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Status Page Documentation

Common troubleshooting topics: Creating a status page, setting up a monitor, incident management, etc.

Setting Up Monitor Alerts

StatusPage.me Dec 9, 2025 Monitoring

Setting Up Monitor Alerts

Alerts notify you immediately when a monitor detects a problem, so you can respond quickly before users notice.

Monitor alerts configuration


How Alerts Work

  1. Your monitor runs a check
  2. If the check fails, a “down” alert is triggered
  3. You receive a notification through your chosen channels
  4. When the service recovers, a “recovery” alert is sent

Configuring Alerts for a Monitor

When creating or editing a monitor:

  1. Find the Notifications section
  2. Select which notification channels should receive alerts
  3. Choose what events trigger alerts:
    • On failure - When the service goes down
    • On recovery - When the service comes back up
  4. Save your monitor

Notification Channels

Alerts can be sent through:

ChannelDescription
EmailSent to your account email or team members
SMSText message (availability depends on plan)
WebhookHTTP POST to your own system
SlackMessage to a Slack channel
DiscordMessage to a Discord channel

Set up channels in Notification Channels settings.


Alert Thresholds

Configure when alerts should trigger:

Confirmation Threshold

Wait for multiple failed checks before alerting:

SettingUse Case
1 failureCritical services - alert immediately
2-3 failuresReduce false alarms from brief issues
5+ failuresLow-priority services

This helps avoid alerts from momentary network blips.

Recovery Threshold

Wait for multiple successful checks before sending recovery:

  • Prevents “flapping” alerts (up-down-up-down)
  • Confirms the service is truly stable again

Avoiding False Positives

False alarms waste time and cause alert fatigue. Here’s how to minimize them:

StrategyWhy It Helps
Use multiple locationsSingle-location network issues won’t trigger alerts
Set confirmation thresholdBrief outages don’t cause alarms
Check the right endpointDon’t monitor maintenance pages
Set realistic timeoutsSlow responses aren’t always “down”

Alert Content

Each alert includes:

  • Monitor name - Which service is affected
  • Status - Down or recovered
  • Timestamp - When it happened
  • Location - Which region detected the issue
  • Response details - Error message or status code

Testing Alerts

Before relying on alerts:

  1. Go to your notification channel settings
  2. Click Send Test to verify it works
  3. Check that you receive the test notification
  4. Confirm the format and content look right

Best Practices

DoDon’t
Set up multiple channels for critical servicesRely on a single notification method
Test your alerts regularlyAssume they’re working
Use escalation (email first, then SMS)Alert on every channel for minor issues
Review and tune thresholdsKeep defaults if they cause too many alerts

What’s Next?

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