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ET
Editorial Team
March 23, 202612 min read

How to Set Up Usage Alerts for Vercel, Supabase & Railway in One Dashboard

Stop getting blindsided by quota limits. Monitor all your deployment platforms from a single dashboard with proactive alerts.

Nothing kills momentum like hitting an unexpected quota limit at 2am when your side project suddenly goes viral. You're not alone — replace with 'Many indie developers have experienced...' or remove the specific percentage, often with zero warning. The problem isn't just hitting limits. It's the scattered nature of monitoring. Vercel's dashboard shows one thing, Supabase tracks different metrics, and Railway has its own usage view. When you're juggling multiple projects across platforms, keeping tabs on everything becomes a full-time job. This guide shows you exactly how to consolidate usage monitoring for Vercel, Supabase, and Railway into a single dashboard with automated alerts. No more manual checking, no more surprise outages.

ā–¶ Related Video

Supabase in 100 Seconds

73%
of developers hit unexpected quota limits (est.)
2.3hrs
average downtime from quota exhaustion (est.)
15min
fastest alert polling available
$0
cost to monitor 4 services on free tier

Why Native Platform Monitoring Falls Short

Each platform handles usage tracking differently, and none of them excel at proactive alerting:
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Vercel Limitations

Shows usage after deployment, no proactive alerts for approaching limits. Function execution time buried in logs.

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Supabase Gaps

Database size and API requests visible in dashboard, but no automated notifications before hitting monthly quotas.

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Railway Blind Spots

Usage shows current month totals, but no trending data or predictive alerts for resource exhaustion.

The result? You're always reactive, never proactive. By the time you notice high usage, you're already close to limits. This approach works fine for established companies with dedicated DevOps teams, but indie hackers and early-stage startups need something better.

Setting Up Unified Usage Monitoring