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Bugcrowd Alternatives — 12 Options Compared (2026)
Looking for an alternative to Bugcrowd? Whether the price is wrong, features don't fit, or you've outgrown the platform — here are 12 tools in the same category, with honest pricing and limitations.
Why people search for alternatives
- Price: Bugcrowd starts at $0/mo — alternatives below cost less.
- Features: some alternatives focus on specific use cases (bug-bounty, pentest, managed) where Bugcrowd is broader.
- Self-hosting: if you want full control, open-source options replace SaaS billing entirely.
- Free tier: generous free tiers exist if your monitor count is small.
Top alternatives
HackerOne
paidLargest bug bounty + VDP platform — quote-based, programs typically run $5K+/mo plus bounty pool.
Cobalt
paidPentest-as-a-Service — vetted human testers, fixed-scope packages. Quote-based, typical engagement ~$8,000+.
Continuous DAST + manual pentest hybrid — published pricing $199-$5,999/yr, popular with SaaS startups.
Continuous public-web-layer guardian — watches HTTP / size / multi-lang redirects / cyrillic drift / structure every 30 min. Self-hostable from $99 one-time.
Industry-standard pentest proxy — free Community for manual work, Pro $449/yr per user, Enterprise from $6,995/yr.
EASM + DAST hybrid — vulnerabilities sourced from a private researcher community, $89-$449/mo published tiers.
Acunetix
paidMature commercial DAST scanner from Invicti — quote-based, generally $4,500+/yr per target tier.
Enterprise DAST + IAST with Proof-Based Scanning — annual contracts, quote-only.
Veracode
paidEnterprise AppSec platform — SAST + DAST + SCA + manual pentest. Public minimum ~$15,000/yr.
Checkmarx One
paidUnified AppSec platform consolidating SAST/SCA/IAST/API/IaC. Quote-based, public minimums ~$30,000/yr.
Developer-first SCA + SAST — Git/IDE/CI integration, generous free tier, paid Team from $25/dev/mo.
Continuous external vulnerability scanner aimed at SMBs — published pricing from $113/mo per target group.
How to choose
If you're switching away from Bugcrowd, the most common reasons are budget (cheaper or free options below), features that don't fit your stack (bug-bounty-specific tools beat generalists), or wanting self-hosted control. Pick 2–3 from the list above, run a 14-day side-by-side test, and switch only if the alternative is a clear win on at least one axis.