Launched this week

EZTest (Easy Test)
Lightweight, Open Source Alternative to TestRail or Testiny
61 followers
Lightweight, Open Source Alternative to TestRail or Testiny
61 followers
EZTest is a high-performance, lightweight, open-source alternative to TestRail and Testiny. Built for speed and data sovereignty, it allows teams to manage test cases in a lightweight, self-hosted environment. ✅ 100% Open Source ✅ Lightning-fast UI (<100ms) ✅ Docker-ready / Self-hosted ✅ 1-click CSV/Excel Import We are building in public from Chennai to bring enterprise-grade FOSS to every QA team. Join our Alpha and help us kill the bloat.








Hi Product Hunt! 😺
I’m Philip, founder of the House of FOSS based in Chennai, India.
We built EZTest because we were tired of legacy test management tools (like TestRail/Testiny) that are slow, expensive ($19 per user per month), and feel like glorified spreadsheets from 2010. We wanted a tool that: 🚀 Is Fast: Optimized for <100ms interactions. 🏠 Is Self-Hosted: You own your data. Period. 🔓 Is Open Source: No vendor lock-in.
We built the whole tool in 2 months using Claude Code, Cursor, etc for the same cost 😅
EZTest is currently in Alpha. We aren’t here for a 'polished' marketing launch; we are here for your brutal honesty. Check out the repo, try the demo, and tell us why you would (or wouldn't) switch today.
I'll be here all day to answer your technical questions!
EZTest has been designed around real-world testing workflows, with a strong focus on practicality, flexibility, and everyday usability. The aim has been to align test management more closely with how modern teams actually plan, execute, and track testing in their day-to-day work.
@kavin_pasupathy 💯💯💯
Most open-source TMS tools look like they were built in 2005. The fact that this is built with Next.js and actually looks modern is refreshing.
I usually stick to spreadsheets because Jira/TestRail are too slow for quick test cycles. If EZTest is as snappy as it claims (running on minimal specs), it could actually bridge the gap between "messy spreadsheets" and "heavy enterprise software." Definitely spinning up a Docker container to try this weekend.