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A Fluxguard alternative focused on doing change detection well

DiffHook is a Fluxguard alternative focused on doing one thing well: detecting changes and delivering them to the tools your team already uses. Every monitor β€” for pages, JSON APIs, sitemaps, or RSS feeds β€” sends a clean alert to Slack, email, Zapier, n8n, or your own system. No bundles, no complicated tiering.

Fluxguard offers a wide monitoring surface aimed at compliance, procurement, and competitive teams. DiffHook is narrower on purpose β€” it doesn't try to be an everything tool. Instead, the whole product is built around giving teams predictable change alerts, a transparent flat price, and a free plan that doesn't expire.

At a glance

DiffHook vs Fluxguard β€” feature comparison

FeatureDiffHookFluxguard
Free plan?What you get without paying β€” useful to know if the free plan is enough for your needs.3 monitors Β· hourly checks Β· free forever, no credit cardLimited free tier
Starter paid plan?The lowest-priced paid plan and what it includes.From $12/mo Β· every alert destination includedHigher starting price, bundle-based
Team / enterprise plan?Plans for teams that need multiple users, shared monitors, or higher volumes.Flat monthly rate Β· no sales callCustom enterprise contracts
How often pages are checked?The shortest time between two checks of the same page. A shorter interval means you get alerted faster when something changes.As often as every 1 minuteHourly or daily typical
Send alerts to other apps?The ability to automatically forward change alerts into other tools β€” Slack, email, Zapier, n8n, or your own systems β€” instead of only reading them in a dashboard or inbox.Included on every plan, including freeSupported, depends on tier
Secure signed alerts?Each alert carries a security stamp proving it really came from the service. Useful if you pipe alerts into sensitive systems and want to block fakes.Yes β€” every alert is signedNot documented
Works on modern JavaScript sites?Many modern sites (SPAs, dashboards, e-commerce catalogues) load content through JavaScript. The tool needs to render them like a real browser, otherwise it sees an empty page.Yes β€” renders pages like a real browserYes
Monitor JSON APIs?Watching an API response directly, not just a web page β€” useful for pricing endpoints, stock availability, or any structured data.Yes β€” watch a specific value in any API responseNot really β€” HTML-focused
Monitor RSS feeds & sitemaps?Automatically pick up new articles, releases, job posts, or catalog entries the moment they appear in a feed or sitemap.Yes β€” both included out of the boxPartial
AI-powered change filtering?Describe what a 'meaningful change' is in plain English (for example, 'alert only when the price changes') to filter out cosmetic noise.Yes β€” describe meaningful changes in plain EnglishRule-based filters
Where alerts can be sent?Where alerts can be delivered β€” email, Slack, Discord, Telegram, your own server, or any automation platform.Email, Slack, Discord, Telegram, automations, your own serverEmail, Slack, custom alerts
Hosting?Whether you can install the tool on your own infrastructure, which some teams need for compliance or data-residency reasons.Hosted onlyHosted only
Developer API?A programmable interface to create, edit, and manage monitors automatically β€” useful when you outgrow clicking around a dashboard.Full API included on every paid planLimited

Why teams switch

Why teams switch from Fluxguard to DiffHook

Teams swap Fluxguard for DiffHook when they don't need a full enterprise monitoring suite β€” they just want reliable change alerts that flow into Slack, an automation tool, or their own app.

  • Alerts flow directly into Slack, Discord, email, Zapier, n8n, or your own app β€” on every plan, including the free one.
  • Transparent flat pricing β€” $12/month on paid, no bundles, no sales quote needed.
  • Native JSON API monitoring, not just HTML change detection β€” watch a specific value in any response.
  • AI-powered filtering accepts plain-English rules, replacing brittle rule-based matching.
  • A developer API is included on every paid plan β€” useful the moment you need to create or audit more than a handful of monitors.

Use cases

What teams use DiffHook for

Alert example

What an alert looks like

Every change produces a clean, structured alert that can be forwarded to Slack, email, Zapier, n8n, a dashboard, or your own app β€” no custom integration needed to get started.

example alert
{
  "event": "page.changed",
  "url": "https://example.com/pricing",
  "detected_at": "2026-04-20T09:14:22Z",
  "change": {
    "before": "$29/mo",
    "after":  "$39/mo"
  }
}

Where this alert can go

  • πŸ’¬Slack or Discord β€” post the change to a channel
  • βœ‰οΈEmail β€” notify a teammate or mailing list
  • ⚑Zapier, n8n, Make β€” trigger any automation
  • πŸ› οΈYour own app β€” send it anywhere via a URL

Honest comparison

Where Fluxguard is still the better pick

Fluxguard targets a broader compliance and procurement audience with integrations, reporting, and onboarding tuned for non-technical teams. If your users are business analysts who want a dashboard with scheduled PDF reports, named contacts, and procurement-style workflows, DiffHook's simpler model probably isn't a fit. DiffHook works best when the alert needs to reach a Slack channel, an automation tool, or a custom app β€” not a weekly report for a leadership meeting.

FAQ

DiffHook vs Fluxguard β€” common questions

How are DiffHook alerts different from Fluxguard's?
DiffHook sends every change as a clean alert that can be forwarded to Slack, Discord, email, Zapier, n8n, or your own app β€” on every plan, including the free one. Fluxguard supports similar destinations, but what's available depends on your bundle.
How does pricing compare to Fluxguard?
DiffHook's paid plan is a flat $12/month with per-minute checks, every alert destination, and the developer API β€” no bundles to pick from. The free plan covers 3 monitors at hourly checks. Fluxguard pricing tends to bundle features by tier and starts higher.
Can I migrate my Fluxguard monitors to DiffHook?
Yes for the core monitoring β€” URL, selector or JSON path, interval, and destination all translate. Procurement-style workflows and scheduled PDF reports don't have a direct equivalent; teams usually keep those in place and move the change-detection side to DiffHook.
Does DiffHook work on modern JavaScript sites?
Yes. Every HTML monitor renders the page like a real browser, so SPAs, dashboards, and lazy-loaded content are captured correctly. Wait-for-selector and network-idle conditions can be configured per monitor.
Can DiffHook watch JSON APIs?
Yes, as a native source type. Point a monitor at a JSON endpoint, tell it which value to watch (for example, a price or stock count), and DiffHook sends an alert the moment that value changes.
Is DiffHook simpler than Fluxguard?
On purpose. DiffHook supports four source types (HTML pages, JSON APIs, RSS/Atom feeds, sitemaps), one consistent alert format, and flat pricing. If you want fewer features but more predictable behaviour, that simplicity is the point.

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