Summary

Qovery is a DevOps Automation Platform designed to simplify the deployment and management of applications on major cloud providers like GCP, AWS, and Azure. It automates infrastructure provisioning, application deployment from Git repositories, and offers features like environment management, database integrations, and security controls. Qovery aims to reduce DevOps overhead and accelerate shipping for engineering teams.

Features
5/14
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Must Have

2 of 5

API & Database Integrations

Access Control & Security

Drag-and-Drop UI Builder

Code Customization

Flexible Deployments

Other

3 of 9

Version Control Integration

Audit Logs & Analytics

Workflow Automation

Debugging & Monitoring

Mobile-Responsive Support

Prebuilt React Components

AI-Generated App Assistant

Custom Theming & Branding

Partner & Customer Portals

Pricing
Tiered
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Free

$0.00 per user
  • Deploy on your local machine
  • Up to 5 users
  • Up to 20 services
  • 1,000 free deployment minutes
  • Community support

Team

$29.00 per user
Popular
  • All FREE features
  • Up to 100 users
  • Up to 5 Managed clusters
  • Up to 200 services
  • 1,000 free deployment minutes
  • Slack support

Enterprise

Custom
  • All TEAM features
  • BYOK (Bring your own Kubernetes)
  • Custom limits
  • Role-Based Access Control
  • Extended security and compliance
  • Usage Report
  • Custom support
Rationale

Qovery is a DevOps Automation Platform that helps developers and platform engineers deploy and manage applications on cloud infrastructure like GCP, AWS, and Azure. While it focuses on infrastructure automation and deployment rather than building internal tools with a drag-and-drop UI, it shares several core functionalities with Retool. Qovery offers integrations with databases (PostgreSQL, MySQL, MongoDB, Redis) and APIs, flexible deployment options (on your own cloud account, BYOK), access control (RBAC, SSO), version control integration (Git auto-deploy, GitOps support), and audit logs. It also supports workflow automation through cron jobs and webhooks. The key difference is the absence of a visual drag-and-drop UI builder for application interfaces, which is a must-have for Retool.