Loading...
Risk assessment tools for cybersecurity risk analysis, threat modeling, and quantitative risk management.
Browse 110 risk assessment tools
Physical security risk assessment and vulnerability management platform
Security program assessment service based on documentary evidence review
SaaS cyber risk register with quantified risk scenarios and financial metrics
Cyber maturity assessments with CRQ for financial loss forecasting
Platform for quantifying cyber risk exposure in financial terms
Security posture rating tool aligned with NIST CSF for MSPs and clients
Cyber risk quantification tool that converts risk into financial metrics
Unified platform for cybersecurity assessments across enterprise frameworks
AI governance platform for risk assessment and regulatory compliance
Project risk management platform for monitoring controls and compliance
Medical device cybersecurity risk assessment and benchmarking platform
Cyber risk quantification platform translating security controls into financial risk
NIST 2.0-based cyber risk assessment dashboard with maturity scoring
Cyber security toolkit for SMBs with health checks, risk dashboard & templates
AI/ML-powered security scoring platform for continuous risk visibility
Cloud-based GRC platform for enterprise risk management and compliance
AI-powered ERM platform for rapid risk identification and benchmarking
Enterprise cyber risk management platform with active/passive assessments
AI-powered risk and claims management software for insurance operations
Quantifies cyber risk in financial terms using automated CRQ methodology.
Cyber risk quantification platform using FAIR methodology for financial analysis
Enterprise risk assessment software for identifying and assessing org risks
Common questions about Risk Assessment tools, selection guides, pricing, and comparisons.
Qualitative risk assessment uses categories (high, medium, low) based on expert judgment. Quantitative risk assessment assigns monetary values to potential losses using models like FAIR (Factor Analysis of Information Risk). Quantitative is more objective and enables business-case comparisons, but requires more data. Many organizations start qualitative and mature into quantitative as they gather loss data.