Alternatives

7 Best Google Alerts Alternatives for Brand Monitoring in 2026

Compare 7 Google Alerts alternatives for brand and competitor monitoring in 2026: social media coverage, sentiment analysis, and API access Google Alerts does not offer, all at self-serve prices.

Updated July 3, 2026  ·  7 tools reviewed
Key takeaways
  • Mentionlytics starts at $49/month with a 14-day free trial and adds social media coverage across nine platforms plus competitor tracking, none of which Google Alerts offers.
  • Awario crawls 13 billion pages daily including social platforms Google Alerts cannot see, starting at €29/month on annual billing with Boolean search control.
  • Brand24 adds AI sentiment analysis, emotion detection, and anomaly detection for $199/month, features that have no equivalent in Google Alerts' plain email notifications.
  • Syften detects new Reddit and Hacker News mentions in about a minute for $29.95/month, faster and far more reliable than Google Alerts' partial, delayed Reddit indexing.
  • BrandMentions offers AI-powered multilingual sentiment analysis and white-label reporting on higher tiers, useful for agencies that Google Alerts cannot serve at all.
  • Determ publishes transparent pricing from €99/month and indexes 100M+ sources with particularly strong Central and Eastern European news coverage.
  • ForumScout adds AI-drafted reply suggestions to every matched mention for $19/month, turning passive monitoring into active engagement in a way Google Alerts was never built to do.

What is the best Google Alerts alternative when free email notifications are no longer enough? Google Alerts is the tool almost everyone starts with because it costs nothing and takes two minutes to set up, but it only sees what Google has indexed. Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, and most of Twitter/X are invisible to it, Reddit coverage is inconsistent, and there is no sentiment analysis, no dashboard, and no API. We looked at seven paid alternatives that fill those specific gaps: Mentionlytics for the cheapest self-serve social coverage, Awario for Boolean-controlled crawling across 13 billion pages a day, Brand24 for AI sentiment and anomaly detection, Syften for sub-minute Reddit and Hacker News alerts, BrandMentions for multilingual sentiment with white-label reporting, Determ for PR-grade media intelligence, and ForumScout for AI-drafted replies on top of monitoring. None of them are free, but each solves a specific problem Google Alerts structurally cannot.

Tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest forTop strength
Mentionlytics$49/moSmall businesses and solo founders who have outgrown Google Alerts and want social media coverage and competitor tracking at the lowest self-serve price available.Cheapest self-serve social monitoring in this rotation at $49/month
Awario€29/mo (annual)Teams that liked Google Alerts' Boolean-style search but need consistent social media and Reddit coverage plus sentiment data.13 billion pages crawled daily, far beyond what a search index catches
Brand24$199/moBrand and PR teams that need AI sentiment, anomaly detection, and podcast coverage and have budget well beyond a free tool.AI sentiment and emotion analysis Google Alerts has no equivalent for
Syften$29.95/moAnyone whose main Google Alerts frustration is inconsistent Reddit and Hacker News coverage and wants sub-minute detection instead.Reliable Reddit and Hacker News detection in about a minute
BrandMentionsContact for pricingInternational brands and agencies that need multilingual sentiment analysis and white-label reporting and do not mind a sales conversation for pricing.AI multilingual sentiment analysis, a real gap in Google Alerts
Determ€99/moPR and comms teams that use Google Alerts mainly for news tracking and need topic clustering plus crisis alerts on top.Published pricing from €99/month, unusually transparent for media monitoring
ForumScout$19/moSmall teams that want to move from passive mention alerts to active engagement with AI-drafted replies included.AI-drafted replies turn a mention into a ready-to-review response
About Google Alerts

Free keyword monitoring that sends email notifications when your brand or search terms appear in new web content indexed by Google

Google Alerts screenshot
Email Notifications for New Web Content

When Google indexes new content matching your alert keyword, an email is sent to your configured address. The email includes the page title, a brief excerpt showing where your keyword appears, and the link to the content. Notifications can be configured for as-it-happens delivery, daily digest, or weekly digest depending on how time-sensitive your monitoring needs are and how much email volume you want to manage.

Multiple Source Type Coverage

Alerts can be filtered to monitor specific content types: news articles from indexed publishers, blog posts, general web content, YouTube videos, Google Books references, and discussion forum threads. Selecting all sources provides the broadest coverage. Filtering to news only reduces noise for brands primarily concerned with media mentions. The discussion filter captures some forum activity including portions of Reddit and other indexed discussion platforms, though coverage is not comprehensive.

Language and Regional Filtering

Alerts support filtering by language and geographic region, allowing teams operating in specific markets to scope monitoring to locally relevant content. More than 40 language options are available. This is useful for brands operating in non-English markets who want to monitor content in a target language separately from global English-language coverage.

Result Quality Filtering

A "best results" filter setting applies Google's relevance algorithm to reduce low-quality or tangential matches, delivering fewer but more relevant notifications. The "all results" setting maximizes coverage at the cost of potentially higher noise. For high-competition keywords where many unrelated pieces of content use the same terms, the best results filter typically produces more actionable alerts.

Frequency and Digest Configuration

Alert frequency is configurable per keyword. Time-sensitive monitoring topics such as crisis keywords or competitor campaign terms can be set to as-it-happens delivery for the fastest awareness. Evergreen monitoring terms like brand name mentions in long-form content can be set to daily or weekly digest to reduce inbox volume. Each alert is configured independently, allowing different frequency settings across a monitoring keyword set.

Now let's dive into the tools

Mentionlytics

Web and social media monitoring with multilingual coverage, AI-generated summaries, and competitor tracking from a single dashboard

Full review →#1
Mentionlytics screenshot

Mentionlytics fixes the single biggest gap in Google Alerts: social media. Where Alerts only sees what Google has crawled, Mentionlytics monitors X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, YouTube, Reddit, Bluesky, and Threads directly, alongside news, blogs, forums, and review sites. The $49/month Basic plan is the cheapest self-serve entry point in this rotation and comes with a 14-day free trial that needs no credit card, so the switch from a free tool to a paid one is low-risk.

Competitor tracking is included at every tier starting with Basic, something Google Alerts has no concept of at all. You would need to manually run a second search and compare results by hand to approximate what Mentionlytics does automatically with a share-of-voice chart. The 13+ language coverage also solves a real Google Alerts problem: Alerts applies its own relevance filtering per language, and results in non-English markets are noticeably less reliable.

The obvious downside versus a free tool is that Mentionlytics costs money starting on day one after the trial ends, and API access is gated to the $249/month Advanced tier. But for a small business or solo founder who has outgrown checking their inbox for Google Alerts emails and wants an actual dashboard with sentiment and competitor data, $49/month is a reasonable next step, not a big leap into enterprise pricing.

Pricing
Feature
Basic
$49/mo
Essential
$141/mo
Advanced
$249/mo
Pro
$416/mo
Social media monitoring
Competitor tracking
AI Reporter
API access
Free trial14 days14 days14 days14 days
Pros
  • Cheapest self-serve social monitoring in this rotation at $49/month
  • 14-day free trial with no credit card required
  • Competitor tracking included at every tier, unlike anything Google Alerts offers
Cons
  • No free tier; Google Alerts remains free forever
  • API access requires the $249/month Advanced plan
  • No podcast monitoring, a source Google Alerts partially catches through indexed transcripts
Best for: Small businesses and solo founders who have outgrown Google Alerts and want social media coverage and competitor tracking at the lowest self-serve price available.

Awario

Brand monitoring and social listening across social media, news, blogs, forums, and reviews

Full review →#2
Awario screenshot

Awario answers the social media question that defines most people's search for a Google Alerts replacement. It crawls X, Facebook, Instagram, Reddit, YouTube, and Vimeo directly rather than relying on whatever Google happens to have indexed, and its Reddit coverage in particular is consistent rather than the hit-or-miss experience Google Alerts delivers. At 13 billion pages crawled per day, the volume dwarfs what a search-index-based tool like Alerts can surface.

Boolean search is the feature Google Alerts users will recognize fastest, since Alerts also supports basic query syntax. Awario extends that with AND, OR, and NOT operators plus exact-phrase matching, so the false positives that plague high-competition brand names get filtered out at the source instead of arriving in your inbox to be manually deleted. Sentiment tagging and reach estimates add an analytical layer Alerts has never had.

The catch is price and currency. Awario bills in euros starting at €29/month on annual billing (€49 month to month), which is real money against Alerts' zero cost, and the Starter plan caps you at 3 topics and a single user. Still, for anyone who has hit the ceiling of what a free email notification can tell them, Awario's combination of broad crawling, Boolean control, and white-label reporting on Pro makes the jump worthwhile.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
€29/mo (annual)
Pro
€89/mo (annual)
Enterprise
€249/mo (annual)
Topics315100
New mentions/mo30,000300,0001,000,000
Boolean search
Sentiment analysis
White-label reports
Pros
  • 13 billion pages crawled daily, far beyond what a search index catches
  • Boolean search extends the query logic Google Alerts users already know
  • White-label reports and API access from the Pro tier
Cons
  • No free tier; Starter still costs €29/month minimum
  • Pricing in euros adds FX uncertainty for non-European teams
  • Starter plan limited to 1 team seat and 3 topics
Best for: Teams that liked Google Alerts' Boolean-style search but need consistent social media and Reddit coverage plus sentiment data.

Brand24

Real-time brand monitoring across social media, news, blogs, and podcasts with AI-powered sentiment analysis and anomaly detection

Full review →#3
Brand24 screenshot

Brand24 is the answer for anyone whose real complaint about Google Alerts is not coverage but analysis. Alerts hands you a raw email with a headline and an excerpt; it has no sentiment classification, no emotion tagging, and no way to tell you a mention spike is happening before you notice it yourself. Brand24 does all three: AI sentiment with an emotion layer, and anomaly detection that flags unusual volume or sentiment shifts proactively.

Podcast monitoring on the Pro plan and above is a source neither Alerts nor most of the other alternatives in this rotation cover, which matters more each year as audio becomes a real venue for brand conversation. The 14-day free trial with no credit card required means the switch from Alerts costs nothing to evaluate, even if the paid tiers do not.

The honest problem is price. Brand24's Individual plan starts at $199/month, which is a serious jump from Alerts' $0, and API access is reserved for the $399/month Pro tier. This is not the tool for someone just trying to replace a free email digest cheaply. It is the tool for a brand or PR team that has decided monitoring is worth budgeting for and wants the deepest AI layer available at this price range.

Pricing
Feature
Individual
$199/mo
Team
$299/mo
Pro
$399/mo
Business
$599/mo
Sentiment analysis
Anomaly detection
Podcast monitoring
API access
Free trial14 days14 days14 days14 days
Pros
  • AI sentiment and emotion analysis Google Alerts has no equivalent for
  • Anomaly detection catches unusual mention spikes proactively
  • Podcast monitoring on Pro and above, a source Alerts misses entirely
Cons
  • Starts at $199/month, a large jump from Alerts' free price
  • API access requires the $399/month Pro tier
  • No white-label reporting until the $999/month Enterprise tier
Best for: Brand and PR teams that need AI sentiment, anomaly detection, and podcast coverage and have budget well beyond a free tool.

Syften

Sub-minute brand mention alerts across Reddit, Hacker News, and 10+ communities

Full review →#4
Syften screenshot

Reddit coverage is the specific weakness that pushes most people to look past Google Alerts, since Alerts only indexes some threads and misses the rest with no way to predict which. Syften was built to solve exactly that: it monitors Reddit, Twitter/X, Hacker News, blogs, GitHub, YouTube, Slack communities, Bluesky, Mastodon, and forums directly, detecting new mentions in about a minute rather than waiting for Google to crawl and index a page.

AI filtering handles the noise-reduction problem that Alerts leaves entirely to you. Alerts applies a blunt "best results" versus "all results" toggle; Syften applies relevance filtering per mention automatically, which matters more the more common your brand keyword is. Multiple alert channels, email, Slack, RSS, API, and webhooks, also go well beyond Alerts' email-only delivery.

At $29.95/month for Entry, Syften is one of the cheaper paid steps up from Alerts in this rotation, and the PRO tier's white-label option at $119.95/month is rare at that price point. What you give up is Alerts' broad, if inconsistent, web and news indexing; Syften is community-and-social-first, not a general web crawler. For anyone whose real problem with Alerts was Reddit and Hacker News specifically, Syften is close to a direct fix.

Pricing
Feature
Entry
$29.95/mo
Standard
$49.95/mo
Syften PRO
$119.95/mo
Detection speed~1 min~1 min~1 min
Platforms covered10+10+10+
AI noise filtering
API access
White-label
Pros
  • Reliable Reddit and Hacker News detection in about a minute
  • AI noise filtering automates what Alerts leaves to manual toggles
  • Multiple alert channels beyond Alerts' email-only delivery
Cons
  • No free tier; $29.95/month minimum to start
  • Narrower general web and news coverage than Alerts' broad indexing
  • No AI-generated summaries or sentiment analysis
Best for: Anyone whose main Google Alerts frustration is inconsistent Reddit and Hacker News coverage and wants sub-minute detection instead.

BrandMentions

Real-time web and social brand monitoring with AI sentiment analysis and competitive intelligence

Full review →#5
BrandMentions screenshot

BrandMentions is a reasonable next step for someone who wants Google Alerts' broad web-plus-news coverage but with social media added and actual sentiment scoring on top. It crawls websites, major social networks, news outlets, forums including Reddit, and review platforms, then classifies each mention by sentiment using AI that works across multiple languages, a real upgrade from Alerts' complete lack of sentiment classification.

Real-time alerts fire the moment a mention or backlink is detected rather than on Alerts' daily-or-weekly digest cadence, which matters for PR teams responding to breaking coverage. Competitor tracking and white-label reports are available on the Pro and Expert tiers, giving agencies a client-facing deliverable that Alerts, as a personal email tool, was never designed to produce.

Pricing is not published; every tier is "Contact for pricing," which is a step backward from Alerts' complete price transparency (free) and from most other alternatives in this rotation that list clear monthly rates. A 7-day free trial softens that friction somewhat. If multilingual sentiment and white-label delivery are the specific gaps you are trying to close, BrandMentions is worth a sales conversation despite the opacity.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
Contact for pricing
Pro
Contact for pricing
Expert
Contact for pricing
Enterprise
Contact for pricing
Real-time alerts
Sentiment analysis
Competitor tracking
White-label reports
Pros
  • AI multilingual sentiment analysis, a real gap in Google Alerts
  • Real-time alerts instead of Alerts' digest-only delivery
  • White-label reports available for agency client delivery on Expert
Cons
  • No published pricing, unlike Alerts' transparent $0 cost
  • Competitor tracking and white-label locked to the Pro and Expert tiers
  • No free tier beyond the 7-day trial
Best for: International brands and agencies that need multilingual sentiment analysis and white-label reporting and do not mind a sales conversation for pricing.

Determ

AI media intelligence for PR and comms teams with 100M+ source coverage

Full review →#6
Determ screenshot

Determ is the upgrade path for someone using Google Alerts primarily to track news and press coverage, not social chatter. It indexes over 100 million sources across online news, print, broadcast transcripts, and social, with a level of regional depth, especially in Central and Eastern Europe, that a general search index like Google's does not consistently surface. Where Alerts gives you a headline and a link, Determ clusters related coverage into topic threads and scores sentiment at the article level.

Published pricing starting at €99/month is genuinely rare in the PR monitoring category and stands in useful contrast to competitors that require a sales call, even if it is still a real cost against Alerts' free price. Crisis alerts add threshold-based triggers for volume or negative sentiment spikes, giving comms teams an early-warning layer that Alerts' plain digest cannot replicate.

The limitation is social depth. Determ's social platform coverage is narrower than dedicated listening tools, so it is not a full replacement if your monitoring needs span Instagram, TikTok, and other social-first platforms Alerts already misses. For brands and agencies whose core monitoring job is press and media coverage, though, Determ's combination of transparent pricing and news depth makes it one of the more serious upgrades from Alerts in this list.

Pricing
Feature
Focus
€99/mo
Expand
€299/mo
Command
€499/mo
Sources monitored100M+100M+100M+
Share of voice
API access
AI topic clustering
Crisis alerts
Pros
  • Published pricing from €99/month, unusually transparent for media monitoring
  • AI topic clustering groups related coverage automatically
  • Strong regional news coverage in Central and Eastern Europe
Cons
  • Social platform coverage is narrower than dedicated social tools
  • API access requires the €499/month Command tier
  • No white-label delivery for agencies managing multiple clients
Best for: PR and comms teams that use Google Alerts mainly for news tracking and need topic clustering plus crisis alerts on top.

ForumScout

Social listening with AI-generated reply suggestions for sales and growth teams

Full review →#7
ForumScout screenshot

ForumScout is the pick for anyone whose real goal was never just to know about a mention, it was to do something about it. Google Alerts sends an email and stops there; ForumScout monitors Reddit, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Bluesky, forums, and news, then attaches an AI-generated draft reply to every matched post so your team can review and post a response instead of starting from a blank page.

Unlimited team seats on every plan, including the $19/month Starter, is the other detail worth noting. Alerts is technically single-user by design since it lives in one person's inbox; ForumScout lets an entire team work from the same monitoring feed for one flat price. Sentiment tagging and competitor mention tracking are also included, features Alerts simply does not have.

What ForumScout does not do is match Alerts' breadth of general web and news indexing; it is built for social and community platforms specifically, not the wide net Alerts casts across blogs, books, and general web content. For a founder or growth team ready to move from passively reading alerts to actively engaging in conversations, ForumScout is a genuinely different category of tool at a price close to what Alerts users are used to paying: nothing, until they realize replying manually costs real time.

Pricing
Feature
Starter
$19/mo
Pro
$49/mo
Ultra
$129/mo
Team seatsUnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
AI reply suggestions
Sentiment analysis
API access
Pros
  • AI-drafted replies turn a mention into a ready-to-review response
  • Unlimited team seats on every plan, including the $19/month Starter
  • Covers Reddit, LinkedIn, Twitter, YouTube, Instagram, Bluesky, forums, and news
Cons
  • No free tier; Alerts remains the only $0 option in this rotation
  • General web, news, and book coverage is narrower than Alerts' index
  • No white-label or client-sharing view for agency use
Best for: Small teams that want to move from passive mention alerts to active engagement with AI-drafted replies included.

Which Google Alerts alternative should you pick?

Cheapest self-serve upgrade with social coverage and competitor trackingMentionlytics
Best Boolean-controlled crawling across social, news, and reviewsAwario
Best AI sentiment, emotion, and anomaly detection with budget to spendBrand24
Best for reliable, fast Reddit and Hacker News coverageSyften
Best multilingual sentiment analysis with white-label for agenciesBrandMentions
Best for press and news monitoring with transparent pricingDeterm
Best for turning mentions into drafted replies, not just alertsForumScout

Comparing 7 Google Alerts alternatives for brand monitoring: which tool adds the social media coverage Alerts is missing, which one adds sentiment analysis, and which one is cheapest to start. Google Alerts is free and reliable for what it actually does, catching new Google-indexed web content, but every team eventually hits the same three walls: no social media coverage, inconsistent Reddit indexing, and no sentiment, dashboard, or API. If cost is still the priority and social coverage is the main gap, Mentionlytics at $49/month is the cheapest self-serve step up, with a 14-day free trial to validate the switch. If Boolean-style query control and broad crawl depth matter most, Awario's 13-billion-page daily crawl extends the search logic Alerts users already know. If AI sentiment, emotion detection, and anomaly alerts are the deciding factor and budget allows, Brand24 delivers the deepest analytical layer in this rotation at $199/month and up. If Reddit specifically was your Alerts frustration, Syften's sub-minute detection is a close to direct fix at $29.95/month. Agencies needing multilingual sentiment and white-label client reports should look at BrandMentions, and PR teams tracking press coverage, especially in Central or Eastern Europe, should look at Determ's transparent €99/month pricing. For teams that want to stop reading alerts and start replying to them, ForumScout's AI-drafted responses and unlimited seats at $19/month turn monitoring into an active workflow. Google Alerts remains worth keeping running as a zero-cost supplementary layer no matter which paid tool you choose. It should just not be the only layer.

Frequently asked questions

What is the cheapest paid alternative to Google Alerts that adds social media monitoring?

Mentionlytics at $49/month Basic is the cheapest self-serve option in this rotation that adds social media coverage, spanning X, Facebook, Instagram, TikTok, LinkedIn, YouTube, Reddit, Bluesky, and Threads, none of which Google Alerts can see. A 14-day free trial with no credit card required lets you validate coverage before paying anything.

Why does Google Alerts miss so many Reddit mentions?

Google Alerts only surfaces Reddit threads that Google has indexed in its web search, and indexing coverage of Reddit is partial and inconsistent by nature of how Google crawls the site. Syften and ForumScout both monitor Reddit directly rather than relying on search indexing, which produces far more consistent and faster detection, typically within about a minute for Syften.

Is there a free alternative to Google Alerts, or do all paid tools require a subscription?

Every alternative in this rotation requires a paid subscription; Google Alerts is the only genuinely free option here. Several tools offer free trials to reduce the risk of switching, including Mentionlytics (14 days, no card), Brand24 (14 days, no card), and BrandMentions (7 days), but none maintain an ongoing free tier the way Alerts does.

Which Google Alerts alternative is best for agencies that need to deliver reports to clients?

Awario and BrandMentions both offer white-label reporting, Awario from its Pro tier at €89/month annual and BrandMentions on its Expert plan, letting agencies present monitoring data under their own brand rather than sending clients raw Google Alerts emails. Syften also offers white-label on its $119.95/month PRO tier.

Does any Google Alerts alternative track brand mentions in ChatGPT or AI search results?

None of the seven alternatives in this rotation track mentions inside ChatGPT, Perplexity, or other AI answer engines; all of them, like Google Alerts itself, focus on traditional web, news, and social monitoring. Teams specifically needing AI-answer-engine visibility tracking should look at a dedicated AI visibility tool rather than a brand monitoring platform in this category.

Should I keep using Google Alerts alongside a paid monitoring tool?

Yes, running Google Alerts alongside a paid tool costs nothing and can catch indexed web content that a social-first tool like Syften or ForumScout might not prioritize. Most teams that upgrade keep a handful of Alerts running for brand name and executive name searches as a zero-cost supplementary layer, while relying on the paid tool for social media, sentiment, and reporting.

Found this useful? Share it: