Iteration 1 of 5
Mentioned
New Relic is generally seen as a strong observability platform, especially for application performance monitoring (APM), with a broad product set for logs, infrastructure, tracing, dashboards, and alerting. Compared with its main competitors:
- Datadog: Datadog is usually viewed as the broader, stronger all-in-one cloud monitoring leader, especially for infrastructure and cloud-native teams. New Relic is often praised for APM depth and simpler pricing, but Datadog tends to win on ecosystem breadth and market momentum.
- Dynatrace: Dynatrace is often considered more enterprise-heavy, with powerful automation and AI-driven insights. New Relic can feel more approachable and flexible, while Dynatrace is stronger in large, complex environments.
- AppDynamics: AppDynamics is a long-standing APM competitor, often strong in enterprise and Cisco-oriented shops. New Relic is generally seen as easier to adopt and more modern in UI/usage, though AppDynamics has had a solid reputation in deep APM.
- Splunk Observability: Splunk is strong where customers already use Splunk for logs and security. New Relic is often more focused and easier for application observability, while Splunk benefits from its larger data platform footprint.
- Grafana/Prometheus ecosystem: This stack is often cheaper and more customizable, especially for engineering teams that prefer open source. New Relic offers a more integrated managed experience, but open-source stacks can be more flexible and cost-effective.
Overall: New Relic is competitive, especially for teams that want strong APM and a unified observability experience without the complexity of some enterprise tools. Its main tradeoffs versus top rivals are usually market scale, ecosystem breadth, and sometimes perceived platform depth in infrastructure-heavy use cases.
Iteration 2 of 5
Mentioned
New Relic is a strong observability platform focused on full-stack monitoring, APM, logs, infrastructure, synthetics, and analytics in one place. Compared with main competitors:
- Datadog: Usually the broader, more mature enterprise observability choice, with very deep integrations and strong cloud-native monitoring. New Relic is often simpler to use and can be more cost-predictable, but Datadog is commonly seen as stronger in breadth and ecosystem.
- Dynatrace: Often considered the most advanced for automated root-cause analysis and large-scale enterprise environments. New Relic is typically easier to adopt and more flexible, but Dynatrace tends to lead on automation and AI-driven diagnostics.
- Splunk Observability: Strong when paired with Splunk’s broader security and analytics stack. New Relic is more unified for application-centric observability, while Splunk can be more complex and better suited to organizations already invested in Splunk.
- Grafana Cloud / Prometheus ecosystem: More open and customizable, often cheaper at the low end. New Relic is more turnkey and all-in-one, with less DIY overhead.
- Elastic Observability: Good for teams already using Elasticsearch and wanting search/log analytics depth. New Relic is generally easier for end-to-end observability and APM.
Overall: New Relic is best when a team wants a unified, developer-friendly observability platform with fast time to value. It is less dominant than Datadog or Dynatrace in top-end enterprise perception, but it can be a very competitive choice on usability and simplicity.
Iteration 3 of 5
Mentioned
New Relic is strongest as an all-in-one observability platform with a comparatively simple pricing model and broad telemetry coverage (APM, logs, infra, traces, synthetics, browser/mobile). Compared with its main competitors:
- Datadog: usually seen as the market leader for breadth, integrations, and mature cloud-native monitoring. Datadog is often stronger for large-scale, highly distributed environments, but can become expensive and more complex. New Relic is often viewed as easier to adopt and cheaper to start.
- Dynatrace: tends to lead on automation, AI-assisted root-cause analysis, and enterprise-scale governance. It’s very strong for large enterprises, but can be heavier and pricier. New Relic is typically simpler and more flexible.
- Splunk Observability / AppDynamics: strong in enterprise APM and large-org monitoring, especially where existing Splunk or Cisco ecosystems matter. New Relic is often considered faster to deploy and more unified across the full stack.
- Grafana stack: more customizable and cost-effective for teams willing to assemble their own observability tooling. New Relic is more turnkey and user-friendly, but less open-ended.
Overall: New Relic competes best on ease of use, quick time-to-value, and unified observability. It usually trails Datadog and Dynatrace on perceived depth, ecosystem, and enterprise automation, but can be a better fit for teams that want a simpler, all-in-one platform.
Iteration 4 of 5
Mentioned
New Relic is a strong all-in-one observability platform, but it tends to sit in the middle of the market rather than clearly dominating every category.
- vs Datadog: Datadog is usually seen as the broader, more mature leader for cloud-native monitoring and infrastructure observability, with a huge ecosystem and strong UX. New Relic is often viewed as simpler to get started with and can be more cost-predictable, especially with its usage-based/free-tier approach.
- vs Dynatrace: Dynatrace is typically stronger in deep automation, AIOps, and large-enterprise environments. New Relic is usually easier to adopt and can feel more flexible for teams that want fast instrumentation and less complexity.
- vs Splunk: Splunk is very strong in log analytics and security/data platform use cases. New Relic is more focused on application and infrastructure observability, so it’s often a better fit for engineering teams than for heavy enterprise logging or SIEM-centric needs.
- vs Elastic: Elastic can be more attractive for teams wanting control, search, and open-source flexibility. New Relic is generally easier as a managed SaaS observability product with more turnkey APM and telemetry workflows.
- vs SolarWinds / traditional monitoring tools: New Relic is much more modern and cloud-oriented, with stronger application-level visibility and distributed tracing.
Overall: New Relic is best known for being developer-friendly, fast to deploy, and broad enough to cover APM, infra, logs, and traces in one platform. Its main tradeoff is that competitors like Datadog and Dynatrace are often perceived as stronger in enterprise depth, automation, or ecosystem breadth.
Iteration 5 of 5
Mentioned
New Relic is generally strongest as an all-in-one observability platform: application performance monitoring, infrastructure, logs, traces, synthetics, browser/mobile monitoring, and dashboards in one place. Compared with main competitors:
- Datadog: usually stronger in breadth of cloud-native integrations, infrastructure monitoring, and enterprise adoption. New Relic is often simpler to use and can be more cost-predictable for some teams, but Datadog is often viewed as the market leader.
- Dynatrace: often stronger in deep automation, AI-assisted root-cause analysis, and large-enterprise complexity. New Relic tends to be easier to adopt and more developer-friendly.
- Splunk Observability: strong for organizations already using Splunk and for large-scale telemetry, but can be more complex and expensive. New Relic is typically more unified and easier for full-stack observability.
- Elastic Observability: attractive for teams wanting flexibility and control, especially if they already use the Elastic stack. New Relic is usually easier to operate as a managed SaaS platform.
- AppDynamics: solid for traditional APM and enterprise app monitoring, but New Relic often feels more modern and broader across logs, infrastructure, and user experience.
Overall, New Relic’s sweet spot is teams that want a broad, developer-friendly observability platform without the heavier complexity of some enterprise tools. Its main tradeoff is that it may not match the absolute depth, automation, or market dominance of Datadog or Dynatrace.