I know there are a dozen of different "EU Alternatives" websites/catalogs already and some of them are actually great for discovering European brands and software. But they never show you what's inside: you only get a name, a logo, a few lines long pitch and then you're on your own.
So after doing some due diligence I've built a more detailed one. Whether you just want a European Dropbox/Google Analytics/1Password etc or you need to know your customers' data won't leave the EU, the idea is the same: give you what you need after the name, not just the name.
Two features I have that surface-level lists do not:
- I show the exposure, not just the "European" label. That word hides the part that matters. A company can have a Berlin office, a "hosted in the EU" banner, and still route your data through a US analytics provider or sit on US-owned cloud - at which point US law reaches it regardless of where the rack is. So for every listing I check, and link the source for:
- Where the data is actually hosted - the data-centre region, not the HQ on the about page.
- The sub-processor list - the one nobody reads. Pretty EU hosting page up front, US tooling quietly in the DPA annex.
- CLOUD Act exposure - US parent or US hyperscaler storage means US jurisdiction, full stop.
- Who owns the company - "EU-founded, US-funded" is a different animal from "EU-owned". Ownership and hosting are shown as separate signals so you decide which one you care about.
- A proper feature matrix. Not "here are five alternatives, good luck" - an actual side-by-side, so you can see which tool genuinely replaces the US one feature-for-feature and which is wishful thinking.
Everything is from public sources only - the vendor's own DPA, sub-processors page, the company registry, legal notice etc. Each point has a link to original page and last verification date. Vendor's self-attestation is not taken on faith.
One number that fell out of doing this for more than 200 tools: a little more than 30% are completely clear of US Cloud Act exposure with no US parent and no significat sub-processors.
On money: the site earns nothing right now. There are a couple of affiliate links added already and it's disclosed everywhere they appear plus listed in full on the transparency page. That's the whole monetisation plan: affiliate links, nothing hidden. Listing order is editorial - no commission logic anywhere in how stuff is sorted.
What I would be happy to hear from you: what's missing? Did I get any assessments wrong? If you see something - let me know and I will fix it right away.
Disclaimer: I'm affiliated. I built and run this site. It currently has a couple of affiliate links live; how it's funded is documented in full at https://euvetted.com/transparency
Missing tool: discord (video conferencing)
Missing category: dns, email aliasing, push-services, search
These are in progress currently, thank you! As well as git services, i.e alternatives to github/gitlab
May I ask why you offer unconditional removals? I understand why you wouldn't want to fight a company to keep them there, but it's curious to eagerly offer that even if the content is factually correct
I am actually eager to fix, not delete. Every claim is sourced so if a company finds any assessment wrong the first thing I want is them to show me and I will correct it asap. There were couple of cases already.
The removal is for other case tho. Some companies just don't want to be on the list. At some point keeping them there will not help anyone. The whole point of this website is to help people find good options, not pointing which is worse. My thought here is that no good product would claim for a removal anyway.
I will look for a way to work this around tho, as displaying something the company doesn't like might still be very useful for the users.
On the one hand, list of EU alternatives.
On the other hand, obviously AI generated.
Ha, fair and I won't pretend otherwise. The write-ups are AI-drafted. I'm one person covering everything and there is no real option to do it otherwise.
But the line I care about is this. The prose is AI, the facts aren't. Everything you see like ownership, cloud act exposure, hosting region, sub-processors, feature comparisons is verified manually.
And you are right that the tone needs to be fixed.
Why didn't you disclose your use of AI in the first place?
Do you need to use AI for the replies, too, though?
Not at all sir
Em—–-dash, babyyy
Nice work, I really like it!
Switzerland is not in the EU though, I wouldn't say Proton Mail is EU-Sovereign.
Thank you! Yes, "EU-Sovereign" and others are editorial labels. They should be treated more like "this is complete safe for EU" (or not safe) rather than "this is 100% made in EU". But I will think on the naming more as they are a bit misleading, I agree.
Even for an Aussie like me, this is incredibly useful for trying to disconnect from US infrastructure as much as possible.
If you ever get the time to find and vet an EU alternative to Ko-Fi - I would love to send a few dollarbucks your way.
Okay I thought only us EU guys are trying to disconnect, nice to know that :)
I haven't made a deep research membership donation services yet, the only one that comes to my mind is https://en.liberapay.com/, it's French but it's hosted on AWS Ireland tho. No idea how good it is, never used any of these
Though it's code is hosted on Github, this application is developed and maintained by several NRENs across Europe.
Filesender is maybe an alternative to WeTransfer?
BSD license and self-hostable
I will review it, saved it to my backlog. Thank you!
Hello, my friend is using Netcup hosting service. It's supposed to be German, so maybe it's a contender for this list?
Hey. Thank you for mentioning that, will see if it fits in my list
I was checking Internxt and they cheapest plan is 10e /month (after the first month). Where did you get 4?
Maybe I got confused by their pricing strategy. Currently I see 3.99 per month if paying annually. I will take a closer look, noted. Thanks.
If it's paid annually, please show the annual price. The per month thing is a marketing strategy to make it look cheaper
That's the first month only, then 10 :(
It's a bit steep vs hetzner storage share (hosted next cloud)
A few things that didn't fit in the post: The hardest part wasn't finding EU tools. It was going through the sub-processor lists. Plenty of vendors publish a nice "hosted in the EU" page, then quietly list a US analytics, support, or infrastructure provider in the DPA annex. That's why I treat the sub-processor list as more telling than the hosting claim itself.
So a question for you: which category do you most wish had a genuinely clean option? And which tool are you still stuck using? That's exactly the gap I want to fill next.
Thanks for the work you've put into this. It does look nice and provides lots of information one might want to have before deciding on a product.
That said, I've found an inaccuracy with KeePass. The comparison claims that, unlike the other password managers, Keepass is unavailable for mobile. Technically, that's true for KeepassXC (the most polished Keepass fork). However, with KeepassDX, there's definitely a very polished Android app (though under a different name), and apparently, iOS apps exist too.
Good catch, thanks. The listing is KeePassXC specifically and that fork really is desktop-onlyб so the "no mobile" is technically true for that one app. But you're right that it reads wrong in a comparison: the whole point of KeePassXC is the local .kdbx file, and that opens fine in mobile apps like KeePassDX on Android or Strongbox/KeePassium on iOS. So the KeePass approach does have mobile, even if this app doesn't ship it.
I'll fix the wording so it doesn't imply you're stuck on desktop. Thanks for flagging it.
I mean, it's open source software and someone ported it, so there's a client, simple as.
What would be interesting to me is to select a few services I use and find the platforms that allow me too replace all (or the majority) of them.
Yeah, that is a great feature, I would use it myself.
There's two sides to it really: one is finding a single EU platform that swallows a few of your tools at once (Proton covers mail, calendar, drive, pass and VPN in one account; Infomaniak's kSuite is close to a Workspace replacement) and the other is just building a clean EU bundle across your whole stack.
I've got curated "stacks" pages that do a rough static version, but the tick-your-tools-and-see-what-covers-them thing isn't built yet. Probably the version people would actually use though. Will definitely build it soon.
This is a very nice site! One VPN that's missing is the finnish F-Secure VPN https://www.f-secure.com/en/vpn
Thank you! Will review that one
Looks nice, good job. I was planning to look at VPNs soon and will refer back to this.
In case you ever want to include gaming as a category, make sure to list lichess.org as an alternative to chess.com. It is precisely what people using a site like this are looking for: Fully EU-owned and EU-hosted, open source, free of ads and trackers etc.
Thank you! Yes, I am currently working on expanding categories. Currently it has more business related stuff but that's not the only direction I am planing.
Hi, thanks for your work. Would Heylogin qualify under password manager ?
Praise be for the transparency!
Good job.
Thank you!
Really nice work! Good job.
One thing I miss, is which payment options they support. You are mostly forced to use VISA or Mastercard.
Thanks, really appreciate it! Right now I don't track payment methods as a field, so that's an honest gap.
What do you thing would actually be useful to see: just "accepts SEPA / direct debit / invoice" as a yes/no, or specifically European options like Bancontact, SOFORT and so on? I'd rather capture the thing people actually look for than guess.
Maybe something like "VISA/Mastercard alternatives available"? Like Proton allows you to pay in cash and Bitcoin. No need to go into too much detail.
Nice work! A question and a request:
ref: https://euvetted.com/compare?p=hetzner%2Covhcloud
(q) Looking at the Cloud & Hosting category, I don't see a distinction for regional datacenters; for instance OVHcloud has a US counterpart and US datacenters (and Canada) along with all their EU stuff. Just sort of asking how that worked out in your investigations... even if it's just Canada, it's not in the EU yet. :) But more realistically say... Helsinki vs. UK or something.
(r) One of the things I spent time on but I don't see reflected - Domain Registrars and DNS Hosting. I used the ICANN official list myself and just clicked a lot, and for DNS I found basically CouldNS, Bunny.net and Gcore.com as the "EU" (not sure if EU or general Europe). [1]
Bunny and Gcore are Cloudflare competitors so it's no small work to build a full set of data like you have done for others, they all offer a lot of products under one umbrella. But CloudNS isn't so it's a crossover area between different types of companies based on singular.. features offered?
[1] side comment, it might be interesting to see a mapping of domain TLDs - it's well known about who owns/controls net. com, org but I think few realize that a lot of these new TLDs are all owned by single megacorps when you dig into Wikipedia etc. Your precious .dev is owned by Google.
Thanks for digging in properly, this is exactly the kind of feedback I was hoping for!
On the data centre thing - yes, fair point. Right now each listing has one hosting country, the EU region I checked, not the full "every region this vendor runs." So for OVH I've got the EU side, but I'm not flagging that you could spin up in their US or Canada region by accident. Should fix that. Two things that help though: I keep ownership and hosting separate on purpose: OVH's French, so even their US datacentres sit under a French parent, which is a different animal from a US company that just offers an EU region. And EU/EEA is the actual bar for me, not "Europe" loosely - UK and Canada don't count even though everyone lumps them in.
DNS and registrars - yeah, not there, blind spot. Part of it is what you said: Bunny and Gcore are umbrella shops where DNS is one product of twenty, so they don't slot in cleanly. CloudNS is the easy one. If you've still got the registrar list you clicked through, I'd take it and I'd want to check who actually owns what before listing, Gcore especially.
TLD ownership is a great shout though. "Your precious .dev is Google's" most people have no clue. I already do write-ups like that (did one on CLOUD Act exposure), so mapping the new gTLDs fits perfectly. Might build it.
So for OVH I’ve got the EU side, but I’m not flagging that you could spin up in their US or Canada region by accident.
In effort not to create a large amount of work or overhead, I think the key concern is more what is considered sovereign - these large shops have core presence and edge presence. It is not uncommon that an edge use the features of the core which crosses countries; when I worked in a multinational, our Sydney DC was an edge to the Hong Kong DC core (think like a monitoring or backup system) so your data actually flowed through HKG pipes because Sydney is insanely expensive to have a DC in (size/space).
Spirit in my comment was more to that - spinning up in US by accident is a "given" to me, kinda obvious. An edge DC routing through a core DC in another country, well that's a different matter. Can be invisible to the end user.
If you’ve still got the registrar list you clicked through
ICANN has a nice page, lets you filter it by country or whatever. There are a million of them, and some of them "feel sketchy" but many seem like generic, boring registrars.
https://www.icann.org/en/contracted-parties/accredited-registrars/list-of-accredited-registrars
I then used the DNSPerf data to dig into that layer, tl;dr 90% (guessing) are US controlled. I actually found more out there than what's on this list but it's really comprehensive of the big players in the DNS space.
https://www.dnsperf.com/
My "investigation" was all manual, dig through publicly available information and follow my nose. The DNS perf listing is actually how I even learned Bunny and Gcore existed.
