Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
DealVault.com positions itself as “security intelligence.” Its core goal is to monitor an organization’s external assets, identify potential security issues, and reduce the burden on security teams by cutting down alert noise. The site repeatedly emphasizes “watch your perimeter” and “catch what others miss,” making it closer to an external attack surface management, asset security posture assessment, and continuous auditing tool than a traditional endpoint antivirus product, WAF, or network firewall.
Based on publicly available information, users can connect key assets such as “Domains, cloud, email” after signing up. DealVault then scores, audits, and gently hardens those assets while aiming to avoid service disruption. Its features include continuous monitoring, scheduled and on-demand checks, finding prioritization, a Clarity Dashboard for posture visibility, and low-noise alerts that notify users “only when it matters.” The site mentions “Agent-coordinated” and “Secured by SecurityAgent,” but does not explain whether an agent must be installed, which cloud platforms are supported, or whether API or SIEM integrations are available. As a result, the deployment model and depth of integration remain unclear.
Pricing information is limited: the service is currently described as “Free for early members,” “No credit card required,” and “Free to start,” making it suitable for low-cost trials. The page also mentions “Paid via PayDirect,” but does not disclose official plans, billing units, payment currencies, or refund policies. In terms of compliance certifications, there is no visible information about SOC 2, ISO 27001, GDPR, China’s MLPS, or similar standards, nor is it clear how data is stored and processed. For a security product, these are areas that must be verified before procurement.
Its strengths are a clear positioning around perimeter assets, posture dashboards, and low-noise alerts, making it suitable for teams that want a quick overview of external risks. Free early-member access also lowers the barrier to trial. The downside is that the available information is quite marketing-oriented and lacks details on detection coverage, false-positive rates, asset scope, reporting capabilities, alert channels, SLA, and customer support. It is therefore still difficult to judge whether it can replace a mature ASM or vulnerability management platform.
DealVault is better suited for startups, small and midsize teams, or security leads who want to run a free trial, inventory external assets, and receive risk prompts. Large enterprises considering it for production use should first request a technical white paper, compliance evidence, and an integration list. Access from mainland China and payment availability are unknown. If access is unstable or compliance requirements are strict, consider comparing it with UpGuard, SecurityScorecard, Bitsight, Tenable, Qualys, or domestic cloud security centers and attack surface management products.
⚠ 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 dealvault.com official site.
dealvault.com is an United States Security (Security Intelligence) provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach dealvault.com directly.