Pageguard vs Enzuzo
SMB-friendly consent management with DSAR workflow automation
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Enzuzo is the right pick if you need small and mid-sized businesses that need both cookie consent management and dsar (data subject access request) workflow automation, without enterprise-level complexity. Pageguard is the right pick if you want documents grounded in what your site actually runs — not what you remember it runs. The free scan takes 60 seconds and needs no account.
Our honest take
The core tension here is not really about price. It is about what happens before a document gets written. Enzuzo asks you questions and trusts your answers. Pageguard scans your live site and trusts what it actually finds. For a simple marketing site with three scripts and honest founders, that gap barely matters. For a SaaS product that has accumulated a year of growth integrations, analytics tools, and payment SDKs, questionnaire accuracy is a real problem because most people do not know every technology running on their own site.
Enzuzo earns its place. It has a genuine consent management platform, Google Consent Mode v2 support, and DSAR workflow automation that Pageguard simply does not offer. If a team needs a cookie banner live by Friday and a structured way to handle user data requests, Enzuzo is a reasonable answer at $7/mo to $22/mo.
Where Enzuzo falls short is document grounding. A privacy policy written from answers you gave in 2022 does not automatically reflect the PostHog instance you added in Q1 or the Stripe identity verification you shipped last month. Pageguard re-scans your live site every time, so documents reflect what is actually running. That distinction matters most to teams shipping fast, not teams in steady-state compliance maintenance.
The real differences
How documents get generated
Enzuzo uses a questionnaire. You select services from a list, answer follow-up questions, and get a policy built from your inputs. The quality of the output depends entirely on how accurately you described your stack. If you forgot you added Intercom six months ago, your privacy policy will not mention it.
Pageguard scans your live site and detects 437+ technology signatures automatically. Cookies, SDKs, third-party scripts, tracking pixels. The document is generated from what the scanner finds, not from what you remember. For any product that has been live longer than a few months and touched by more than one developer, that is a meaningful accuracy difference.
The free tier and what it actually covers
Enzuzo's free plan covers one domain and up to 5,000 monthly visitors. A SaaS product with any real traction will exceed that quickly, pushing the team to the $22/mo Growth plan or higher. Costs also scale with visitor volume, so a traffic spike can change your bill.
Pageguard's scan is free with no account required. You pay per document generated, not per pageview. A solo founder who needs a privacy policy, a cookie policy, and a terms of service pays once per document with no ongoing subscription required.
App Store and Google Play compliance
Enzuzo is a web compliance tool. It does not generate Apple App Store privacy nutrition labels or Google Play Data Safety forms. A five-person SaaS team shipping both a web product and an iOS app would need to handle mobile privacy disclosures somewhere else entirely.
Pageguard covers App Store privacy nutrition labels and Google Play Data Safety forms alongside the standard web documents. For teams with a mobile surface area, that matters.
DSAR workflow and consent management
This is where Enzuzo has something Pageguard does not. Enzuzo automates Data Subject Access Request workflows and includes a consent management platform with Google Consent Mode v2 support. If a team needs structured tooling for handling user data requests or wants a consent banner wired into GA4, Enzuzo is the right tool for those specific jobs. Pageguard focuses on document generation and compliance scanning. It does not include DSAR automation or a CMP.
Feature comparison
Pricing
Free (1 domain, 5K visitors) · $7/mo Starter · $22/mo Growth · $59/mo Pro
Free scan (no account) · Pay per document generated. No subscription required, no pageview caps.
Migration considerations
Switching from Enzuzo to Pageguard is not a full platform migration. The two tools overlap on document generation but serve different additional functions, so most teams would not replace Enzuzo wholesale without thinking through what they give up.
What actually changes: you run a free Pageguard scan on your live site (no account required) and get a gap report with severity ratings. From there you generate a privacy policy, cookie policy, and terms of service based on what the scanner actually detected. Your new documents will reflect your real technology stack rather than the answers you gave in Enzuzo's questionnaire. If you added tools since you last updated your Enzuzo policies, the scan will catch them.
What you give up: Enzuzo's consent banner, Google Consent Mode v2 integration, and DSAR workflow automation have no equivalent in Pageguard. A team that relies on Enzuzo for cookie consent or for routing user data requests through a structured workflow would need to find separate tooling for those functions.
Data continuity is not a concern in the traditional sense because there is no user data to migrate. Your old Enzuzo-generated documents can stay in place until you regenerate them through Pageguard. The switch is document-by-document, not an all-at-once cutover.
When to pick which
Small and mid-sized businesses that need both cookie consent management and DSAR (Data Subject Access Request) workflow automation, without enterprise-level complexity.
Things to know first
- —Questionnaire-based document generation — no live site scanning for technology detection
- —Free plan limited to 5,000 monthly visitors; inadequate for most SaaS products
- —No App Store privacy form generation
- —Visitor-based pricing can become expensive as traffic grows
Enzuzo sits in a sweet spot between the cookie-banner-only tools and the full enterprise platforms. It's genuinely good for teams that need DSAR automation alongside consent management. Where it falls short is document accuracy: like its peers, Enzuzo uses a questionnaire rather than scanning your actual site. Pageguard detects your real stack and generates documents from what it finds — a meaningful difference if your site is more complex than a simple landing page.
Scenarios: who fits where
A solo founder who built a React SaaS and is about to apply to Y Combinator. They need accurate legal documents before the application review and know their app uses Stripe, Segment, Mixpanel, and a support widget they added last quarter. The questionnaire risk is real because they will not remember every integration under pressure. Pageguard scans the live app, surfaces everything running, and generates documents from what it finds. Pay per document, no subscription.
A five-person team shipping a consumer iOS app with a companion web dashboard. They need privacy documentation for both the App Store submission and the web product. Enzuzo does not generate App Store privacy nutrition labels. Pageguard does, alongside the standard web documents. This team should use Pageguard for document generation across both surfaces.
A 20-person e-commerce brand that processes orders in the EU and gets regular DSAR emails. They need a cookie consent banner, Google Consent Mode v2 for their ad campaigns, and a structured way to route and respond to data requests. This is Enzuzo's strongest use case. The $22/mo Growth plan gets them consent management and DSAR automation. Pageguard does not replace that workflow.
A bootstrapped B2B SaaS with 8,000 monthly active users looking to cut compliance costs. They are over Enzuzo's free tier visitor cap and paying $22/mo or more. If they do not actively use the DSAR tooling or consent banner features, they are paying for things they do not use. Pageguard's per-document model means they pay to generate or regenerate documents when needed, with no traffic-based subscription.
Common questions
Does Enzuzo scan my site or use a questionnaire?
Enzuzo uses a questionnaire-based approach to generate compliance documents. You select services and answer questions; it builds a policy from your answers. It does not scan your live site to detect technologies. Pageguard scans your live site and detects 437+ technologies automatically.
What is a DSAR and does Pageguard handle them?
A Data Subject Access Request (DSAR) is a formal request from a user to see, correct, or delete their personal data. Enzuzo automates the workflow for handling these requests. Pageguard focuses on document generation and compliance scanning — it doesn't include DSAR workflow tooling.
Is Enzuzo more affordable than other compliance platforms?
Enzuzo's pricing is competitive — $7/mo for a starter plan, with a free tier. However, the free tier caps out at 5,000 monthly visitors, and costs scale with traffic. Pageguard charges per document generated rather than by traffic volume.
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Best Enzuzo alternatives →Don't ship without Bandit.
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