IT teams comparing device management platforms usually land on the same three names: Jamf, Scalefusion, and JumpCloud. All three manage and secure company devices, but they were built to solve different problems. Jamf goes deep on Apple. Scalefusion spreads wide across operating systems. JumpCloud starts from identity and treats devices as one piece of a bigger access puzzle.
Picking the wrong one is expensive, both in dollars and in the months it takes to notice the platform doesn’t fit. Here’s how the three actually compare.
Key Takeaways
- Jamf is the strongest choice for organizations that are mostly or entirely Apple, offering same day OS support and the deepest macOS management on the market.
- Scalefusion covers Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, Linux, and ChromeOS from one console, making it a fit for mixed device fleets.
- JumpCloud leads with identity and access management, bundling directory services, SSO, and MFA alongside lighter device management.
- Pricing ranges widely: Scalefusion starts around $2 per device monthly, Jamf runs roughly $3.67 to $12.50 per device monthly depending on product, and JumpCloud spans $9 to $27 per user monthly across its tiers.
| Category | Jamf | Scalefusion | JumpCloud |
| Core focus | Apple device management | Cross-platform UEM | Identity and access management |
| OS support | macOS, iOS, iPadOS, tvOS, visionOS | Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, Linux, ChromeOS | Windows, macOS, Linux, plus lighter mobile support |
| Identity features | Jamf Connect (add-on) | OneIdP (add-on) | Built-in, core strength |
| Best fit | Apple-heavy enterprises, education, healthcare | Mixed OS fleets, frontline and kiosk devices | Companies replacing Active Directory or centralizing identity |
| Starting price | Around $3.67 to $12.50 per device monthly | Around $2 to $6 per device monthly | Around $9 to $27 per user monthly |
Jamf built its whole business around one operating system family. That focus shows up in how fast it supports new Apple releases. When Apple ships a macOS or iOS update, Jamf typically has compatibility ready the same day, something no cross-platform vendor consistently matches.
Jamf Pro handles the heavy lifting for larger fleets: zero-touch enrollment through Apple Business Manager, granular configuration profiles, and compliance reporting built around Apple’s own security frameworks. Jamf Protect adds endpoint threat detection tuned specifically for Mac behavior rather than a generic antivirus engine retrofitted for Apple. Jamf Connect handles identity, letting Mac users log in with cloud identity provider credentials instead of a local account.
The tradeoff is scope and cost. Jamf doesn’t manage Windows, Android, or Linux devices at all, so a mixed fleet needs a second tool alongside it. And Jamf’s pricing sits well above budget MDM options, with businesses typically paying between $3.67 and $12.50 per device monthly depending on device type, product mix, and scale.
Scalefusion takes the opposite approach. Instead of specializing in one ecosystem, it manages Windows, macOS, Android, iOS, Linux, and ChromeOS devices from a single console. That range makes it a common pick for organizations running a mix of laptops, tablets, kiosks, and rugged handheld devices, especially in retail, logistics, and field service work.
Its kiosk mode is a genuine differentiator. Locking a tablet to a single app or a curated set of apps is straightforward, which matters for POS systems, digital signage, and shared devices that shouldn’t give users free rein. Scalefusion also integrates with Apple Business Manager and Apple School Manager, so it can handle Apple enrollment reasonably well even though Apple isn’t its specialty.
Pricing is Scalefusion’s clearest advantage. Plans start around $2 per device monthly for the Essentials tier and scale up to roughly $6 for Enterprise, undercutting both Jamf and JumpCloud on a per-device basis. Reviewers consistently mention this as the reason they pick Scalefusion over pricier alternatives, though some also note the interface takes getting used to and troubleshooting documentation could be better.
JumpCloud starts from a different question entirely: who has access to what, not just which devices are enrolled. It positions itself as a modern replacement for Active Directory, combining a cloud directory, single sign-on, multi-factor authentication, and password management with device management layered on top.
For organizations dealing with employee lifecycle management (onboarding, offboarding, access reviews across dozens of SaaS apps), JumpCloud’s identity-first design solves a problem that Jamf and Scalefusion weren’t built to solve. It manages Windows, macOS, and Linux devices reasonably well, though its mobile device management is lighter than either Jamf or Scalefusion offers.
JumpCloud’s pricing structure is modular: features are sold in packages like Device Management, SSO, and Core Directory, each priced separately per user per month, generally landing between $9 and $27 depending on tier. That flexibility helps companies pay only for what they need, but it also means costs stack up quickly once an organization wants several capabilities bundled together, and advanced features like conditional access sit behind the most expensive tier.
If Apple devices make up most of the fleet, Jamf’s advantage is hard to argue with. Same-day OS support, native integration with Apple’s declarative device management framework, and features like Self Service+ that let employees install approved apps themselves are all built specifically around how macOS and iOS actually behave.
Scalefusion handles Apple devices adequately through its Apple Business Manager integration, which works fine for basic enrollment and policy pushes. JumpCloud’s Apple support is the thinnest of the three, more focused on directory and SSO integration than deep macOS configuration.
This is where Scalefusion pulls ahead. Managing Windows, Android, Linux, and ChromeOS devices alongside Apple hardware from one dashboard removes the need for separate tools per platform. Jamf simply doesn’t compete here since it’s Apple-only. JumpCloud covers Windows, macOS, and Linux, but its mobile device management for iOS and Android remains a secondary feature rather than a primary strength.
JumpCloud wins this category outright. Its directory platform, SSO catalog, and conditional access policies were built as the core product, not bolted on afterward. Jamf and Scalefusion both offer identity add-ons (Jamf Connect and OneIdP, respectively), and both work well enough for basic use cases, but neither matches JumpCloud’s depth in areas like user provisioning, password policy enforcement, or directory federation with existing on-premises Active Directory environments.
Scalefusion is the most budget-friendly of the three on a straight per device basis. Jamf costs more but bundles Apple-specific capabilities that a cheaper cross-platform tool can’t replicate. JumpCloud’s per-user pricing model means costs depend heavily on team size and which feature packages get added, and companies chasing advanced security features often end up on the priciest Platform Prime tier to unlock them.
None of the three publish complete enterprise pricing, so getting an accurate quote for larger deployments requires a sales conversation regardless of which platform you’re evaluating.
The honest answer depends on what your fleet actually looks like, not which platform has the best marketing.
Choose Jamf if: Apple devices make up most or all of your fleet, and you need enterprise grade macOS management, security, and compliance reporting. This fits large enterprises, healthcare organizations, and schools running mostly Mac and iPad.
Choose Scalefusion if: your organization runs a genuine mix of operating systems, especially with kiosk, POS, or shared device use cases, and cost per device matters. This fits retail chains, logistics companies, and frontline-heavy businesses.
Choose JumpCloud if: your priority is centralizing identity and access across cloud apps and devices, particularly if you’re trying to retire an aging on-premises Active Directory setup. This fits distributed teams and companies where SSO and access governance matter more than deep device configuration.
Some organizations end up running two of these tools together, using JumpCloud for identity while a dedicated MDM handles device configuration. That’s a valid setup, but it’s worth budgeting for before committing to either platform alone.
No. Jamf is built exclusively for Apple hardware: Mac, iPhone, iPad, Apple Watch, Apple TV, and Vision Pro. Organizations with Windows devices need a separate tool or a cross platform option like Scalefusion or JumpCloud.
Scalefusion integrates with Apple Business Manager for enrollment and basic policy enforcement, but it doesn't match Jamf's depth in macOS specific configuration or same day OS compatibility.
Not fully. JumpCloud manages devices as part of its broader identity platform, but its mobile device management is lighter than what Jamf or Scalefusion offer. Companies with complex device configuration needs often pair JumpCloud's identity features with a separate MDM.
Scalefusion generally has the lowest starting price per device, around $2 monthly for its Essentials tier. JumpCloud and Jamf both cost more, though the right comparison depends on whether you're pricing per device or per user, and which features each plan actually includes.
Yes, though migrating enrolled devices between MDM platforms takes planning, particularly for Apple devices tied to Apple Business Manager. Most organizations budget time for re-enrollment and policy rebuilding rather than expecting a clean, instant switch.
There isn’t a single best platform among Jamf, Scalefusion, and JumpCloud. Each one was built around a different assumption about what IT teams need most. Jamf assumes Apple is the whole story. Scalefusion assumes the fleet is mixed. JumpCloud assumes identity comes first and devices come second. Matching that assumption to your actual environment matters more than any single feature comparison.