Netify

Head to head · Updated June 2026

Cato Networks vs Palo Alto Networks (2026): graded feature by feature

Every grade below comes from the Netify evidence matrix: 40 capability features plus regional coverage, cloud support, AI capability and resilience, graded from public sources. Grades measure breadth of evidenced capability, not depth per category: a specialist can match a generalist on a grade yet lead it in practice, so read both full profiles before deciding.

Cato Networks scores 98.1; Palo Alto Networks scores 89.5 on the Netify 40-feature balanced matrix (June 2026). Cato Networks leads on 9 features; Palo Alto Networks leads on 0 features; 31 features are level.

Score 98.1

Cato Networks

Cloud-native SASE / SD-WAN provider · Typical deployment: hours

Clear feature advantages: Fully managed service; Co-managed service; Multi-tenant MSP / white-label support (and 6 more)

Score 89.5

Palo Alto Networks

SD-WAN / SASE technology vendor · Typical deployment: weeks

Clear feature advantages: none outright

CapabilityCato NetworksPalo Alto Networks
Service delivery and operating model
Fully managed serviceYes, public evidenceVia partner
DIY / self-managed modelYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Co-managed serviceYes, public evidenceVia partner
Multi-tenant MSP / white-label supportYes, public evidenceVia partner
Professional services and migration supportYes, public evidenceVia partner
Last-mile circuit managementVia partnerVia partner
Lifecycle managementYes, public evidenceVia partner
Flexible commercial modelYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Network architecture and transport
Encrypted overlay fabricYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Dynamic path selectionYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Active-active link utilisationYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Application-aware routingYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
QoS and traffic shapingYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Packet loss remediationYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Local internet breakoutYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
MPLS coexistence and migrationYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Cellular and 5G supportPartialPartial
Cloud on-rampYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Gateway, PoP and backbone design
Public cloud gatewaysYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Private PoPs / dedicated PoPsYes, public evidenceNot confirmed
Private global backboneYes, public evidenceNot confirmed
Regional breakout and data residencyYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Multi-cloud transit fabricYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Flexible edge form factorsYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
High availability designYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
SLA-backed service fabricYes, public evidenceVia partner
Security and SASE capability
Integrated next-generation firewallYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Full SASE platformYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
SSE ecosystem integrationYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Zero Trust Network AccessYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Secure web gatewayYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
CASB capabilityYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Data loss preventionYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Remote user accessYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
SOC/SIEM/SOAR integrationYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Operations, assurance and automation
Centralised orchestrationYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Customer portal and RBACYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Observability and digital experience monitoringYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
APIs and automationYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Managed service assuranceYes, public evidenceVia partner
Regional coverage
UK and IrelandYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
EuropeYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
North AmericaYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Asia PacificYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Middle East and AfricaYes, public evidencePartial
Latin AmericaPartialPartial
China (mainland)Via partnerPartial
Cloud platforms
AWSYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Microsoft AzureYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Google CloudYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Oracle CloudPartialYes, public evidence
Alibaba CloudPartialNot confirmed
AI capability and resilience
AI-driven operations (AIOps)Yes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
AI security analyticsYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
AI assistant / copilotPartialYes, public evidence
Disaster recoveryYes, public evidenceYes, public evidence
Typical deployment speedhoursweeks

Grades: Yes (public evidence), Partial, Via partner, Via managed service, Not primary, Not confirmed. Extended dimensions are indicative desk research; confirm via RFP.

Questions

About this comparison

Cato Networks or Palo Alto Networks: which is better?

Cato Networks scores 98.1; Palo Alto Networks scores 89.5 on the Netify 40-feature balanced matrix (June 2026). Cato Networks leads on 9 features; Palo Alto Networks leads on 0 features; 31 features are level. Which fits you depends on operating model, sector, regions and security priorities; the interactive shortlist builder scores both against your exact requirements.

Where does Cato Networks beat Palo Alto Networks?

Cato Networks holds a clear evidence advantage on 9 features, including Fully managed service, Co-managed service, Multi-tenant MSP / white-label support, Professional services and migration support.

Where does Palo Alto Networks beat Cato Networks?

Palo Alto Networks holds no outright feature advantages in this comparison; differences sit in degree and delivery rather than capability presence.

More head to heads