Commercial mismatch
Alternatives become more relevant when the pricing model stops fitting the way your team actually grows or manages the environment.
Hexnode is a defensible UEM choice for IT teams managing mobile-heavy and kiosk-heavy device fleets at mid-market scale — but buyers typically reach this page because one of three questions is unresolved: whether Hexnode's desktop management depth is sufficient for their Windows and macOS fleet, whether the tier-gated pricing structure means their actual cost is significantly higher than the headline $2.20/device/month entry price, or whether a platform with stronger automation and patching capabilities would reduce operational overhead enough to justify a different investment.
This page is most useful once the team has understood Hexnode's core strengths — kiosk management depth, multi-platform coverage, transparent per-device pricing, and an intuitive admin console — and wants to stress-test it against platforms with deeper desktop management, included-in-licensing economics, or stronger automation for IT operations workflows.
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This alternatives page is designed to help buyers widen the shortlist without losing category context.
The most common reason buyers look beyond Hexnode is desktop management depth. Hexnode's roots are in mobile device management, and this shows in the relative maturity of its Windows and macOS administration capabilities.
Teams whose primary endpoint management challenge is desktop — patch management, complex software deployment, granular Windows policy configuration, OS imaging — consistently find that purpose-built desktop management tools like ManageEngine Endpoint Central or NinjaOne deliver more depth at comparable or lower cost once the comparison is run at equivalent tier levels.
Hexnode's desktop management features are gated behind the Ultimate and Ultra tiers ($4.70 and $5.40 per device per month), which narrows the pricing advantage that makes the Pro tier attractive for mobile-only use cases.
Secondary reasons include automation limitations (Hexnode supports policy-based automation but lacks the conditional logic depth and cross-platform orchestration available in NinjaOne or ManageEngine), the tier-gating effect on effective pricing (features many IT teams consider essential — remote control, custom scripting, patch management — require the higher-priced tiers, creating a gap between the advertised starting price and the price buyers actually pay), and Microsoft 365 licensing economics (organizations already holding E3 or E5 licenses get Intune at no marginal cost, which makes any additional UEM spend an incremental budget line).
None of these gaps make Hexnode a weak product — they define the situations where a differently structured or differently priced alternative is a better fit.
Hexnode alternatives should be assessed based on operational fit, not just feature overlap.
The strongest alternative to Hexnode depends on where the current shortlist is too expensive, too narrow, too complex, or too limited for the workflows that matter most. This page is meant to shorten that evaluation process.
The most useful comparison dimensions when evaluating alternatives to Hexnode are: effective per-device cost at the tier that covers actual requirements (not headline entry pricing), desktop management depth for Windows and macOS (patching, scripting, software deployment, policy granularity), kiosk management capability (where Hexnode is genuinely strong and many alternatives are weaker), automation and conditional logic depth (how much operational work can be automated without external tooling), and platform coverage breadth (whether the alternative covers the full device mix or requires supplementary tools for specific platforms).
Hexnode wins on kiosk management, multi-platform mobile MDM, pricing transparency, and admin console simplicity. Alternatives that win against it do so on desktop management depth, automation capabilities, or economics tied to existing Microsoft licensing.
Run the comparison at equivalent capability levels, not at entry-level pricing. Hexnode Ultimate at $4.70/device/month should be compared against the ManageEngine or Scalefusion tier that delivers the same features — not against Hexnode Pro versus a competitor's full-featured plan.
Similarly, the Intune comparison is only meaningful on cost grounds when the organization does not already hold Microsoft enterprise licensing. When existing licensing includes Intune, the comparison shifts entirely to administration simplicity, kiosk management, and whether Hexnode's UEM capabilities justify paying for a second platform.
Alternatives become more relevant when the pricing model stops fitting the way your team actually grows or manages the environment.
A product can stay on the shortlist for a while and still lose on deployment fit once security, infrastructure, or rollout constraints become concrete.
The strongest alternative is often the one that creates less tuning, less admin burden, or less friction after the first phase of rollout.
These are the alternatives most directly compared against Hexnode, organized by the primary reason buyers evaluate each one.
NinjaOne is increasingly compared against Hexnode by IT teams that want a unified platform for endpoint management, monitoring, and IT operations. NinjaOne's architecture is RMM-first — it combines endpoint management, patching, remote access, alerting, and monitoring in a single platform with strong automation and scripting capabilities. Its patch management is more mature than Hexnode's Ultra-tier patching, and its remote access tools are built-in rather than gated behind higher tiers. Hexnode is more focused on MDM and UEM use cases, particularly mobile device management and kiosk deployments. NinjaOne does not offer the kiosk management depth that Hexnode provides, and its mobile device management is limited compared to Hexnode's full MDM stack. The comparison typically splits along the buyer's primary need: if the priority is device management, compliance enforcement, and kiosk lockdown, Hexnode is the stronger fit. If the priority is endpoint monitoring, automated patching, and IT operations automation with remote access, NinjaOne delivers more value.
Pricing: Usage-based pricing. Deployment: Cloud. Trial: Free trial available.
ManageEngine Endpoint Central is the strongest alternative when the evaluation is driven by desktop management depth — particularly for Windows environments. Endpoint Central offers more mature patch management, software deployment, OS imaging, remote troubleshooting, and automation for Windows and macOS than Hexnode delivers at any tier. Its automation engine supports complex conditional workflows that Hexnode's policy-based automation cannot match. ManageEngine also offers mobile device management, making it a full UEM platform, though its mobile management capabilities are not as polished as Hexnode's mobile-first stack. Pricing is comparable at equivalent feature levels, with ManageEngine offering both cloud and on-premises deployment options. Hexnode wins on kiosk management, mobile-first simplicity, pricing transparency, and console usability. ManageEngine wins on desktop administration depth, automation capabilities, reporting flexibility, and enterprise scale for Windows-heavy environments.
Pricing: Custom quote. Deployment: Cloud / On-prem. Trial: Free trial available.
Automox gives teams a way to evaluate endpoint management software fit, deployment tradeoffs, and day-to-day operational usability.
Pricing: Endpoint-based. Deployment: Cloud. Trial: Free trial available.
If Hexnode holds up through these comparisons — particularly once the desktop management depth, effective tier-level pricing, and automation requirements have been validated — move into the Hexnode pricing page for the full cost analysis at the correct tier and device count, then review the comparison pages for whichever alternatives remain on the shortlist.
The best alternative depends on what drives the comparison. For IT teams that need deeper Windows and macOS desktop management, ManageEngine Endpoint Central or NinjaOne offer more mature patching, automation, and remote troubleshooting. For organizations already on Microsoft 365 E3 or E5 licensing, Microsoft Intune is included at no additional cost and provides deeper Windows management with Azure AD conditional access. For Apple-only environments, Jamf Pro delivers unmatched Apple device management depth. For teams wanting a close feature match with competitive kiosk management at a similar price point, Scalefusion is the most direct alternative. Hexnode is rarely replaced when kiosk management and mobile-first MDM are the primary use cases — its kiosk mode is best-in-class at the mid-market price point.
NinjaOne and Hexnode serve overlapping but distinct use cases. NinjaOne is stronger for IT operations teams whose primary needs are endpoint monitoring, automated patching, remote access, and alerting across desktops and servers. Hexnode is stronger for teams whose primary needs are mobile device management, kiosk lockdown, and compliance enforcement across mixed device fleets. NinjaOne's patching and automation capabilities are more mature than Hexnode's, but NinjaOne does not offer the kiosk management depth that Hexnode provides and its mobile device management is limited. The right choice depends on whether the team's priority is IT operations automation or device management and compliance.
Hexnode can replace Intune for organizations that are not deeply invested in the Microsoft 365 enterprise ecosystem and whose primary needs are mobile MDM, kiosk management, and straightforward multi-platform device management. Hexnode offers a simpler admin experience, stronger kiosk capabilities, and transparent per-device pricing. However, Hexnode cannot replicate Intune's conditional access policies tied to Azure AD, its deep integration with Microsoft Defender for Endpoint, or its Windows management depth. For organizations already holding Microsoft 365 E3 or E5 licenses, replacing Intune with Hexnode means paying for a capability that is already included in existing licensing — which is difficult to justify unless Hexnode's kiosk management or admin simplicity delivers enough operational value to warrant the incremental spend.
Hexnode and Scalefusion are the closest competitors in the mid-market UEM space. Both offer published per-device pricing, strong kiosk management, and multi-platform MDM. Scalefusion has stronger digital signage and content management features. Hexnode has broader Gartner recognition and supports tvOS and visionOS. The two platforms trade advantages at the feature level depending on tier — buyers should run side-by-side trials at equivalent tier levels rather than comparing headline pricing. For most mid-market IT teams, the decision between Hexnode and Scalefusion comes down to specific feature gaps discovered during evaluation rather than a clear-cut winner on all dimensions.
Use these linked pages to move from alternatives into product detail, pricing, category context, comparisons, glossary terms, and research.
Return to the category hub when the team needs broader buying context before narrowing further.
Check which tools in this category offer free tiers, trials, or community editions.
Check the commercial model, official pricing notes, and what to validate before procurement treats the pricing as settled.
Use alternatives when the product is credible but the buying team still needs stronger pressure-testing against competing fits.
Use comparison pages once the shortlist is specific enough for direct vendor-to-vendor evaluation.
Use glossary terms when the product page raises category language that needs a clearer operational definition.