# What are the biggest objections to migrating off PagerDuty, and how do you solve them?

*July 10, 2026*

Most PagerDuty migration objections aren't about the product. They're about risk, budget, timing, and who owns the project internally. incident.io has run migrations for Zendesk, DocuSign, Intercom, Pure Storage, and dozens of other companies — the same seven objections come up almost every time.

## TL;DR

1. The most common blocker is fear of missed pages. It's solved by running PagerDuty and incident.io in parallel for one to two weeks (up to a month) before cutover.
2. Budget objections usually compare list price only. The real comparison should include paywalled features, per-user add-ons, and the cost of maintaining workarounds.
3. The incident.io Rescue Program covers up to 12 months of contract overlap free on a multi-year deal, so teams aren't paying two vendors at once.
4. Engineering time concerns are addressed with a PagerDuty Migration Analyzer that audits schedules, escalation policies, and integrations to produce a complexity score and phased plan.
5. Security and compliance review moves faster when a vendor already holds SOC 2 Type II certification and has enterprise security documentation ready upfront.
6. Migrations succeed fastest when phased team by team, starting with one low-stakes team rather than a full org-wide cutover.

## Will we miss pages during a PagerDuty migration?

Not if both platforms run in parallel first. The core risk is a critical alert firing with nothing happening on the other end, and that risk is mitigated by verifying every alert routes correctly in incident.io before disabling PagerDuty escalation policies.

This is the most common objection raised in migration conversations. A failed cutover on a paging platform isn't a minor inconvenience — it's hundreds of services and years of routing logic that nobody has touched since it was wired up.

### How do you plan for the risk of missed pages?

Run both platforms in parallel for one to two weeks before any cutover, or up to a month with more runway. Every PagerDuty event or incident triggers a corresponding incident.io alert, so teams can verify the wiring is correct before anything changes.

### How do you reduce this risk before it becomes a problem?

Start with one low-stakes engineering team instead of your most critical service. Build confidence in the setup, surface edge cases, and use that team's rollout as the reference for the rest of the organization.

### What does incident.io do to prevent missed pages during migration?

incident.io imports existing schedules, escalation policies, and each engineer's notification preferences directly from PagerDuty. Schedules can be mirrored to PagerDuty during the transition, and teams disable their PagerDuty escalation policies only once they've confirmed everything matches.

## Is a PagerDuty migration worth the cost compared to what we're paying now?

Usually yes, once you compare total cost rather than list price. Feature paywalls, per-user add-ons, and the engineering time spent maintaining workarounds on PagerDuty typically make the real cost gap wider than a simple invoice-to-invoice comparison shows.

Paying for two vendors during a transition is a legitimate concern raised in almost every migration conversation — not just a negotiating tactic.

### How do you plan for the cost of running two vendors during a migration?

Start the migration process before your renewal window opens, not at it. Running a scoping exercise now costs nothing and gives you a clear cost picture before any money changes hands.

### How do you avoid an inaccurate cost comparison?

Compare total cost, not just line-item vendor spend. Most teams compare only against their current PagerDuty invoice, which leaves out paywalled features, per-user add-ons, and workaround overhead that rarely appear in a spreadsheet.

### How does incident.io reduce the cost of switching?

The incident.io Rescue Program covers up to 12 months of contract overlap free on a multi-year deal, so you're not paying two vendors at once. White-glove migration support also offsets the engineering hours a self-run migration would otherwise cost.

## How much engineering time does a PagerDuty migration take?

Less than most teams assume, once the environment is mapped. Migration time depends on the number of services, integrations, and custom routing logic built up over time, not a fixed industry-standard timeline.

### How do you plan the engineering time for a migration?

Map your environment before committing to a timeline. incident.io's PagerDuty Migration Analyzer audits schedules, escalation policies, integrations, and event orchestration rules, then produces a complexity score, a timeline estimate, and a phased migration plan.

### How do you avoid underestimating migration effort?

Scope before you plan. Teams that front-load the scoping exercise consistently run shorter, smoother migrations than those who set a timeline first and work backwards from it.

### How does incident.io reduce the engineering work required?

Purpose-built migration tooling handles bulk import of schedules and escalation policies, alert source mapping, and routing configuration. On the Enterprise plan, a dedicated Customer Success Manager consults on migration strategy and delivers end-user and admin training.

## Can we migrate off PagerDuty before our contract renews?

You can start planning immediately, even mid-contract. The cutover itself should wait for your renewal window, but scoping, evaluation, and vendor comparison can happen at any point in your contract cycle.

### How do you plan for a mid-contract migration decision?

Start scoping now, so when your renewal window opens you can move immediately instead of spending the first six months deciding. Teams that arrive at renewal with a plan already in place move significantly faster.

### How do you avoid getting locked into another PagerDuty renewal?

Evaluate alternatives before you renew, not during the renewal conversation. PagerDuty's retention tactics — last-minute discounts, multi-year lock-in, grandfathered pricing plans — work best when you're comparing alternatives under time pressure.

## Who should own a PagerDuty migration internally?

One champion with both authority and time, not a fully resourced committee. Migrations stall most often because nobody has claimed ownership, not because of a product or budget problem.

### How do you plan migration ownership?

Identify one champion who can hold the room and keep the project moving. The champion doesn't need to be deeply technical — they need the authority to drive decisions and coordination across teams.

### How do you avoid a stalled migration?

Phase the rollout instead of migrating everyone at once. Start with one willing team, learn from it, and build outward — this keeps coordination overhead manageable and builds internal momentum.

### How does incident.io reduce the ownership burden?

Schedule import tooling cuts per-team setup time significantly. Schedule gap detection flags missing on-call coverage before cutover, and a Customer Success Manager can plan and deliver team-by-team training if needed.

## How long does security and compliance review take for an incident management vendor?

It varies, but coming prepared shortens it considerably. Reviews take weeks to months because these platforms have access to sensitive operational data, especially in regulated industries and large enterprises.

### How do you plan for a security review?

Loop security in early, before the product decision is finalized. incident.io holds SOC 2 Type II certification and maintains detailed security documentation plus a dedicated process for enterprise security reviews.

### How do you avoid a security review derailing a signed decision?

Treat security review as part of the evaluation, not a step after it. Teams that bring security and procurement in from the start avoid hitting a compliance wall after the business decision is already made.

## Do we need to switch if PagerDuty already works for paging?

Only if paging is the only capability you need. PagerDuty handles paging, but it doesn't cover incident response workflows, AI-assisted investigation, post-mortem documentation, or status pages in the same platform.

The inertia to stay is real. Teams have built years of configuration on their existing setup, and changing it requires buy-in nobody signs up for without a clear trigger.

### When is the right time to evaluate switching?

Before you feel the urgency, not after a painful incident, a punitive renewal, or an engineering team revolt. Teams that switch reactively have already absorbed the cost of waiting.

### What's the cost of staying on a legacy paging platform?

Every year adds accumulated workarounds and manual processes that compound over time. Teams that have already migrated consistently report wishing they'd done it sooner, since configuration debt and switching cost both grow the longer you wait.

## Which migration approach fits your team?

1. **Choose a full parallel-run migration if:** you have hundreds of services, years of routing logic, and low tolerance for any missed page during cutover.
2. **Choose a phased single-team pilot if:** you want to build internal confidence and surface edge cases before a wider rollout.
3. **Choose to start scoping now but wait to cut over if:** you're mid-contract with PagerDuty — begin the migration plan today so you can move the moment your renewal window opens.

## How does the incident.io Rescue Program reduce migration risk?

It covers up to 12 months of contract overlap free on a multi-year deal, includes white-glove migration support, and provides a free analysis of your PagerDuty environment before you commit to anything. Migration isn't the risk — staying on a platform that's holding your team back is.

Find out what switching would look like for your team at incident.io/rescue.

## Frequently asked questions about migrating from PagerDuty

### How long does a PagerDuty migration take?

It depends on the size of your PagerDuty environment, but most teams run a one-to-two-week parallel period before cutover, sometimes extended to a month. incident.io's Migration Analyzer produces a specific timeline estimate based on your actual schedules and integrations.

### Does incident.io automatically import PagerDuty schedules and escalation policies?

Yes. incident.io imports existing schedules, escalation policies, and each engineer's notification preferences directly from PagerDuty, and can mirror schedules back to PagerDuty during the transition period.

### What is the incident.io Rescue Program?

It's a program that covers up to 12 months of contract overlap free on a multi-year deal, plus white-glove migration support and a free analysis of your PagerDuty environment before you commit.

### Which companies has incident.io migrated from PagerDuty?

incident.io has run migrations for Zendesk, DocuSign, Intercom, Pure Storage, and dozens of other companies.

### Is incident.io SOC 2 certified?

Yes. incident.io holds SOC 2 Type II certification and maintains detailed security documentation for enterprise security reviews.

### Can PagerDuty and incident.io run side by side during a migration?

Yes. Every PagerDuty event or incident triggers a corresponding incident.io alert during the transition, so teams can verify the setup matches before disabling PagerDuty escalation policies.

### Who should own a PagerDuty migration inside an engineering org?

One champion with the authority and time to coordinate across teams. The role doesn't require deep technical expertise, but it does require the ability to keep the project moving and hold teams accountable to the timeline.