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Zenmap

Zenmap

Zenmap is a graphical interface for Nmap that enables users to visualize network scan results. It supports the creation and comparison of scan profiles to assist in identifying changes in network configurations.

Zenmap is a graphical interface for Nmap that enables users to visualize network scan results. It supports the creation and comparison of scan profiles to assist in identifying changes in network configurations.

Cost considerations

Functionality

Compatibility

User experience

Customer support

Why these ratings?

Cyberse perspective

Solution details

Subcategory
Deployment
Key features
Market segment
Product features
Cloud ecosystem partners
Pricing
Services support
Target industry
Integrations

We use the following criteria to evaluate this product:

Cost considerations

Zenmap is free and open-source, so there are no license fees or paid plugins. Organizations can run unlimited scans without worrying about per-asset or per-scan charges. Total cost of ownership is near zero compared with commercial vulnerability management tools.

Cost considerations

Zenmap is free and open-source, so there are no license fees or paid plugins. Organizations can run unlimited scans without worrying about per-asset or per-scan charges. Total cost of ownership is near zero compared with commercial vulnerability management tools.

Functionality

Zenmap delivers manual network discovery with simple vulnerability scripts but offers only raw findings without any risk ranking or ticketing. It does not support authenticated scans or cover cloud and container assets. Security teams must schedule scans and manage remediation in separate tools, limiting continuous protection.

Functionality

Zenmap delivers manual network discovery with simple vulnerability scripts but offers only raw findings without any risk ranking or ticketing. It does not support authenticated scans or cover cloud and container assets. Security teams must schedule scans and manage remediation in separate tools, limiting continuous protection.

Compatibility

Zenmap focuses solely on remote network scanning and lacks built-in agents or APIs for operating systems, clouds, or containers. It offers no native connectors for CMDB, SIEM, or ticketing tools, so any data sharing relies on manual exports or custom scripts. These gaps leave Zenmap at the lowest tier of compatibility among vulnerability management products.

Compatibility

Zenmap focuses solely on remote network scanning and lacks built-in agents or APIs for operating systems, clouds, or containers. It offers no native connectors for CMDB, SIEM, or ticketing tools, so any data sharing relies on manual exports or custom scripts. These gaps leave Zenmap at the lowest tier of compatibility among vulnerability management products.

User experience

Zenmap provides a point-and-click interface that lets teams launch scans without command-line knowledge; user reviews describe the GUI as friendly yet basic. The windows and reports feel dated and lack consolidated dashboards or step-by-step remediation, so staff often export results for further analysis. Security practitioners still need moderate expertise to interpret findings, placing the learning curve in the middle of the market.

User experience

Zenmap provides a point-and-click interface that lets teams launch scans without command-line knowledge; user reviews describe the GUI as friendly yet basic. The windows and reports feel dated and lack consolidated dashboards or step-by-step remediation, so staff often export results for further analysis. Security practitioners still need moderate expertise to interpret findings, placing the learning curve in the middle of the market.

Customer support

Support is provided only via public mailing lists, so replies depend on volunteers and can be slow. New detection scripts ship when the Nmap team publishes a new release, and changelog entries show gaps of several months between versions. Comprehensive online manuals exist, but there is no staffed help desk or dedicated success manager.

Customer support

Support is provided only via public mailing lists, so replies depend on volunteers and can be slow. New detection scripts ship when the Nmap team publishes a new release, and changelog entries show gaps of several months between versions. Comprehensive online manuals exist, but there is no staffed help desk or dedicated success manager.