Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Issue Track appears, based on its domain and page copy, to be an online SaaS for issue or task tracking. The captured content is mainly limited to login, registration, password reset, and account activation flows, with a prompt inviting users to start a 30-day free trial. After signing up, users need to complete account setup via an email link.
The confirmed functionality is mostly account-related: login, registration, password reset, email verification, and access-denied messages. At the form level, it includes validation for fields such as name, organization, email, and password. Passwords must be at least 6 characters long and include an uppercase letter, a number, and a special character. When access is denied, the page states that the “attempt has been logged,” suggesting the system may record suspicious access attempts.
However, the page content does not disclose the core capabilities expected from an issue tracking product, such as ticket creation, status workflows, priority levels, assignment, comment-based collaboration, notifications, reporting, custom fields, SLA support, or a knowledge base. There is also no visible information about third-party integrations, APIs, permission roles, audit logs, data export, or compliance certifications.
The page clearly offers “Start your free 30-day trial!”, making the 30-day free trial the clearest commercial detail currently available. However, formal plans, pricing, seat limits, whether billing is per user, whether a free plan exists, and whether enterprise plans or custom quotes are available are not disclosed. For enterprise procurement, users would still need to enter the trial or contact the official team for confirmation.
The main advantages are that it offers a free trial and has a low barrier to entry; the registration flow includes basic validation and email verification; and the password complexity requirements plus access-denied logging message suggest some awareness of security. The drawbacks are also clear: there is very little public information, making it difficult to assess whether its issue tracking capabilities are complete. It also lacks details on pricing, integrations, permissions, security compliance, and support channels, which increases evaluation risk for buyers.
It may suit teams that want to try a lightweight issue tracking tool, but without a clearer feature description, it is not recommended for critical business workflows. The available content does not indicate how well it works from China, and supported payment methods are also unknown. If access, compliance, or local support are important, consider comparing it with alternatives such as Jira, Linear, YouTrack, Asana, ClickUp, as well as China-based options like PingCode and Teambition.
⚠ 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 issuetrack.io official site.
issuetrack.io is an Unknown SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 5.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach issuetrack.io directly.