Radiant Logic
Capability scores
Methodology →- Authentication
- 3.0
- SSO & Federation
- 3.0
- Authorization
- 4.0
- Lifecycle & Provisioning
- 3.5
- MFA & Passwordless
- 2.5
- Governance & Audit
- 4.0
- Developer Experience
- 3.0
- Deployment Flexibility
- 4.0
- Pricing Transparency
- 3.0
- Support & Ecosystem
- 3.5
Scored 0–5 against a published rubric. Independent analysis, no vendor sponsorship.
Overview
Radiant Logic provides an identity data fabric that unifies identities from many sources (directories, databases, and applications) into a single virtualized view, with analytics and governance layered on top. Founded in 2000, it solves a foundational problem that trips up governance programs: identity data scattered and inconsistent across the enterprise.
What it is good at
Identity unification and virtualization are the core strengths. Radiant Logic correlates and reconciles identities across fragmented sources without forcing a costly data migration, presenting one authoritative, queryable view. For large enterprises whose directories and apps have grown into a tangle over decades, that data fabric is the prerequisite that makes downstream governance, authentication, and analytics actually work, and the identity analytics layer adds risk insight on top.
Where it falls short
It is infrastructure rather than a turnkey governance product. Radiant Logic underpins other identity tools rather than delivering out-of-the-box provisioning and certification on its own, so teams expecting a complete IGA will need to pair it with one. Where identity data is already unified and simple, the value is limited, and authentication and MFA are not its focus.
Pricing
Quote-based enterprise licensing. Compare with full-suite IGA using the TCO calculator.
Best for, and who should look elsewhere
Choose Radiant Logic when fragmented identity data must be unified before it can be governed. For provisioning and certification suites, see SailPoint vs Saviynt; for effective-access visibility on top of unified data, see Veza.
Bottom line
A strong fit for large enterprises that must unify messy, fragmented identity data before governing it, working as foundational infrastructure rather than a complete IGA.
By SWI Community Team · Last evaluated 2026-06-19
Independent, community-driven analysis. No vendor sponsorship. Compiled from public research and community input and verified on a best-effort basis, so details may be incomplete or out of date. Scores are opinions, not advice. Trademarks belong to their owners; mention does not imply affiliation or endorsement. See the full disclaimer, or send corrections to community@startwithidentity.com.