Abstract

CertKit is officially out of beta. We started building CertKit a year ago, and since then over 600 people signed up, issued certificates, and deployed to their infrastructure. Several are running it as their production certificate management platform right now.

We built a lot during the beta. Some of it we planned: SSO, team management, alerting. Other things, users had to beat into us. The Keystore came from enterprise security requirements to keep private keys in house. RDP and RRAS support came from managing Windows infrastructure. You can check out where we’ve been and where we are going on the roadmap.

We also did the boring but important work: security practices, terms of service, privacy policies. The stuff that makes a product a real thing people can depend on.

The beta is over because CertKit is stable and has all the core pieces in place. We’re doing full-service onboarding right now, working directly with every new customer to get CertKit installed and running. For now, you get a real person.

What this means for users

If you’re already running CertKit, nothing changes today. Your certificates keep renewing, your agents keep deploying, your setup stays exactly as it is. What’s new is that we’re now a real product with real pricing, and your 90-day free trial starts today.

A thank you to early adopters

You took a chance on us when we were unfinished. That matters. If you helped us figure out what this product needed to be, we want to say thank you with something concrete.

Founder pricing is 40% off, forever. That includes your base plan, your certificates, your agents, everything. Subscribe to any plan before May 31st to qualify. This isn’t a first-year deal. Start your free 90-day trial.

If you want to help spread the word, we’re on Product Hunt and Show HN today.


CertKit handles certificate lifecycle management end to end. Book a demo if you want a walkthrough before you commit.

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