Nile vs Fortinet

Nile vs Fortinet: Which NaaS Fits Your Network?

An independent, side-by-side look at Nile and Fortinet across pricing, management, security, and total cost — from advisors who work with both.

At a glance

Two different approaches to managed networking.

Nile

Nile delivers NaaS with zero-trust security architected in, billed per square foot or per user.

  • Zero-trust network access built in
  • Flexible per-user or per-sq-ft billing
  • Guaranteed performance SLAs (Advanced)
  • No upfront hardware cost
  • Strong fit for regulated industries

Fortinet

Fortinet builds networking around its FortiGate firewall and unified Security Fabric.

  • Industry-leading next-gen firewall
  • Unified Security Fabric across the stack
  • Secure SD-WAN for multi-site
  • FortiSASE and ZTNA
  • Consumption-based FortiFlex licensing
Feature comparison

Nile vs Fortinet: side by side

Nile Fortinet
Category Security-first NaaS Security-first networking
Pricing model Per square foot or per user Hardware + FortiCare/FortiGuard licenses
Upfront hardware cost ✓ None — included CapEx required
Who manages the network ✓ Fully managed by Nile Self-managed or MSSP
Deployment Nile manages deployment In-house or MSSP
Built-in security ✓ Zero-trust built into the fabric Industry-leading NGFW + Security Fabric
Geographic coverage US (select markets) Global
Billing ✓ One subscription Hardware + FortiCare/FortiGuard
Best for Security-conscious and regulated environments Security-first and multi-site SD-WAN environments
When each wins

Match the model to your situation.

NILE WINS

You want networking delivered, not operated

Nile is built to be fully managed by nile — security-conscious and regulated environments. If reducing operational load is the goal, Nile fits cleanly.

NILE WINS

Predictable cost matters more than deep control

With per square foot or per user and no upfront hardware, Nile keeps budgeting simple and avoids surprise CapEx.

FORTINET WINS

Security-first and multi-site SD-WAN environments

Fortinet builds networking around its FortiGate firewall and unified Security Fabric. If that matches your environment, Fortinet is the stronger choice.

Bottom line

Nile builds zero-trust into a fully managed network service; Fortinet builds networking around its firewall and Security Fabric. For teams that want ZTNA delivered as managed NaaS without operating it, Nile is the better fit. Fortinet wins for security teams standardizing on a single fabric they'll run themselves or through an MSSP. If you're not sure which fits your environment, a NaaSAdvisor advisor can quote both side by side.

Common questions

Nile vs Fortinet FAQ

Nile is priced per square foot or per user with none — included upfront, billed as one subscription. Fortinet uses hardware + forticare/fortiguard licenses — hardware + forticare/fortiguard. The right model depends on your footprint and how you prefer to budget; an advisor can translate both into one comparable number.
Nile: fully managed by nile. Fortinet: self-managed or mssp. If your team doesn't have dedicated network engineers, a fully managed model removes a significant operational burden — which is often the deciding factor between these two.
Nile handles security via zero-trust built into the fabric, while Fortinet uses industry-leading ngfw + security fabric. Neither is automatically better — it depends on whether you want security delivered inside the network service or as a dedicated layer you control.
Yes. Rather than approaching each vendor separately, a NaaSAdvisor advisor competes Nile, Fortinet, and other providers against each other on your specific scope — independent, with no cost to you. Use the pricing tool for a ballpark, then talk to an advisor for real numbers.
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