Coreflux offers an industrial IoT platform built around a programmable MQTT broker and browser-based Hub control panel. The platform enables real-time device communication, protocol bridging, and edge AI deployments.
Key products include the Coreflux MQTT Broker for self-hosted and managed environments, and Coreflux Hub 2.0 for visual broker administration and IoT integration management.
The industrial IoT market continues expanding as manufacturers seek real-time connectivity between legacy equipment and modern analytics platforms. Coreflux targets this demand with edge-deployable MQTT infrastructure and AI-assisted data pipelines.
With EUR 1.2 million in Seed funding from Armilar and Portugal Gateway, Coreflux is positioned to scale enterprise data connectivity solutions across European industrial markets and beyond.
Coreflux differentiates through its programmable MQTT broker architecture using the Language of Things scripting, enabling custom automation without traditional coding. Its edge deployment on low-cost hardware like Raspberry Pi lowers barrier to entry for small manufacturers.
The platform combines broker capabilities with a visual Hub interface and AI-assisted integrations, offering a unified solution rather than point tools. Subscription-based SaaS pricing and multi-cloud deployment add operational flexibility for enterprise clients.
Coreflux is a smaller player in the industrial IoT platform market compared to established competitors such as ThingsBoard, HiveMQ, and EMQX, which may limit brand recognition and ecosystem size.
The company has a narrower geographic presence centered in Europe compared to some global competitors, and its customer base is primarily focused on manufacturing and smart infrastructure verticals.
Coreflux operates on a subscription-based SaaS pricing model with tiered plans for enterprise IoT deployments. The platform is deployable on edge hardware, private clouds, and hyperscaler marketplaces including DigitalOcean, offering operational flexibility for B2B clients.
Self-hosted and managed broker options allow customers to choose between cloud-managed and on-premises deployments based on compliance and infrastructure requirements.