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Status Pages

Create public-facing status pages to communicate service health and uptime to your users.

Status Pages

Status pages require a Pro plan or above.

A status page is a public-facing website that shows the current health of your services. Instead of your users guessing whether something is broken or flooding your support channels, they can check your status page for a real-time view of what is working and what is not.

Why status pages matter

When a service goes down, the first thing users do is look for confirmation. A well-maintained status page:

  • Reduces support load -- Users can self-serve instead of opening tickets asking "is it down?"
  • Builds trust -- Transparent communication during outages shows professionalism
  • Keeps users informed -- Subscribers get notified automatically when something changes
  • Provides historical context -- Uptime history shows your track record over time

Creating a status page

Choose a slug

Navigate to Operations > Status Pages and click New Status Page. Choose a URL slug for your page. Your status page will be available at:

your-slug.status.seenty.app

For example, if your slug is acme, your status page URL will be acme.status.seenty.app. Choose something recognizable -- typically your company or product name.

Set a title and description

Enter a title (e.g., "Acme Status") and an optional description (e.g., "Real-time status for all Acme services"). The title appears at the top of your status page, and the description appears below it.

Add components

Components represent the services you want to show on your status page. See Components and Groups for details on organizing your services.

Customize branding

Add your logo, choose an accent color, and configure the appearance. See Customization for all available options by plan.

Publish

Once you are satisfied with the setup, your status page is live at the URL. You can toggle the page between public and private at any time.

Public vs. private

  • Public -- Anyone with the URL can view the status page. This is the default and recommended setting for user-facing services.
  • Private -- The status page is only accessible to authenticated members of your organization. Use this for internal services that you want to track but not expose publicly.

What your status page shows

A published status page includes:

  • Overall status -- A banner at the top summarizing the overall health (e.g., "All Systems Operational" or "Partial System Outage")
  • Components -- Each component shows its current status with a color-coded indicator
  • Component groups -- Related components organized under collapsible groups
  • Uptime history -- A visual bar showing uptime percentage over the last 90 days for each component
  • Active incidents -- Any ongoing incidents are displayed with their current status and timeline
  • Dark/Light mode -- Users can toggle between dark and light themes

Status page limits

PlanStatus pages
Hobby--
Starter--
ProUp to 2
UltraUp to 5
EnterpriseUnlimited