Solid ground for your code
Owns the merge decision. Delegates everything else.
GitPlane is a lean, policy-driven git host that owns the merge decision and delegates everything else to the best-of-breed tools you already run — delivering enterprise-grade change management at a fraction of the platform tax. No bundled CI, no built-in AI product to protect. Just repos, review, and a merge decision engineered to stay up.
One flat price. No bundled add-ons. No per-seat security upsell.
Why we're building this
Most enterprises we talk to aren't missing AI code review, secrets scanning, or code quality. They already have it — often several layers deep, and often better than what a git host would bolt on as a checkbox feature. SonarQube already ships agentic fix suggestions. GitGuardian already gates secrets before merge. Snyk already scans every dependency that matters.
What's missing is a git host that treats those signals as first-class inputs to the merge decision, instead of quietly selling its own thinner version of the same thing and hoping you switch.
GitPlane is a lean, policy-driven git host that owns the merge decision and delegates everything else to best-of-breed partners — delivering enterprise-grade change management at a fraction of the platform tax.
Own the decision
A policy engine that composes signals from every gate you already run into one auditable merge decision — with exception workflows, not just pass/fail.
Delegate the rest
No in-house CI, no in-house SAST, no AI product to protect. Every signal you feed in comes from the specialist tool your team already trusts.
Stay reliable
A small, boring core has fewer ways to go down. Git hosting is infrastructure — we treat uptime as the headline feature, not an SLA footnote.
What's actually in the core
Small on purpose.
GitPlane only builds what has to sit next to your code. Everything else is a native integration, not a roadmap item.
Lean, policy-driven git host
Own the merge decision, not a bloated DevSecOps suite.
Unbundled by design
Bring your CI, scanners, agentic fix, and registries — GitPlane just orchestrates them.
Change Proposals > PRs
Govern Git PRs, Jujutsu stacks, batched patches, and agent diffs with one model.
AI-ready governance
Know which changes were AI-assisted, tighten policy, and prove human oversight.
Parallel without chaos
Stack-aware flows, overlap detection, and merge trains stop teams and agents colliding.
Review where it counts
Risk-weighted policies save deep human review for the riskiest changes.
Enterprise-grade isolation
Single-tenant, dedicated domains, and strong boundaries for your orgs and teams.
Partner ecosystem
You probably already run one of these.
Most enterprises already own tooling this rich for CI/CD, secrets, and code quality. GitPlane doesn't rebuild it — it plugs straight into it and lets the signal gate the merge.
CI/CD
Bring your own runners or go fully managed. GitPlane triggers the build; your pipeline vendor owns the execution.
Secrets prevention
Most teams already run this. We plug straight in and gate the merge on the result — no separate portal to check.
Agentic code quality
Your team's agentic fix suggestions already land here. We gate the merge on the result instead of shipping a thinner version ourselves.
Application security
SAST, SCA, and container scanning wired straight into the merge request — not a separate portal you check on Fridays.
Artifact & package registry
Store what you build. Point CI at either and go — no vendor lock on the binaries.
Planning & issue tracking
Keep planning where your team already lives — synced both ways, never duplicated.
Boring, on purpose
The most important feature of a git host is that it's always there.
Every layer we don't build is a layer that can't take your repos down with it. No bundled CI queue backing up the API. No AI product outage cascading into pull requests. The core does one job — repos, review, merge — and it's engineered for uptime first.
Git hosting has quietly become fragile as platforms race to bundle CI, Copilot-style AI, and a
dozen other products onto the same infrastructure that has to serve your next
git push. Publicly tracked incident data for the industry's largest git host shows
48 major outages and over 100 hours of downtime in the past year — largely tied to the
capacity and complexity of running everything on one platform.
Source: IncidentHub, GitHub outage history, May 2025 – April 2026, corroborated by GitHub's own availability reports and The Register.
Pricing
One tier. No storage bands, no CI-minute meters, no feature paywalls. €9 is the whole invoice for the core.
- Unlimited private repositories
- Code review & merge requests
- Lightweight issues & wiki
- SSO / SAML, branch protection, CODEOWNERS
- Native connectors to every partner category
- Full API & webhook access
- Community support included
How the pricing stays honest
Why is it just one price?
Because the core doesn't grow feature paywalls over time. If it's not repos, review, or merge, it's not in here — and it's not upsold later either.
Who bills me for partner tools?
The partner does, directly, at their own published rate. GitPlane never marks it up or takes a cut of your CI minutes.
What if I don't want any partners?
Then you pay €9 and nothing else. The core works standalone — the ecosystem is opt-in, category by category.
Early access
Get early access.
We're onboarding teams in small batches ahead of general availability. Leave your work email and we'll reach out with an invite.