Coolify vs Tsuru
| Tagline | Self-hostable Heroku/Netlify alternative for apps, databases, and services | Extensible open-source PaaS built by Globo for multi-tenant app deployment |
| Category | Self-Hosting Platforms & PaaS | Self-Hosting Platforms & PaaS |
| Replaces | Heroku, Vercel, Netlify, Render | Heroku, Render, Netlify |
| GitHub stars | 57k | 4.5k |
| Language | PHP | Go |
| License | Apache-2.0 | BSD-3-Clause |
| Self-host difficulty | 2/5 Easy | 4/5 Involved |
| Deploy options | One-Click Docker Docker Compose Manual | Docker Kubernetes Manual |
| Managed hosting | ||
| Last updated | 5 days ago | 4 months ago |
| View repo | View repo |
Where each falls short
The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.
Coolify
- No managed global edge/CDN network; you run on your own VPS so global latency and DDoS protection are your responsibility.
- Scaling is largely single-server by default; multi-node clustering is less mature than cloud autoscalers.
- Built-in observability (logs/metrics/tracing) is basic compared to Heroku/Render dashboards.
- Some advanced features and polish still in flux; occasional breaking changes between releases.
Tsuru
- Documentation is sparse for newcomers outside the Globo ecosystem
- UI dashboard is minimal; most operations require the CLI
- Community support is smaller than Dokku or CapRover
Bottom line
Choose Coolify if you want the lower-effort setup; choose Coolify for the larger community and ecosystem. Coolify has seen more recent development. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.
Coolify
Self-hostable Heroku/Netlify alternative for apps, databases, and services