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Miradore: cloud-based MDM and endpoint management with a free tier

Miradore uses per-device pricing with free tier pricing, runs on cloud, supports iOS, Android, Windows, and Free plan (up to 50 devices, no credit card required); 14-day Premium+ trial.

Miradore is a cloud-based mobile device management (MDM) and endpoint management platform now owned by LogMeIn (GoTo). It manages iOS, Android, Windows, and macOS devices from a single console, handling device enrollment, security policy enforcement, app deployment, remote wipe, and BYOD separation.

It earns evaluation time from IT departments managing mixed mobile and desktop fleets under 500 devices, MSPs looking for a low-cost MDM layer to add to their stack, and education or nonprofit organizations where per-device budget pressure is acute. For organizations that need deep Windows endpoint management, advanced application packaging, or conditional access policy engines, Miradore's scope will feel limited — and that is a product design choice, not a gap the vendor is unaware of.

Written by RajatFact-checked by Chandrasmita

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Pricing model

Per-device pricing with free tier

Deployment

Cloud

Supported OS

iOS, Android, Windows

Trial status

Free plan (up to 50 devices, no credit card required); 14-day Premium+ trial

Review rating

Not surfaced

Vendor

Miradore

Miradore pricing

Miradore publishes its pricing, which makes pre-sales cost benchmarking straightforward. Three tiers are available: Free (up to 50 devices with basic MDM features), Premium ($3.30 per device per month on monthly billing, or $2.75 per device per month billed annually), and Premium+ ($4.75 per device per month billed annually, which includes GoTo Resolve remote support integration and Microsoft Entra ID sync). A 14-day free trial of Premium+ is available without a credit card. Nonprofit organizations receive a 20% discount.

The per-device pricing model is straightforward — you pay for each enrolled device, regardless of whether it is company-owned or BYOD. This scales predictably for stable fleets but compounds during seasonal onboarding or fleet expansion.

Miradore's pay-as-you-go model is genuinely flexible: you pay only for the licenses you are using, and you can adjust device count up or down without annual lock-in on the monthly billing plan. Annual billing locks in the lower rate but requires commitment to a device count estimate that may not reflect real usage if the fleet fluctuates.

At $2.75 per device per month on annual billing, Miradore's Premium plan is materially cheaper than Hexnode (starting around $1.50/device/month for basic but escalating quickly for advanced features), Scalefusion (comparable entry pricing but higher at enterprise tiers), and significantly cheaper than Microsoft Intune ($8 per user per month as a standalone plan).

View Miradore pricing

Free: $0 (Up to 50 devices, basic MDM features, device enrollment, policy enforcement, remote wipe)
Premium: $2.75/device/month (annual) or $3.30/device/month (monthly) (Full MDM feature set, automation, advanced reporting, app management, no device limit)
Premium+: $4.75/device/month (annual) (Everything in Premium plus GoTo Resolve remote support, Microsoft Entra ID sync, Google Workspace integration)

Verified from the official pricing page on March 17, 2026. View source

What stands out about Miradore

Miradore is an honest MDM platform that does what it says without pretending to be something it is not. It covers cross-platform device enrollment, policy enforcement, app management, and remote actions at a price point that undercuts most competitors meaningfully — the free plan alone is enough for a small office to manage basic device security, and the paid tiers remain among the cheapest per-device rates in the MDM category.

Miradore is best for

Small to mid-sized IT departments managing mixed iOS, Android, Windows, and macOS fleets under 500 devices where the priority is affordable, fast-to-deploy MDM without the configuration overhead of enterprise UEM platforms. It is particularly well-suited for education organizations using Apple Business Manager or Google Workspace for device provisioning, MSPs that need a low-cost MDM layer to offer alongside their RMM and PSA stack, and nonprofits where per-device budget pressure makes the free tier or discounted paid plans a deciding factor.

Why Miradore stands out

Miradore stands out for two reasons that are genuinely difficult for competitors to replicate at the same price point. First, the free tier supporting up to 50 devices with real MDM functionality — not a time-limited trial, but a permanent free plan — gives small teams a way to manage device security without any budget commitment. No other MDM platform in the category offers a comparable free plan at that device count.

Commercial fit for Miradore

Miradore's commercial fit is clearest when the evaluation criteria prioritize speed to value and cost predictability over feature depth. A team that needs device management running within a day — not a week of configuration and policy architecture — will find Miradore's setup process forgiving and its per-device pricing easy to model in a budget spreadsheet. The commercial model becomes harder to defend when the team's requirements grow beyond basic MDM into unified endpoint management territory: conditional access, advanced compliance posture scoring, automated remediation workflows, and deep OS-level patch management.

What users think

Cloud-based MDM for iOS, Android, and Windows devices with a free tier that supports unlimited devices with basic management. SMB teams managing a mixed mobile fleet without a dedicated device management budget often start here before moving to a more full-featured platform as requirements mature.

In depth

Miradore is best evaluated in the context of the specific endpoint management software workflows your team is trying to standardize or improve.

Shortlist quality depends less on surface-level feature parity and more on how well Miradore fits your deployment preferences, reporting expectations, and the amount of day-to-day operational ownership your team can absorb. Use this page to understand product fit before moving into direct vendor comparisons.

  • Test whether Miradore fits the current environment and OS mix.
  • Validate the vendor’s pricing mechanics against real rollout assumptions.
  • Check whether the platform solves the workflows that matter in the first 90 days.

Miradore features

Device enrollment and zero-touch provisioning

Miradore supports multiple enrollment methods to accommodate different fleet sizes and ownership models. Apple Business Manager and Apple School Manager integration enables zero-touch enrollment for iOS and macOS devices — devices purchased through Apple's channel are pre-assigned to Miradore and enrolled automatically when powered on, with no manual configuration required from the end user. - Android Enterprise enrollment supports fully managed devices (company-owned, single-use or standard), work profile (BYOD where corporate data is containerized), and dedicated device mode for kiosks or shared-use tablets. - Windows enrollment works through Azure AD join for organizations on Microsoft 365, or via a manual enrollment link that end users open in a browser.

Security policy enforcement and compliance

Miradore enforces security policies at the device level across all supported platforms. Passcode policies specify minimum length, complexity requirements, and auto-lock timeouts. - Wi-Fi and VPN configuration profiles can be pushed to enrolled devices so that corporate network access is configured automatically without requiring end users to enter credentials manually. - Selective wipe removes only corporate data and profiles, which is the appropriate action for BYOD devices when an employee departs.

Application management and deployment

Miradore handles application deployment across iOS, Android, Windows, and macOS from the cloud console. iOS and iPadOS apps can be deployed through Apple's Volume Purchase Program (VPP) via Apple Business Manager, which allows silent app installation on supervised devices without requiring Apple ID credentials from end users. Android apps are deployed through managed Google Play for Android Enterprise enrolled devices. - Windows application deployment covers MSI and MSIX packages, though Win32 app packaging with complex dependencies is more limited than what Microsoft Intune provides. macOS app deployment supports PKG-format applications and App Store apps through Apple Business Manager, but DMG-format applications — a common distribution format for macOS software — require script-based workarounds rather than native console deployment. - App updates can be pushed remotely, and mandatory apps can be configured to reinstall automatically if an end user removes them from a managed device.

Remote actions and device lifecycle management

Miradore provides a set of remote actions that IT administrators can execute against enrolled devices from the cloud console without physical access to the device. Remote lock secures a lost or misplaced device immediately. - Selective wipe removes corporate data, profiles, and managed apps while preserving personal data — the standard action for BYOD devices during employee offboarding. - Location tracking (where supported by platform and enrollment type) provides last-known device location for lost device recovery. - These remote actions are available across all supported platforms, though specific capabilities vary by platform and enrollment type — for example, location tracking on iOS requires supervised mode.

GoTo Resolve remote support integration (Premium+)

Miradore's Premium+ tier includes native integration with GoTo Resolve, LogMeIn's remote support platform. This integration allows IT administrators to initiate a remote support session against an enrolled device directly from the Miradore console — the administrator selects a device in Miradore's device list, launches a GoTo Resolve session, and connects to the device for hands-on troubleshooting without switching applications or managing a separate remote access subscription. - The remote session runs within the GoTo Resolve framework, which supports screen sharing, remote control, file transfer, and chat. - The integration is native — built by the same parent company — which means it is maintained as part of the core product and does not break when either Miradore or GoTo Resolve updates independently.

Reporting and device inventory

Miradore provides reporting on enrolled device fleet status, including device compliance summaries, enrollment status, OS version distribution, storage utilization, and application inventory. Reports are accessible from the cloud console dashboard and can be exported for external analysis or compliance documentation. - For organizations with audit or compliance reporting requirements, the device inventory report surfaces the data needed to demonstrate that managed devices meet security policy requirements — encryption status, passcode compliance, OS version currency, and installed security profiles. - The reporting capabilities cover the basics adequately but do not include the custom report builder, scheduled report delivery, or advanced analytics dashboards available in platforms like Hexnode or Intune.

BYOD and data separation

Miradore supports bring-your-own-device management through platform-native containerization. On Android, the work profile enrollment mode creates a separate container on the employee's personal device that houses corporate apps, data, and policies — the IT administrator manages the work profile without visibility into or control over the personal side of the device. - The BYOD enrollment flow can be user-initiated: employees receive an enrollment link or QR code, complete the enrollment on their own device, and the corporate container or managed profile is created automatically based on the enrollment policy. - This separation is critical for BYOD policy compliance in most organizations, and Miradore handles it through the platform-native mechanisms (Android work profile, iOS management framework) rather than a proprietary container, which means the data separation is as reliable as the underlying OS implementation.

Pros and cons of Miradore

This is the point in the evaluation where buyers should separate what sounds strong in the demo from what will still matter after implementation, reporting setup, and day-two administration are real.

Strengths

These are the strengths most likely to keep Miradore in the shortlist once the team starts comparing practical fit, not just feature breadth.

Genuinely free tier for up to 50 devices with real MDM capabilities

Miradore's free plan is not a time-limited trial or a feature-stripped placeholder — it supports up to 50 enrolled devices with basic MDM functionality including device enrollment, security policy enforcement, and remote wipe. For a small office, a school with a modest iPad fleet, or a startup that needs device-level passcode enforcement and encryption verification, the free plan covers the requirements without any spending.

Fast setup and intuitive interface that reduces IT overhead

Miradore consistently receives high marks in user reviews for ease of implementation and day-to-day usability. Device enrollment can be completed via QR code, email invitation, or Apple Business Manager automated enrollment, and the web-based console is clean enough that IT generalists — not just dedicated MDM administrators — can manage the platform without extensive training.

Cross-platform coverage for iOS, Android, Windows, and macOS in one console

Miradore manages all four major device platforms — iOS, Android, Windows, and macOS — from a single cloud console without requiring platform-specific modules or add-on purchases. For IT departments managing a mixed fleet where employees carry iPhones while using Windows laptops, or where company iPads coexist with Android tablets in field operations, the single-console management model eliminates the need to maintain separate MDM tools for different platforms.

Native GoTo Resolve remote support integration in Premium+

The Premium+ tier includes native GoTo Resolve remote support, which means IT administrators can initiate remote troubleshooting sessions directly from the Miradore console against enrolled devices without a separate remote access subscription. This is a workflow integration, not just a product bundle — the remote session launches in the context of the managed device, with the device record and enrollment status visible during the support interaction.

Microsoft Entra ID and Google Workspace user synchronization

Miradore's Premium+ tier integrates with Microsoft Entra ID for near-real-time user synchronization, which means user records created or modified in Entra ID flow automatically into Miradore without CSV imports or manual data entry. For organizations running Microsoft 365, this eliminates one of the most tedious MDM administration tasks — keeping user-to-device assignments current as employees join, leave, or change roles.

Limitations

These are the points worth pressing in pricing calls, technical validation, and rollout planning before the team treats the product as a safe choice.

Windows endpoint management depth falls short of dedicated UEM platforms

Miradore handles basic Windows MDM enrollment, policy enforcement, and app deployment, but it does not match the depth of Microsoft Intune, Hexnode, or ManageEngine for advanced Windows management scenarios. Granular Windows patch management, Win32 app packaging and deployment, PowerShell script execution at scale, and conditional access policy integration are areas where Miradore's capabilities are either limited or absent compared to enterprise UEM tools.

macOS app deployment requires workarounds for DMG-based applications

Miradore supports macOS app deployment, but DMG-format applications — which represent a significant portion of macOS software distribution — cannot be deployed natively through the Miradore console and require script-based workarounds. This creates friction for IT administrators managing Mac-heavy environments where application deployment is a frequent task.

Deployment error feedback and logging are limited

When a policy push, app deployment, or profile installation fails on an enrolled device, Miradore's error reporting provides limited detail about why the action failed. Administrators see that a task did not complete but often lack the diagnostic information needed to troubleshoot the root cause without manual investigation on the device itself. This is a consistent theme in user reviews across G2, Capterra, and Gartner Peer Insights.

Documentation is inconsistent and sometimes outdated

Miradore's knowledge base and product documentation are functional but inconsistent in depth and currency. Some areas — particularly iOS enrollment and Apple Business Manager integration — are well-documented with current screenshots and step-by-step guidance. Other areas — including Windows enrollment edge cases, advanced policy configuration, and API usage — have documentation that is either sparse or references older versions of the product interface.

Feature set gaps emerge as fleet complexity grows beyond basic MDM

Miradore covers the core MDM use cases effectively, but organizations that outgrow basic device management will encounter feature ceilings. Conditional access policies, compliance-based device posture scoring, automated remediation workflows, geofencing, and advanced reporting with custom dashboards are either absent or rudimentary compared to what Hexnode, Scalefusion, or Microsoft Intune provide at their higher tiers.

Miradore deployment, integrations, and platform coverage

Miradore is cloud-only — there is no on-premises deployment option. The entire platform runs as a SaaS application accessed through a web browser, which eliminates server infrastructure requirements and reduces implementation to account creation, initial policy configuration, and device enrollment. Most administrators report having the platform operational with initial devices enrolled within a few hours, not days.

The setup wizard guides new users through Apple Push Notification service certificate configuration (required for iOS/macOS management), Android Enterprise setup, and initial security policy creation. For teams that have never deployed an MDM before, Miradore's onboarding experience is among the most forgiving in the category.

Platform coverage spans iOS, iPadOS, Android, Windows, and macOS. iOS and macOS management integrates with Apple Business Manager and Apple School Manager for zero-touch Automated Device Enrollment — devices purchased through Apple's channel can be pre-assigned to the Miradore MDM server and enrolled automatically when an end user powers on the device. Android Enterprise enrollment supports fully managed, work profile (BYOD), and dedicated device modes.

Windows enrollment works through Azure AD join or manual enrollment via a browser-based enrollment link. The cross-platform support is genuine for core MDM actions — enrollment, policy enforcement, remote lock, remote wipe, and app deployment all work across platforms — but feature depth varies, with iOS management being the most mature and Windows management being the most limited.

Before you book a demo

Miradore free trial, demo, and buying motion

Miradore enters the shortlist most often when an IT team needs MDM coverage quickly at a budget that does not accommodate enterprise UEM pricing, or when the free tier offers a risk-free way to validate whether MDM is worth investing in at all. The evaluation path is unusually low-friction for the MDM category — the free plan and 14-day Premium+ trial mean buyers can test the product against real devices before any commercial conversation.

1

Start with the free plan if you have fewer than 50 devices and basic MDM requirements. Enroll a representative sample of your device fleet — at least one iOS, one Android, and one Windows device — and test enrollment workflows, policy push, app deployment, and remote wipe in your actual environment.

2

If the free plan covers your requirements, you may not need to upgrade at all. If you hit feature limits (automation, advanced reporting, integration needs), the 14-day Premium+ trial lets you test the full feature set before committing.

3

Compare Miradore's per-device cost against what you are actually spending — or would spend — on device management today. For teams currently managing devices manually without an MDM, the relevant comparison is not Miradore vs. Intune pricing but Miradore vs. the operational cost of manual device management. For teams evaluating Miradore against another MDM, compare at the same tier: Miradore Premium at $2.75 per device per month against the equivalent Hexnode or Scalefusion tier that covers the same feature set.

4

Test the Premium+ remote support integration if you do not already have a remote access tool. Initiate a GoTo Resolve remote session from the Miradore console against an enrolled device and evaluate whether the integrated workflow replaces your current remote support tool. If it does, the Premium+ uplift ($2 per device per month over Premium) pays for itself by eliminating a separate remote access subscription.

5

Check whether your requirements will outgrow Miradore within the next 12 to 18 months. If the team is likely to need conditional access enforcement, advanced compliance posture scoring, or deep Windows patch management in the near term, starting with Miradore and migrating later is more expensive than starting with a platform that covers those requirements now. If the team's needs are genuinely basic MDM for the foreseeable future, Miradore's price advantage is the deciding factor.

Frequently asked questions about Miradore for MDM Software

How much does Miradore cost?

+

Miradore offers three tiers: Free (up to 50 devices with basic MDM), Premium ($3.30 per device per month on monthly billing, or $2.75 per device per month billed annually), and Premium+ ($4.75 per device per month billed annually, which adds GoTo Resolve remote support, Microsoft Entra ID sync, and Google Workspace integration). Nonprofit organizations receive a 20% discount. No credit card is required for the free plan, and a 14-day trial of Premium+ is available.

Is Miradore really free?

+

Yes — Miradore offers a permanent free plan (not a time-limited trial) that supports up to 50 enrolled devices with basic MDM functionality including device enrollment, security policy enforcement, remote lock, and remote wipe. The free plan lacks advanced features like automation, detailed reporting, and the GoTo Resolve remote support integration available in paid tiers. For small offices or teams testing whether MDM is worth investing in, the free plan is functional enough for production use, not just evaluation.

Is Miradore an MDM?

+

Yes — Miradore is a cloud-based mobile device management (MDM) platform that manages iOS, Android, Windows, and macOS devices. It handles device enrollment, security policy enforcement, app deployment, remote lock and wipe, and BYOD data separation. It is now owned by LogMeIn (GoTo) and includes native integration with GoTo Resolve for remote support in the Premium+ tier. Miradore is positioned as an accessible, affordable MDM rather than a full unified endpoint management (UEM) platform.

What platforms does Miradore support?

+

Miradore manages iOS, iPadOS, Android, macOS, and Windows devices from a single cloud console. iOS and macOS management integrates with Apple Business Manager for zero-touch enrollment. Android Enterprise supports fully managed, work profile (BYOD), and dedicated device modes. Windows enrollment works via Azure AD join or manual enrollment link. Feature depth varies by platform — iOS management is the most mature, while Windows management covers basic MDM but lacks the endpoint management depth of tools like Microsoft Intune.

How does Miradore compare to Microsoft Intune?

+

Miradore and Microsoft Intune serve different segments of the MDM market. Miradore is simpler to deploy, significantly cheaper ($2.75 per device per month vs. $8 per user per month for Intune standalone), and faster to get operational. Intune offers far deeper Windows management, conditional access enforcement through Entra ID, advanced compliance posture scoring, and integration across the entire Microsoft 365 security stack. For organizations heavily invested in Microsoft 365 with complex compliance requirements, Intune is the stronger choice. For teams that need straightforward cross-platform MDM without the configuration overhead and cost of enterprise UEM, Miradore covers the essentials at a fraction of the price.

Does Miradore support BYOD?

+

Yes — Miradore supports BYOD through Android work profiles and iOS managed app containers, which isolate corporate data from personal data on employee-owned devices. IT administrators can enforce security policies on the work container without accessing or controlling the personal side of the device. Enrollment for BYOD can be user-initiated via an enrollment link or QR code. The selective wipe capability removes only corporate data when an employee leaves, leaving personal data intact — a requirement for most BYOD policies.

What is the difference between Miradore Premium and Premium+?

+

Premium ($2.75 per device per month annually) covers the full MDM feature set: device enrollment, policy enforcement, app management, remote actions, automation, and reporting. Premium+ ($4.75 per device per month annually) adds three capabilities: native GoTo Resolve remote support integration (initiate remote sessions from the Miradore console), Microsoft Entra ID user synchronization (automatic user record sync from Azure AD), and Google Workspace integration. The $2 per device per month uplift is justified if the team needs integrated remote support or identity provider sync — otherwise, Premium covers the core MDM requirements.

Miradore alternatives worth comparing

These are the alternatives most directly compared against Miradore, organized by the primary reason buyers consider them. Miradore's free tier and low per-device pricing make it a compelling default for budget-conscious teams — the alternatives become relevant when feature depth, platform specialization, or enterprise-scale requirements exceed what Miradore covers.

Hexnode

Hexnode is the most common direct competitor in evaluations where buyers need more feature depth than Miradore provides at a similar price range. Hexnode offers a broader UEM feature set — kiosk mode, advanced compliance policies, conditional access integration, and deeper Windows management — at per-device pricing that starts competitively but escalates at higher tiers. For teams that are outgrowing Miradore's feature ceiling or need capabilities like geofencing, kiosk lockdown, or custom compliance scoring, Hexnode is the logical next step up in complexity and cost. Where Miradore wins against Hexnode is simplicity and speed to value — Hexnode's broader feature set comes with a steeper configuration learning curve.

Scalefusion

Scalefusion competes with Miradore on cross-platform MDM with strong Android management depth. Scalefusion's Android kiosk mode, content management, and device location tracking capabilities are more developed than Miradore's, which makes it a stronger choice for organizations deploying Android tablets in field operations, retail, or logistics. Pricing is comparable at entry tiers but Scalefusion's per-device cost grows faster at enterprise configurations. For teams whose primary fleet is Android devices in managed or kiosk mode, Scalefusion's Android depth is the argument. For mixed-platform environments where simplicity and cost are the priority, Miradore is typically the simpler, cheaper choice.

Automox

Automox gives teams a way to evaluate endpoint management software fit, deployment tradeoffs, and day-to-day operational usability.

BigFix

BigFix gives teams a way to evaluate endpoint management software fit, deployment tradeoffs, and day-to-day operational usability.

Ivanti Neurons

Ivanti Neurons gives teams a way to evaluate endpoint management software fit, deployment tradeoffs, and day-to-day operational usability.

Head-to-head comparisons

Open the comparison pages once Miradore makes the shortlist.

Related buyer guides

Use the surrounding category research before this tool becomes the default answer.

Buyer guide

Linux Endpoint Management

Linux endpoint management should be evaluated by distro support, automation model, mixed-estate fit, and the operational burden the team can sustain after rollout.

Sources

These are the public references, pricing pages, and editorial inputs used to support this page. Readers should still confirm final commercial or product details directly with the vendor when the decision becomes real.

Continue through this software cluster

Use the linked pages below to move from the product profile into pricing, alternatives, category context, comparisons, glossary terms, and research.

Endpoint Management

Return to the category hub when the team needs broader buying context before narrowing further.

Miradore pricing

Check the commercial model, official pricing notes, and what to validate before procurement treats the pricing as settled.

Miradore alternatives

Use alternatives when the product is credible but the buying team still needs stronger pressure-testing against competing fits.

Open the glossary

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