Opsgenie Migration
NewTop Opsgenie Alternatives and Migration Targets: How to Transition in 2026
Atlassian retires Opsgenie on April 5, 2027. Discover the best alternatives and follow our migration checklist to move your on-call schedules safely.
By Peer Rahne · Co-Founder & CEO at All Quiet
Updated: Friday, 08 May 2026
Published: Friday, 08 May 2026
Atlassian recently announced the official end-of-life for Opsgenie. Organizations must now prepare for a full service shutdown on April 5, 2027. To maintain reliable on-call schedules and incident response, teams need an effective Opsgenie migration strategy.
Quick Answer: Opsgenie End of Life (EOL) Facts
- Final Shutdown Date: April 5, 2027. Support ends and Atlassian deletes all remaining data.
- New Subscription Cutoff: June 4, 2025. No new trials or accounts after this date.
- Pricing Reality: Many Opsgenie replacements cost more. With All Quiet, you typically gain modern features and reduce spend. See the Uberspace customer story.
- Official Atlassian Path: Jira Service Management (JSM) serves as the migration destination for existing Atlassian customers.
Opsgenie Migration Timeline: Key Dates
Plan your budget and vendor selection according to these critical milestones.
| Date | Changes | Action Item |
|---|---|---|
| June 4, 2025 | Sales end for new subscriptions. | Finalize your vendor shortlist. |
| October 2025 | Early shutdowns for some JSM users. | Begin data export for integrated accounts. |
| April 17, 2026 | Potential read-only restrictions. | Test your parallel alerting system. |
| April 5, 2027 | Service shutdown and end of support. | Complete all migration tasks. |
| Post-April 2027 | Atlassian deletes all customer data. | Archive all audit logs and history. |
Top Opsgenie Alternatives for 2026
Smart teams use this transition to rethink their incident management stack. Use this comparison to find the best fit for your organization.
| Tool | Pros | Cons | Best For | Complexity |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| All Quiet | Calm alerting, simple setup, clear pricing. | Focuses on essential agility over bloat. | Teams of all sizes looking for clarity and simplicity in their incident response workflows. | Low |
| JSM | Official Atlassian path, ticketing focus. | High administrative overhead and costs. | Atlassian-heavy enterprises. | High |
| PagerDuty | Mature ecosystem, deep automation. | Expensive and often noisy. | Large scale enterprises. | High |
| Rootly | Excellent Slack-first coordination. | Requires a separate paging layer. | Workflow-centric teams. | Medium |
| incident.io | Great incident coordination, templates, timelines, and retros. | Paging/on-call needs to be added as paid add-on. | Product/engineering teams improving incident process maturity. | Medium |
What to Look For When Replacing Opsgenie
Migrate your intent, not your chaos.
Evaluate alternatives based on these critical factors to ensure your next tool provides a genuine upgrade:
- Noise Control: Look for grouping, deduplication, and precise routing.
- Usability: Ensure schedules and overrides remain simple to manage.
- Workflow Integration: Link alerts to resolutions within a single interface.
- Migration Surface: Prioritize tools with API coverage and Terraform support.
- Total Cost: Consider admin time and cognitive load, not just the bill.
Deep Dive: The Best Opsgenie Alternatives
All Quiet: The Modern Choice for Lean Teams
Many teams find that legacy tools increase cognitive load during incidents. All Quiet takes a different approach. We designed the product to reduce noise, keep integrations tight, and make on-call schedules predictable again.
Teams migrating to All Quiet benefit from:
- Rapid Onboarding: Configure your organization without a dedicated owner.
- Unified Flow: Manage the full lifecycle from alert to status pages.
- Noise Suppression: Use smart grouping to prevent alert fatigue.
- Clear Total Cost of Ownership (TCO): Reduce your total cost of ownership with transparent pricing and lean setup.
Opsgenie Migration Resources
If you're actively migrating, these posts go deeper on strategy and implementation:
- Step-by-Step Migration Guide
- Terraform (IaC) Guide Part I
- Terraform (IaC) Guide Part II
- The SRE Perspective: All Quiet vs. ITSM Bloat
Jira Service Management: The Official Path
Atlassian moves Opsgenie features into Jira Service Management. This path works for organizations that prioritize ITSM processes and ticket-based operations. However, ticketing platforms often pull teams into heavy processes that can slow down incident response.
Compare All Quiet vs Jira Service Management (JSM Premium)
PagerDuty: The Enterprise Standard
PagerDuty offers a mature ecosystem with deep automation. It suits large organizations with massive scale. The primary challenge is complexity: without strict governance, teams often recreate the noise issues they intended to solve. In practice, a lot of teams only need a fraction of the platform (often ~20% of the features), but still have to pay the full price.
Compare All Quiet vs PagerDuty
Specialized Coordination: Rootly and incident.io
These tools focus on Slack-first coordination and post-incident hygiene. They excel at workflow maturity but treat on-call as an expensive paid add-on.
Practical Opsgenie Migration Checklist
Treat your migration as a parallel-run project to minimize risk during the transition.
- Audit: Inventory all current teams, integrations, and routing rules.
- Export: Save your on-call history and audit logs early.
- Model: Choose between a ticket-first (ITSM) or engineering-first (Alerting) model.
- Parallel Run: Route alerts to Opsgenie and your new tool to verify configuration.
- Validate: Run game days to test escalations and ownership.
- Cutover: Switch integrations one at a time with clear rollback steps.
- Shutdown: Confirm all data is archived before the 2027 deletion.
Final Thoughts
The Opsgenie EOL deadline is an opportunity to move toward a calmer incident response culture. If you need a replacement that is fast to deploy and designed to reduce cognitive load, All Quiet is built for this moment.
Author
Co-Founder & CEO at All Quiet
Product leader focused on B2B SaaS platforms; writes about on-call experience, payload mapping, and how teams ship reliable incident workflows.
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