Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Cyber Intelligence House (CIH) has a very clear positioning: it is not a general-purpose threat intelligence platform sold directly to end-user enterprises, but a dark web intelligence and cyber exposure service foundation built specifically for MSSPs. The platform emphasizes “Built only for MSSPs, Never sold to their clients,” enabling MSSPs to deliver intelligence such as leaked credentials, infostealer traces, dark web marketplace mentions, and attacker chat activity under their own brand, and further turn these outputs into assessment, continuous monitoring, and advanced investigation services.
CIH focuses more on external exposure and dark web intelligence than traditional perimeter protection. Its three-tier product lineup includes Cyber Exposure, The Watch, and Investigation, covering the workflow from customer domain input to discovery validation, interpretation, and report delivery. Deployment and usage are lightweight: it can be used directly through a browser-based Web UI, and also supports REST/JSON API access with API key authentication. It also offers MCP connectivity, allowing MCP clients or AI Agents such as Claude, Codex, Gemini, and Grok to query findings, run Concierge, and generate reports. The available materials do not disclose traditional compliance certifications, SLA terms, or data residency information.
The platform highlights “Domain in, findings out” and claims to validate findings in around 15 minutes. Concierge is responsible for translating intelligence into customer-readable answers and generating white-label reports. It is suitable for MSSP sales, delivery, and management teams, and the company states that users can get started without dedicated intelligence analysts or complex training. Its integration capabilities are fairly complete: API and MCP access allow findings, reports, and intelligence signals to be embedded into existing systems. However, the available materials do not specify concrete alerting or ticketing integrations such as email, Slack, SIEM, or SOAR, so this should be confirmed before purchase.
CIH uses private MSSP partner pricing and does not publish a public price list. Billing is based on Slots, meaning concurrent customer capacity: 1 Slot serves 1 concurrent customer and can be reallocated across project assessments, continuous monitoring, Watch, and Investigation. The company says entry pricing is in the “low tens of thousands” range, with detailed pricing provided after a fit check. The advantage of this model is that it avoids per-finding billing and idle licenses, but for smaller MSSPs, a tens-of-thousands-of-dollars entry threshold still needs to be evaluated against their ability to convert customers.
Its strengths include an MSSP-only channel strategy, white-label delivery, reallocatable Slots, multiple access methods via Web/API/MCP, a history of dark web intelligence operations, and recognition from organizations such as Gartner, Forrester, UNODC, INTERPOL, and NATO. The limitations are also clear: it is not suitable for direct purchase by end-user enterprises; public materials lack details on compliance, payments, SLA, and specific integration lists; and pricing is not transparent, requiring commercial discussions. It is best suited to MSSPs that already have a customer base and want to upgrade one-off security assessments into continuous monitoring and high-value intelligence services.
The available materials do not provide information on access from mainland China, payment methods, or local support, so china_access can only be marked as unknown. If used in mainland China, the Web UI, API, and MCP connectivity should be tested in practice, and cross-border data handling and customer compliance requirements should be confirmed. Comparable international alternatives include Recorded Future, Flashpoint, KELA, SOCRadar, ZeroFox, and Intel 471. If localized delivery is required, domestic threat intelligence and dark web monitoring providers should also be evaluated.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on cyberintelligencehouse.com official site.
cyberintelligencehouse.com is an Unknown Security provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach cyberintelligencehouse.com directly.