down on the SLOs and SLAs we are trying to meet at all times. During big events such as album releases, we need to ensure our devices are running at peak performance, and LogicMonitor allows us to see these flare-ups in real-time before they become massive issues. Being able to stamp out these issues before they take down sites during big releases is key.

Since switching to LogicMonitor, we have gone down from about 65 to 70% in false positives to 20 to 30%. While still not where we want it to be, this is a massive step in the right direction. Our SLAs and SLOs were averaging about 10 to 15 failed SLAs and SLOs that were over the time allotted to get those resolved, and those are now down to about two to three per week. This is a massive step forward and always going to be a work in progress, but LogicMonitor has definitely helped us move everything in the right direction.

What needs improvement?

LogicMonitor could improve their support system. One thing Dynatrace had that I enjoyed was real-time support chat available to reach someone and get help in real-time. With LogicMonitor, that is not really an option. We have to set up an email or reach out to support and try to set up an ad hoc call, which cannot be done in real-time when time is the most sensitive issue. That is definitely one area where they could improve.

There are not many gaps or anything that LogicMonitor does not already have available. More data sources or more reporting options would be helpful to make sure all bases are covered, no matter what kind of report or data we are looking to pull. Outside of that, there are really not many notes regarding changes to the application itself.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using LogicMonitor for almost five years and took it end to end from the point of proof of concept all the way through go-live and beyond with Universal Music Group. I have a lot of experience, and I am now working on some other projects that use LogicMonitor as well.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

Since we implemented LogicMonitor and got it working in production, there has been no downtime, no reliability issues, and nothing major regarding flare-ups from LogicMonitor's perspective.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

LogicMonitor's scalability absolutely meets our organization's growth needs. When we bring in new sites and new devices, the auto setup or wizard very easily automatically detects those and pulls in those devices.

How are customer service and support?

Overall, customer support has room for improvement because reaching someone can be difficult at times. We need to be able to reach them in real-time, and without those kinds of options available, we have to set up ad hoc calls, which could be improved.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Neutral

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We previously used Dynatrace along with AKIPS and AWS CloudWatch. Dynatrace was only using about 25 to 30% of the resources available, and it was a very high price point. We ended up going with LogicMonitor because it was more cost efficient and allowed us to utilize even more than what we were using with Dynatrace.

How was the initial setup?

LogicMonitor is deployed in our organization on private cloud, with the majority being private cloud. We have some hybrid deployments because we have some infrastructure inside Amazon AWS as well.

What about the implementation team?

We did not purchase LogicMonitor through the AWS Marketplace. This was something we did contracts with and went through LogicMonitor directly, setting it up from proof of concept all the way through go-live and beyond.

What was our ROI?

I do not have information concerning money saved, fewer employees needed, or time saved. However, I do know they have definitely seen a return on investment with LogicMonitor. I have heard them say very positive things financially about it and how improvements have occurred since implementation, but I do not have specifics in that area.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

I did not have much experience with the pricing, setup cost, and licensing for LogicMonitor. I sat in on some of the business meetings, but my main focus was the technical side of it, getting everything implemented and moved over through all of the integrations. I do not remember much about the business sales aspect.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

We looked into DataDog, we also had Splunk for a little while, and Grafana as well. Those did not pan out much. We even looked at possibly using more of the Dynatrace space, but their price point was far too high, so LogicMonitor ended up being the solid choice for us.

What other advice do I have?

New users should definitely pay attention to how LogicMonitor allows you to change everything from adding things in via the resource tree, doing things using the expert wizard tools. You do not have to manually bring your devices over; LogicMonitor can automatically find the devices for you. There are plenty of different modules that you can use and data sources, so pretty much any scenario you have that you need for a monitoring space or monitoring option, LogicMonitor will be able to provide that and then some.

I give LogicMonitor a solid 10 on a scale of 1 to 10. Outside of those little things, that would not bring my score down at all. With my experience working with other observability stacks and applications, this one is definitely top of the game and top of the list.

I chose a 10 because of the granularity, the customization, the scripting capabilities, the real-time monitoring options, and how easy it is to migrate or integrate it with things such as BigPanda and ServiceNow. Overall, LogicMonitor is a one-stop shop for anything you need monitoring-wise.

There is going to be a learning curve as with all observability stacks, but definitely play around with LogicMonitor, get comfortable with it, build out a sandbox, and do their demo trials. Being willing to embrace change and a new way of doing things will show you that LogicMonitor is very solid, as they should be able to support any use case you throw at them.

As long as LogicMonitor makes the updates and lets us know what has changed and how to access the new features, that is the main thing. I would rate this product a 10 out of 10 overall.

Which deployment model are you using for this solution?

Private Cloud

If public cloud, private cloud, or hybrid cloud, which cloud provider do you use?

Amazon Web Services (AWS)


    reviewer2772051

Has reduced mean time to resolution by expanding visibility across hybrid environments

  • October 28, 2025
  • Review from a verified AWS customer

What is our primary use case?

My main use case for LogicMonitor is enterprise monitoring, specifically infrastructure monitoring, and cloud, so hybrid monitoring. For hybrid monitoring, we monitor services that are running in the cloud amongst all three providers, whether it's GCP, AWS, or Azure, as well as infrastructure in our data center and at our various locations as well.

What is most valuable?

The best features LogicMonitor offers include the single pane of glass, the constant improvements to the features within LogicMonitor, as well as the excellent support and the ability to actually get hold of the developers of their specific products or features within the tool.

The single pane of glass feature helps my team day to day by allowing us to look at all our specific areas in one view, in one tool, even though it's infrastructure for various departments or various teams; with that, they can see their own systems within LogicMonitor, do reporting, graphing, dashboarding, etcetera.

LogicMonitor has positively impacted my organization by being up to date with all the latest features and capabilities, so as our organization develops cutting-edge systems, whether internal or third party, we can always rely on LogicMonitor to provide proper enterprise level monitoring and observability.

LogicMonitor has expanded our view of our systems and has reduced our mean time to resolution, as now engineers that work on specific issues are able to very quickly identify what the cause is.

What needs improvement?

LogicMonitor can be improved by having more meetings with customers to find out what they really need and perhaps also by providing feedback on feature requests to see where the feature requests actually sit in their development queue.

For how long have I used the solution?

In my current field, I've been working for more than twenty years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

LogicMonitor is stable.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

LogicMonitor scales well; however, the need to assess the load on collectors is a bit cumbersome.

How are customer service and support?

Customer support is good, but escalations within customer support are not so good.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Positive

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

I previously used a different solution, but I cannot say the name, and it wasn't up to date with current technologies and did not align with our observability requirements.

What's my experience with pricing, setup cost, and licensing?

I experienced no issues with pricing, setup cost, and licensing; it was very transparent, and the licensing model is very clear and easy to understand, with the exception of the cloud licensing, which is a bit confusing.

The cloud licensing is confusing due to the way resources are counted; they have an algorithm or method that they use, but it's not shared or easily determinable for me to ascertain what the actual cost is based on my usage.

Which other solutions did I evaluate?

Before choosing LogicMonitor, I evaluated other options, but I cannot disclose what those other options were.

What other advice do I have?

On a scale of one to ten, I would rate LogicMonitor an eight. I choose that number because it's above average, but they still haven't quite reached the level of features required for it to be a complete single pane of glass; for example, the APM feature is not quite as developed as Datadog.

My advice for others looking into using LogicMonitor is to assess what your needs are, whether the features align with your company's design, as well as what your company actually requires from the tool, since LogicMonitor is designed for full level observability, so it's pointless getting it just to monitor three servers; we're looking at enterprise-level monitoring here.

I would rate LogicMonitor an 8 out of 10.


    Max Anderson

Has improved issue resolution with custom monitoring while needing better support for cloud and containers

  • October 16, 2025
  • Review provided by PeerSpot

What is our primary use case?

LogicMonitor is our network and systems monitoring tool. It is primarily for our on-premises infrastructure, including firewalls, routers, switches, servers, both physical and virtual, storage systems, and anything in between. We do a little bit with SaaS solutions and cloud, but LogicMonitor really shines for on-prem solutions.

Primarily, it determines when a server is up or down. It is also helpful to correlate multiple different alerts together. If I see one server down at a branch location and I can go in and quickly check that the router is also down, that would tell me the circuit or the power is probably out at that location. This helps me narrow down what I need to work on.

It is a really solid tool for the on-premises, physical and virtual infrastructure. I have had nothing but good things to say about it, and it has been a pleasure using it for those use cases.

What is most valuable?

I love the idea of how the monitoring scripts are built. LogicMonitor is made up of Logic Modules with different types. Primarily, users work with data sources. The Logic Modules are written in Groovy programming language. The script goes out and does whatever it needs to do to authenticate, which may be a custom situation for every type of different device. It authenticates, and within the logic of the script, it knows how to pull the data and output it to standard out in a standard format.

This is really powerful because it allows you to look at the code that LogicMonitor's own engineers have written for all of the various different out-of-the-box solutions. For example, with VMware vSphere, they have probably a dozen Logic Modules. If you need to troubleshoot, or if the Logic Module does not work exactly as needed, you can go in, look at the code, and fork that Logic Module to adjust the Groovy code to do exactly what you need.

I was able to create ping monitoring of every virtual machine in our vSphere instance. I did not want to pay for a separate LogicMonitor license for certain servers where I only needed to know if they were up or down. I built a custom Logic Module that operates off of all the VM instances within Vcenter and performs a ping every minute. We use that primarily to determine up-down status for all of our VMs.

For our colocation facility, which has an API, we wanted to monitor certain events, such as when someone enters our cage. I wrote a custom event source which queries the API periodically. It looks for new entries into our cage, and if it finds one, it creates a LogicMonitor alert that gets delivered to all proper stakeholders so we know when someone enters our secure location.

What needs improvement?

The hardest part about LogicMonitor is its current support for cloud, SaaS, and container monitoring. The on-premises network monitoring tools are stronger than some of the more modern things we need to monitor in the IT landscape. With cloud monitoring, all metrics are pulled directly from Azure, whatever Azure provides. There is not really anything custom. There are no Groovy scripts or anything custom that can be customized for cloud monitoring.

The container monitoring seems to be really behind compared to some bespoke cloud-native monitoring solutions that are designed around Kubernetes, containers, and ephemeral environments. LogicMonitor does not shine as well in these more modern IT systems.

The product is not as mature in these areas. During our trial, I developed quite a list of different issues and bugs. While we could deal with or work around each issue individually, the combination of all of them together made me less excited to move forward with a monitoring product for containers. Being that it was a separate cost requiring procurement, we opted not to proceed at that point. We are still in the market and looking around. We may do another trial of LogicMonitor container monitoring in the future, but it is not number one on our list.

For how long have I used the solution?

I have been using this solution for at least five years.

What do I think about the stability of the solution?

It is very stable. I have never seen LogicMonitor itself go down. I have seen issues where our collectors stop working, but I think that is potentially due to issues with our own infrastructure and not necessarily their software. In terms of their cloud-hosted portion, it is extremely solid. I have never had any issues with it.

What do I think about the scalability of the solution?

Their model assigns monitor devices to a collector, and you can scale out collectors as much as you want. They are not licensed, so you could deploy one collector or 1,000 collectors for the same cost. As your company grows, you are able to scale effectively by just deploying additional collector machines.

How are customer service and support?

Thankfully, I have not had to open many support tickets because the product mostly just works without issues. For the few times that I have had to open a ticket, they have been helpful. I have found that they are less likely to want to jump on a call. I appreciate when support at other companies is quick to say, "Let's jump on a Zoom call and work it out." With LogicMonitor, they really want to try to keep the conversation over email and tickets as long as possible. Sometimes that can prolong the support experience, but overall, the support experience was good, and I usually always got what I needed from the support engineers.

How would you rate customer service and support?

Neutral

Which solution did I use previously and why did I switch?

We did not have previous solutions. We might have evaluated one or two options, but it was primarily LogicMonitor because some team members had prior experience at previous employers and there was not really anything else that caught our eye or that we thought was worth looking at.

What was our ROI?

I do not have any specific metrics because we do not record that information, but I can definitely notice a difference in our posture, uptime, and ability to solve problems and resolve outages much quicker since we have had LogicMonitor in place.

We have felt improvements in our ability to solve problems quicker and diagnose issues faster. Overall, it makes our jobs easier, though I do not have any hard numbers to share.

What other advice do I have?

If you need a traditional on-premises monitoring tool for your physical and virtual infrastructure in your own data center, it is a great solution. If you are primarily a public cloud user, you should probably look at another solution.

On a scale of 1-10, I rate this solution a 7.