Team support
Invite people by email, assign roles from full access down to read-only browsing, and move between organizations when you belong to more than one.
DevTicket is a lightweight issue tracker. It doesn't have a million features, and that's the entire point. It's simple, fast, and great at what it does. DevTicket works best for solo devs and small teams. We use it internally, so it definitely gets constant testing and upgrades.
Invite people by email, assign roles from full access down to read-only browsing, and move between organizations when you belong to more than one.
Work from a sortable ticket table with search and pagination. Narrow the list with filters—status, project, category, priority, who it is assigned to, due dates, and recent activity. Star what matters, choose which columns appear, and keep those preferences on each device you use.
Give your backlog shape with shared projects and categories (including icons and colors), plus ordered priorities. Set sensible defaults so new tickets start in the right place—without extra clicks every time.
Each ticket has a clear thread of updates. Add notes, choose oldest- or newest-first when you read the story, and attach images or documents to a specific update so files stay tied to the moment they mattered—not lost in a generic pile.
Save reusable text as snippets and expand them inside an update with a short trigger—handy for repro steps, checklists, or the phrases your team uses every day.
Stay informed when you are assigned work or when tickets you care about change. Configure how you want to be notified across the channels your workspace supports, so updates reach you without forcing everyone into the same habit.
No vendor lock-in. Download your tickets as CSV at any time, for any reason.
DevTicket runs on the web, iOS, and Android, with both light and dark modes.