Here is a list of the best Bug Tracking Tools: Track Defects Efficiently With These Top Issue or Defect Tracking Tools
We are testers – in other words, bug finders. Defect/Bug/Issue/Fault/Failure/Incident – whatever we choose to call – our primary job description revolves around finding, recording, reporting, managing, and tracking these. There is no harm in using an Excel sheet to record/track emails to report/alert/communicate.
As the magnitude of the projects, the number of test cycles, and the count of people involved, grows – it becomes absolutely important to have a much stronger mechanism that will make the management of these issues simpler and more consistent. We can concentrate harder on finding more issues in the AUT than managing the ones already found.
To enable the same, the QA market has seen the emergence of various bug-tracking systems or defect management tools over the years.
As is the general rule, all the tools that belong to a certain ‘genre’ consist of certain common/similar features that we can bank on.

For Bug tracking software, it is essential to have:
- Reporting facility – complete with fields that will let you provide information about the bug, environment, module, severity, screenshots, etc.
- Assigning – What good is a bug when all you can do is find it and keep it to yourself, right?
- Progressing through life cycle stages – Workflow
- History/work logs/comments
- Reports – graphs or charts
- Storage and Retrieval – Every entity in a testing process needs to be uniquely identifiable. The same rule applies to bugs too. A bug tracking tool must provide a way to have an ID that can be used to store, retrieve (search), and organize bug information.
Mentioned above are the features of the essence, which means these are necessary for any system that claims to be a bug-tracking system. Apart from that, there might be additional features of convenience, like watching, saving searches, etc., and some assurances, like voting, showing the bug info in a live stream, and so on.
While features of convenience and assurance are nice to have, it is the features of essence that become the game-changers during the evaluation and choosing what tool to use. Then, there are economics to consider too.
We know that the tools available in the market are innumerable – with some of them being a perfect fit for you and others that just won’t cut it. The remainder of this article is primarily going to focus on some of the crème de le crème of the bug tracking tools available and introduce you to them briefly.
Table of Contents:
Benefits of Using a Bug Tracking System
Can a Defect Management Tool Make You a Better Tester?
I am not a big fan of single-purpose tools. Whether the tool in question is a kitchen gadget or a work management software, you want it to serve you in multiple ways.
The benefit of a defect tracking tool is not just effective management but, did you know that defect tracking tools could help you be a better tester?
In this part of the article, let’s explore how.

First, Why Use a Defect Tracking Tool?
In the absence of a Bug Tracking Tool, teams use spreadsheets to report, track, and transport their bugs. While this might be a good temporary solution for small-sized teams and projects, this is not a sustainable method.
Here is why.
Spreadsheets/Excel sheets pose a ton of challenges when you use them as your primary method of defect tracking and management.
A few of them are listed below:
#1) Too many bulky emails: Does this ring a bell? Excel sheets with screenshot attachments are sometimes over a few MB. I often have these spreadsheets with emails attached sitting in my outbox waiting to be sent or receiving a mailbox full alert as soon as I get one.
#2) Lack of real-time visibility into bug discovery and progress/status: We don’t hear of an issue as soon as it is found. We also don’t know if an issue has been retested or returned, etc. in real-time.
Since there is no automatic alerting system, defects do not call for any attention to them unless someone is deliberately looking.
#3) Work Assignment issues: We don’t know who has what issue and what they are doing. If it has been picked up for resolution, what priority is set, etc. is never as easily visible as you would like it to be.
You may have to call, email, or send an IM to find out what is happening.
#4) Lack of a Central Repository: Too many folders, release-wise, module-wise, or something-else-wise.
If you want to get back to a defect that was reported in the previous release or maybe a few releases behind it, which was commented on by the developer in a certain way – you are simply playing a guessing game as to where the defect might be.
Even if you did find it, you might not have all the comments on it, all the history of it, etc.
#5) Manual gathering and consolidation of Defect Statistics for insights into the Quality of the product.
Imagine collecting raw defect data from each team member, entering it into an Excel template, organizing it to show a pattern or trend, and finally plotting a chart or graph. This process is time and labor-intensive. And also, rigid.
Say, if your team wants to view a new kind of report, you are looking at the additional effort and creating new templates, etc. So you have limited your choices of what defect trends you can and will see.
Teams will no longer be inclined to invest time in monitoring and measuring and this means a lack of visibility and confidence about the quality of the product. Some problems could be solved by the use of a shared document on a remote/network drive, but not all. So, most test teams use a defect-tracking tool to handle this process effectively.
Defect Management/Bug Tracking tools offer a single point of truth for all your defects, provide real-time updates, aid collaboration with the team members, trace the defects back to the requirements, and generate real-time reports.
Everyone knows about this, what’s new?
Here are some great ways you can make your bug-tracking tool multi-task.
3 Intangible Benefits Of Using a Bug Tracking System
I guarantee you that the defects in your report will be superior, valid, and easier to understand, and will have a higher ‘picked-for-resolution’ rate.
#1) Understand Defect Trends
We are not talking about Defect density or Defects per requirement, etc. We are talking about getting a deeper understanding of the system under test.
Let’s say, you are new to testing an application. If you are in the process of understanding the system, check out your Bug Tracking tool for the kind of bugs previously reported.
Pay attention to some of the following points:
- Is there a component/module/functional area of the application that records more bugs than the others?
- Are there platform/compatibility-related issues before?
- Are the testing teams allowed to make enhancement suggestions? Check if testers before you do this.
- Were there any problems related to the environment and are they treated as typical defects by this team?
- What was the defect turnaround time? How long did it take between Defect Reporting and fixing/closing?
- What is the average age of the defects?
#2) Understand Defect Reporting standards
Now, every company, every project, every team, and every individual is different. So, even though a few common guidelines on how to write defect reports exist, nothing prepares you as your in-house research does.
How do you do that?
Check your Defect Tracking tool for the following:
- Which defect reports were returned as “Not enough information”?
- What defects were outright rejected by developers as ‘Not a defect’ or ‘works as intended’. And, why?
- What enhancement suggestions were considered?
- What defects are still open?
- Do reports with screenshots have a higher rate of being fixed?
- For the defect, if the developers changed the severity, check out why. This might let you know what is “serious” about the team and what is not.
Recommended read => Defect Triage Process
#3) Prevent duplicates and invalid suggestions
Once you know your application, your team’s work style, and your development team, then you automatically become a better tester. This way you will know what has already been reported or what has already been suggested and rejected.
You can now focus on uncovering new bugs, exploring the application deeper, and tailoring your reports in a way that you can get through to your development team better.
Those who don’t know history are destined to repeat it. – Edmund Burke
So, let’s know 🙂
Most Popular Bug Tracking Software
Here we go!!
#1) JAM

Jam is a free browser extension for 1 click bug reporting. Just record your screen, take a screenshot, or replay a bug that just happened. Every Jam includes deep bug diagnostics you can share with engineers in one link.
- Automatically includes console and network logs, reproduction steps, and metadata in every bug report.
- Ability to capture bugs after they happened (up to 2 minutes) with technical session details.
- AI code analysis for streamlined debugging, based on your existing bug reports.
- Integrates with the most popular issue trackers and collaboration tools like Jira, Linear, Asana, Sentry, Slack, etc.
- Faster and more organized QA flows with team workspaces.
- Enterprise-grade security and privacy, compliant with SOC 2 Type II
#2) JIRA Software

Atlassian JIRA Software, primarily an incident management tool, is also commonly used for bug-tracking. It provides a complete set of recording, reporting, workflow, and other convenience-related features.
It is a tool that integrates directly with the code development environment thus making it a perfect fit for developers as well. Also, due to its capability to track any kinds of issues, it is not necessarily concentrated on only the software development industry and renders itself quite efficient to help desks, leave management systems, etc.
It also supports agile projects as well. It is a commercially licensed product with many add-ins that support extensibility.
#3) QACoverage

QACoverage is your one-stop destination for efficiently managing all your testing processes so that you can produce high-quality and bug-free products. It has a defect management module that will allow you to control defects from the initial identification stage to closure.
The defect tracking process can be customized and configured per client needs. In addition to tracking defects, QACoverage has capabilities to track risks, issues, enhancements, suggestions, and recommendations. It also has the full capabilities of sophisticated test management solutions including requirement management, test case design, test case execution, and reporting.
Features:
- Control the complete workflow for various Ticket Types including risks, issues, tasks, and enhancement management.
- Generate comprehensive metrics for identifying root causes and severity levels.
- Support various defect-supportive information via attachments.
- Design and establish workflows for improved re-test visibility via automatic notifications.
- Graphical reports based on severity, priority, defect type, defect category, expected fix date, and much more.
- Jira integration and much more.
Pricing: It starts from only $11.99 per month for a complete test management platform. Start your 2-week free trial now.
#4) Zoho Projects

Zoho Projects is a task management software. It is an online tool that will let you create Projects, milestones, tasks, bugs, reports, documents, and so on. The bug tracker module by itself has all the features of essence that you generally look for. The product is commercial but not very expensive.
You can also try it for free for a limited time and see how it fits your needs.
#5) Kualitee

Kualitee is for development and QA teams who are looking beyond just assigning and tracking bugs. It lets you build high-quality software through fewer bugs, faster QA cycles, and overall better control over your builds.
The comprehensive suite includes all the functionalities of a good defect management tool and also has test case and test execution workflows built seamlessly into it. You wouldn’t have to mix and match different tools; instead, you can manage all your testing from one place.
Features:
- Create, assign, and track defects
- Traceability between defects, requirements, and tests
- Easily reusable defects, test cases, and test cycles
- Customizable permissions, fields, and reporting
- Interactive and insightful dashboard
- Third-party integrations and REST APIs
- Intuitive and user-friendly interface
Pricing: It starts at $15/user/month. Kualitee also offers a free 7-day trial.
#6) Bugzilla

Bugzilla has been a leading bug-tracking tool widely used by many organizations for quite some time now. It is very simple to use, a web-based interface. It has all the features of the essence, convenience, and assurance. It is completely open-sourced and is free to use.
#7) Mantis

I have one thing to say about this tool – do not be deceived by its simple exterior. In terms of simplicity and ease of use, this tool wins the crown.
It has every feature you can hope for and then some. To catch up with the changing times, Mantis not only comes as a web application but also has its mobile version. It is implemented in PHP and is free to use. If you would like it to be hosted, they do charge a price, but it’s quite affordable, I must say.
#8) Trac

Trac is not necessarily a specialized bug-tracking system. It is an issue-tracking system.
It is written using Python and is web-based. When you integrate Trac with an SCM system, you can use it to browse through the code, view changes, view history, etc. The issues/incidents in Trac are referred to as “tickets” and the ticket management system can be used for defect management as well if you wish to do so.
#9) Redmine

Redmine is an open source issue tracking system that integrates with SCM (Source Code Management systems) too. Even though it is not a ‘bug tracking’ tool it involves working with issues where issues can be features, tasks, bugs/defects, etc. It is a web application that works across many platforms but will need Ruby to be available.
Also read =>> How to use Redmine tool
#10) Micro Focus ALM/Quality Center

Well, no list of bug-tracking tools will be complete without the Micro Focus QC, will it? Micro Focus ALM is an end-to-end test management solution with a robust integrated bug-tracking mechanism within it. Micro Focus ALM’s bug tracking mechanism is easy, efficient, and everything you can ask for.
It supports Agile projects too. It is one of the pricey tools available in the market, which continues to be a prime source of criticism along with the fact that it is not very friendly with all the web browsers.
#11) FogBugz

FogBugz is also a web-based bug tracking system that refers to defects as ‘cases’. It allows you to create, list, assign, and work on cases created. Also, the project information can be created in terms of milestones so that the progress of the cases can be evaluated against the milestones.
It’s very simple to use and has all the features of the essence for sure. Additionally, with FogBugz, you can create wikis to be made available to the general public. It is a commercial product but very reasonably priced.
#12) IBM Rational ClearQuest

Clear Quest is a client-server-based web application that supports the defect management process. It provides integration with various automation tools which can be considered an additional feature. Other than that, it has an end-to-end, customizable defect-tracking system. It is a commercial product and can seem a little costly. You can try it for free for 30 days.
#13) Lighthouse

Lighthouse is an issue tracker that is web-based and is also compatible with your mobile devices. It is simple and organized. All the issues are referred to as tickets here too. There is an activity stream, milestones, etc. Another nice feature is that the lighthouse lets you store a project document online in its interface itself.
#14) The Bug Genie

Though the name sounds like it must be a bug-tracking tool – that is not all Bug Genie is.
It is a complete project management and issue tracking tool that involves defect management to be one of its aspects along with integration with many SCM systems, project creation and handling features, issue tracking mechanism, integrated wiki, and easy-to-use web interface. Support Agile projects also.
#15) BugHost

A web-based defect tracking system that is very simple and has all the features that you will need to manage issues for your project effectively. There is also a nifty little service WebHost that you can use for the users (the end customer) to create an issue directly into your project. Though commercial, it is very affordable.
#16) BugHerd

BugHerd is the easiest way to track bugs, gather and manage feedback for web pages. Your team and clients pin feedback to elements on a web page, for precise locating of issues.
BugHerd also captures the information you need to replicate and resolve bugs fast, such as the browser, CSS selector data, operating system, and even a screenshot.
Bugs and feedback, along with technical information, are fed to the Kanban-style Task Board, where bugs can be assigned and managed through to completion. BugHerd can also integrate with your existing project management tools, helping keep your team on the same page with bug resolution.
#17) Bird Eats Bug

Bird Eats Bug is a browser extension that helps anyone create interactive data-rich bug reports. While a user makes a screen recording of the issue, Bird’s browser extension automatically augments it with valuable technical data like console logs, network errors, browser information, etc.
QAs get to cut a lot of back and forth with developers and report bugs much faster. Developers receive detailed, reproducible bug reports directly in their bug tracker.
#18) Backlog

Backlog is an online bug-tracking and project management software built for development teams. It’s easy for anyone to report bugs with a full history of issue updates, comments, and status changes. Reported issues are easy to find with search and filters.
In addition to tracking bugs, it’s also widely used to manage IT projects with features like sub-tasking, Kanban-style boards, Gantt and burndown charts, Git and SVN repositories, Wiki, and IP access control. Native iOS and Android apps are a plus!
#19) Marker.io

Report bugs and track issues, directly on live websites with visual annotations. Get developer-friendly bug reports with screenshots, browser, operating system, page URL, console logs, and custom metadata.
Perfect for digital agencies, project managers, developers, designers, and QA testers.
#20) ReQtest

ReQtest is a powerful bug-tracking software that allows Developers & Testers to collaborate on fixing bugs using the “Agile board”. There is a dedicated bug module to report bugs.
You can also import bug reports from a CSV file. You can also track the progress of bug-tracking initiatives with reports. ReQtest also offers a desktop app for capturing bugs with video or images and seamlessly uploading them to ReQtest.
You can integrate your JIRA projects with ReQtest projects using a JIRA add-on. The bugs in ReQtest can be synchronized with Jira issues.
#21) Katalon Platform

Katalon Platform is a free, powerful orchestration platform that helps with your bug-tracking process. It gives testing and DevOps teams a clear, connected picture of their tests, resources, and environments to run the right test, in the right environment, at the right time.
- Deployable on Cloud, Desktop: Windows and Linux systems.
- Compatible with almost all testing frameworks available: Jasmine, JUnit, Pytest, Mocha, etc; CI/CD tools: Jenkins, CircleCI, and management platforms: Jira, Slack.
- Real-time data tracking for fast, accurate debugging.
- Live and comprehensive reports on test execution to identify root causes of any issues.
- Plan efficiently with Smart Scheduling to optimize the test cycle while maintaining high quality.
- Evaluate release readiness to boost release confidence.
- Enhance collaboration and increase transparency through comments, dashboards, KPI tracking, and actionable insights – all in one place.
- Streamlined result collection and analysis through robust failure analysis across any framework.
#22) aqua cloud

aqua cloud is an advanced Test Management System with robust and progressive bug-tracking capabilities. What makes it stand out in the topic of defect management is Capture – the new standard for efficiency and collaboration. With Capture, testers create advanced bug reports with more in-depth environmental information and pass it to developers.
Aside from a revolutionary bug reporting solution, in connection to the core functions of aqua as TMS, you also get:
- Revolutionized and traceable defect lifecycle: Using Aqua’s defect lifecycle management, you will shorten the time-to-fix by an impressive 35%. You’ll be able to tailor your workflow with mandatory fields, required steps, and automated notifications for swift and efficient defect resolution.
- Full transparency and reporting: You can experience unparalleled transparency and reporting capabilities with Aqua’s TMS, providing a clear and comprehensive view of your project’s testing landscape.
- Flexible Workflows and Custom Templates: aqua helps you improve your testing processes through flexible workflows and customizable templates, adapting to the unique requirements of your projects.
- Agile and Kanban integration: With Aqua, you can seamlessly integrate Agile and Kanban methodologies into your testing workflows, enhancing adaptability and efficiency in your project management approach.
#23) Userback

Userback is the fastest way to report bugs and feedback from your websites and applications.
Developers love using Userback as it gives them everything they need to fix bugs faster. With Userback, it’s easy for anyone to report bugs with annotated screenshots, video recordings, console logs, event tracking, browser info, and more.
Built for software companies, developers, and designers, Userback will save you time by managing feedback for all your projects in one place. It even lets you streamline your workflows by integrating with looks like Jira, Slack, GitHub, and more.
Additional Tools
#24) DevTrack

Devtrack cannot be categorized as your average defect tracker, although it does function well if that is what you have in mind. It can be obtained as a stand-alone component or it comes along with Agile Studio, DevTest Studio, or DevSuite. As the name implies, it is a comprehensive solution to the implementation track.
Supports both agile and waterfall projects. It is a commercial product. A free trial is available too.
Website: http://techexcel.com/products/devtrack/
#25) BugNET

BugNET belongs to the “Issue management” group of tools – quite a good one at that. The issue could be features, tasks, or defects. It has all the features of creating projects, managing them, creating issues against them, tracking them to completion, searching, reports, wiki pages, etc.
There is a pro version of this tool that is licensed and commercial, but the regular version is free to use.
Check out more information at https://www.openhub.net/p/bugnet
#26) eTraxis

eTraxis is another tracking tool that can be used to track bugs, but again, that is not all. You can choose to track anything. So, the target audience is not confined to software systems.
The best feature of this tool is the flexibility it provides in the creation of custom workflows- in other words, you can choose to define the rules that need to be followed in the process of tracking and progressing a certain aspect through its lifecycle stages. These custom workflows are referred to as templates and they can be very handy.
The product is not free, although a free limited version is available for trial. Visit https://www.etraxis.com/ for more information.
#27) Lean Testing

Lean Testing is a free bug tracking and test case management software designed by testers. It has a browser extension to report bugs on websites quickly and easily as well as in-app reporting tools to allow users to report bugs directly from within mobile apps.
The system has everything you’d expect from a bug tracker and test case manager, but great emphasis has been placed on making sure that everything is intuitive and easy to use. Lean Testing is web-based and requires no installation.
For more information, visit: https://leantesting.com/
List of a few more Defect Tracking software that are prominent:
#28) DoneDone
A commercial issue tracker that has all the features common to this category of tools. It helps with the creation of issues, assigning, tracking, and setting the statuses, SVN and Git integration, file sharing, etc.
#29) Request Tracker
Request Tracker, as the name implies track tickets. If your particular situation will guide you to treat each bug you receive a ticket for, then, by all means, you might want to try this tool out. It is absolutely free.
#30) WebIssues
Open source issue tracking systems with a desktop client as well as a web-based interface. The typical features of an issue tracking system too.
#31) OnTime Bug Tracker
Defect/Issue tracker specifically built for agile projects. One feature I like is how it lets you drag and drop attachments. It is not free, but there is a free trial version.
#32) YouTrack
Agile-centric project and issue management tools. It has all the features that will let you handle agile projects – backlogs, scrum boards, custom workflows – in the works. Bug tracking is also integrated, so if that is what you are looking for, you are covered. It is a commercial product with a free trial.
#33) Unfuddle
A developer-centric bug tracking system (but a bug tracking system nevertheless) with integration to Git and Subversion, it deals with issues such as tickets and has a web-based repository browser to inspect changes in files. It is a commercial with a free trial available.
#34) InformUp
Ticket/issue/task – whatever you need to track, you have this tool up your alley along with the other tracking systems. It is commercial.
#35) Gemini
Gemini is a commercial application lifecycle management system along the lines of Micro Focus QC. It has all the features necessary to carry out all your Project management and test management activities along with bug tracking. While it is a commercial product, there is a free starter pack available.
#36) BugAware
A simple tool that can be used to manage bugs or just manage to-do lists that have nothing to do with software, this tool can be a good option. Commercial product but it does have a free trial.
#37) TestTrack
This tool falls into the section of ALM tools and provides a comprehensive solution for test case creation, execution, and defect management of course. It is a licensed product.
Conclusion
Defect management system, when used correctly – as a tester, you understand your ecosystem better and as a team, it will improve the overall efficiency.
Therefore, if you are still using the primitive spreadsheet method for bug tracking, it’s time to change.
There are many options for bug-tracking tools.
- If you are using a Test management tool, you will have access to defect tracking as well. You are good to go!
- Some companies create in-house bug-tracking tools. They are similar to the commercial ones available. They do the job just fine.
- Commercial, yet affordable tools. For example, JIRA or FogBugz
- Finally, if all your team needs is a tool for defect tracking and if the entire testing is still maintained manually, your best option is to go with an open-source defect management/bug tracking system.
I hope this article has persuaded you to think beyond your Defect Management tool as a spreadsheet alternative and treat it as a huge historical data asset.
Over to you
That is quite a big list, isn’t it? Surprisingly, the list is not exhaustive. In addition to these tools, some software companies have their internal bug-tracking systems that they build and use for their projects.
Let us know which defect-tracking software you use on your projects.





I’m trying to find information for validating Bugzilla for FDA approval
I used QATouch which was very friendly inbuilt bug and test case management tool. UI/UX is looking awesome. It is ease to use and flexible. QA Touch has helped us to manage test cases, test runs, log defects, and reporting all in one place.
Hai thanks for your valuable information.
This information is very useful for Beginners for tracking Bugs,can u please send me the steps for installing “BugZilla” in my system.
Great list indeed! To add on zipBoard is another efficient Bug tracking and management tool.
Can we use this software for testing ERP software. We are ERP software developing company. We now using selenium for tracking defects.
This website very good guide for how to track the bugs using JIRA bug tracking tool for my project
Thanks for sharing this list. It’s going to be really helpful. I was able to install an issue tracking software PrimeTrack before I got lucky to visit this site. Do you have any idea about the features and if it would be better to continue its use?
Thank you
Hello, Really helpful article to find out some good Bug Tracking software, We also launched one Bug Tracking software which is working very well now days, many developers and tester are using our Bug Tracking software named “Bug Clipper”
You should once check bug clipper and list out in your post.
Regard:
Hashit Jain
@Aghil Ravindran
Please tell me a steps How to install BugZilla ,when bcoz i try to install in my System they not install correctly plz sent me a steps or any others study materials on following email id
pravinyeole04@gmail.com
The one that I using is called TrackDuck.
I loved minimal and flat design of it, also you dont need to install it and was really easy to get started.
Thankd to share it . it is very fantastic knowledge about software testing I glad to say thanks a lot
Quality Center also come under Defect Tracking tool but it was not mentioned in the list. may i know the reason please.
Thanks in advance
This info is helpful!
My organisation to looking to buy a bug tracking tool for its defects. We would also want a tool which supports importing exporting test cases and also can log bugs at the same place.
Any help in this matter is much appreciated.
I used BugFree which was very handy. However, it stopped its service and has been optimized into ZenTao, an open source management software, which is even better.
One of the smart issue tracker (eworkplaceapps.com) software that provide easy to manage issues, task.
Open source web based application.
Can manage multiple projects.
Excellent way to manage permissions
Email Notifications
Issue Capture
Good Issue Management
Easy navigation and Easy to administration
frgvb
Thanks for this useful post.
A “real Open Source” software i’ve been using for a few years is SQUASH TestManager from the SQUASH Suite.
Has almost the same features HP QC has, but … at a 0$ cost !
Here’s a couple more that might make good additions to your list.
BugHerd (http://bugherd.com)
Sifter (http://sifterapp.com)
I suggest you try Damn Bugs. It is a free hosted bug tracker designed for simplicity. It is not a project management tool, it is only designed for functional, manual testing. Besides, it offers easy permission management for internal and external teams.
Hi
Anytime Anywhere Tablet compatible all inclusive tracking tool
Thanks for the information about these tools..
thank you for sharing the useful list. we are doing analysis of various tools right now. got this list at the right time. it will help us tremendously. we are looking for open source tool but might consider any cheap and good option as well.
A very nice article. Just for my information is any one of the test management & bug tracking tool mentioned cover Project Management activities as well?
Check out Trello
open source and can be used for various requirements
Totally customisable
create Boards, List and Keeps adding cards for issues and dev activities.
Totally a poject management tool based on usage
Hello,
What tool would you recommend to track third party issues and bugs? I am a product manager of third party vendor tools only. Right now all issues and bugs are kept in Excel or OneNote. As mentioned in the article, it is difficult to keep track of them with every update.
Hey RiPa,
What do you mean by third party issues?
To the author: I notice your title states these are the ‘most popular’ – not the most effective or best value, etc. Can you disclose how popularity was determined, and what controls the sequence in which these tools are listed? Is there a features-matrix to help readers distinguish the tools from each other in terms of “essence” and “convenience” and “assurance”?
jTrac is also simple and super cool…But it has only defect management module..Test/Test case management do not come with it..Needs very less server and DB space..Simple and effective for startups/developing companies…
The top tool in the list is BugZilla and its amusing that no one says a word about it in the comments 🙂 , I’m here for that. I use BugZilla, its so powerful, open source and stable. But not so intuitive, its all over the place. Its loaded with features and hence its crowded. I wish BugZilla had better UI by grouping all the features. Nevertheless, nothing beats BugZilla. 🙂
Hello,
Could you please help me to find which will be the best defect tracking tool for ERP software.
I just learned an amazing tool that we can use to get quality feedback from your users. It is the BugRem – User Feedback Tool. You can try it for free!
The most interesting text on this interesting topic that can be found on the net …
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Hey
First off, congratulations on this post.
We appreciate your sharing this informative article. this information . 17 Best Bug Tracking Tools: Defect Tracking Tools Of 2021
to reach their target audience and show them the most recent updates and offers. We all have to start somewhere, and your article is perfect.
Great Share, and thanks for the mention here. Wow……
How cool is that
NogaTech shares this post now. I want all those new bloggers to see that if they don’t already have an article, then they read now.
Defect tracking tool integration(Mantis) in eclipse
I utilized ProProfs Bug Tracking Software at my organization for a year it is acceptable programming for bug following and undertaking the executives.
And really thank you for sharing a helpful list for more options.
This is really helpful article to find best defect management tool.
Thanks for sharing this informative article. It’s really helpful to people like me! Great insights you have put together!
Hey, Even Zipboard.co is one of the best tool for Bug tracking. It gives real time experience of your website while it’s in production.
There is also a desktop bug tracker with a custom user interface just for testers:
Project managers and developers also use custom UIs.
I have been using Issue Tracker by eWorkplaceApps. It is very easy to use this tool, all you need is to create a Project and Users and start adding issues immediately, It has got wide varieties of reports and dashboard functionalities too which is very helpful for QA Team leads. And above all its free!!
Thanks. This is very helpful site.
Ciro is my favorite so far! It’s super fast, and easy to use. I find that I’m more willing to enter tasks into Ciro, since it’s so fast (love the keyboard shortcuts). You can add as many tags as you want, and searching makes it really easy to get what you want fast. It works great in small windows, so it doesn’t take up much screen real-estate on my multi-monitor setup. Notifications makes it easy to communicate with my team, and I don’t have to bother people with questions, since I know they’ll see it.
Hello sir,
right now i am working on Mantis bt it is also a very simple tools , but any one can tell me how to import excel file test cases in mantis bt.
Thank you for sharing this list. Very useful. What I noticed is that many of them aren’t really free for small teams or startups… That would help a lot.. anyway.. What I found is Ubirimi (www.ubirimi.com) that is actually free alternative to JIRA, and this meant a lot for me. Well, still need to get used to it, but at least is free.. and has Free Updates and Free Suport. That’s impressive… Do you have some other tools to share? Thank you.
I recommend PrimeTrack
There is ‘Rally’ for complete features on Issues in SDLC
Yeah, I agree with Todd.
Thanks a lot. Good one.
Thanks for sharing this informative article. It’s really helpful to me.
Thank you for sharing this. It is very useful list.
There is one more tool called Debuggle (www.debugle.com), it is also very easy – though does not have more customization features but can be helpful for startup.
I use http://www.pageproofer.com for visual bug tracking. It allows me to leave notes directly on a website. Makes it super easy for clients to flag issues and leave feedback without any extra training, just a few clicks and they can leave feedback.
Please can anyone giving me answer what is exactly difference between Error, Fault, Failure, Bug, Defect, Issue, Incident with proper example.
Definition is bit confusing to me, Please elaborate with proper example…
Thank you in advance……………….
i m develop project for defect tracking please tell me what new invention i do?????
Hi, thank you for this post I agree with you that We know that the tools available in the market are innumerable – with some of them being a perfect fit for you and the others that just won’t cut it. very useful information
Thanks for sharing the list, it was really informative. I would recommend adding zipBoard (www.zipboard.co) to the current list of bug tracking tools used by eLearning course development giants like ELM Learning and security firms like Knowbe4 which would give readers a vast range of options to choose from.
Hello, Yes as one of you said, Defect Tracking tools are innumerable, our discussions go endless for this scenario. But keep in mind, to capture the info or make self assessment: as per the categories: License based and open source, list TWO tools atleast in your knowledge bucket. For License based: ALM/QC, Jira & Opensource based: BugZilla, Tracker, Mantis, I suggest. As of now we are using JIRA in my current project for Requirements, Defects Log. Ofcourse it is a project management tool, even can execute test cases but it is hectic so for execution, we use ALM.
Even the above information provided would be helpful in CV design and cracking interviews too.
I used FogBugz at my company anavclouds software for 6 month it is good software for bug tracking and project management.
Thanks so much this huge list of bug tracking softwares.
Hi Vijay,
The article is very useful and has good information. In our project we are using the One ITSM (Remedy) tool as defect tracking tool. Which is also very simple and user friendly and using which we can have change management, problem management,asset management, Knowledge management,service request management,contract management etc…all features are induced in one tool..
which is the best test management tool free tool ,please anyone suggest
It is ease to use and flexible. QA Touch has helped us to manage test cases, test runs, log defects, and reporting all in one place.
If you are working on a Microsoft technologies project with Visual Studio then you should consider the VS / Project / Sharepoint / Test Case / Bug Tracking ALM: TFS (Team Foundation Server)
Hi,
Apple has its own ALM tool, called ‘Radar’. Its very simple and easy to use. We can create, export/import Test cases as well as manage the defects.
Excellent information.
Great Job !!!
https://www.inflectra.com/SpiraTest/ is another good one!
Thanks for the comprehensive overview of bug trackers. Being a team of small web developers we use trac in combination with the browser-based bug tracker Usersnap.
It’s great for front-end bug tracking and helps us to solve bugs faster with screenshots & additional information (such as browser size, installed plugins, javascript errors) from Usersnap.
Simple bug track tool.
You can use this as a bug tracking tool, or issue tracking system. This provides all the basic features that you might expect in a tracking system
Bug tracking requires many metrics in a tool, the case, bug, case library, and case suite are essential. We have been used zentao to do the job for a while and it’s pretty cool. The case and could be linked to stories which were created by PO, which make zentao an application lifecycle management tool.
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Hi,
I need to convince client to implement Jira over Clear Quest. Kindly help me in what way I can convince client to implement Jira for issue- tracking tool. Kindly help me in this and docs, ppts are much preferable.
Thanks in advance.