evenito
Swiss event management platform — GDPR-compliant, data in Switzerland
- Data residency
- EU only
- DPA available
- Yes
- Pricing
- Subscription
- Art. 9 data
- Not suitable
Who this tool is for
Industries
- Corporate event teams
- Agencies running client events
- Professional registration and check-in
- Organisers wanting Swiss data hosting
evenito is a Swiss event-management platform aimed at corporate and agency clients, covering invitations, registrations, a check-in app, and analytics across the event lifecycle.
Headquartered in Zurich, evenito hosts data in Switzerland, offers a GDPR data-processing agreement (AV-Vertrag), and uses BSI-conformant encryption. For DACH organisers handling attendee data for professional events, the Swiss residency and encryption posture are reassuring.
There is no free tier — evenito is a subscription product positioned for professional event production rather than casual or one-off use, where the structured registration and check-in features earn their keep.
Pros and cons
Strengths
- Full event lifecycle in one platform
- Check-in app and analytics included
- Data hosted in Switzerland
- BSI-conformant encryption
- GDPR DPA available
Trade-offs
- No free tier
- Aimed at professional, not casual, events
- Subscription cost for smaller organisers
Where it sits with GDPR
Good fit for
- Data hosted in Switzerland
- BSI-conformant encryption
- AV-Vertrag available
Think twice / not suitable for
- Attendee data needs lawful basis and retention limits
- No free tier to trial compliance fit
Data protection note
Zürich HQ; Hosting in der Schweiz; DSGVO-DPA; BSI-konforme Verschlüsselung.
Frequently asked questions
Where does evenito host data?
evenito hosts data in Switzerland.
Does evenito offer an AV-Vertrag?
Yes, a GDPR data-processing agreement is available.
Does evenito include a check-in app?
Yes, a check-in app and analytics are included.
Is there a free evenito plan?
No, evenito is a subscription product without a free tier.
Reviews are written and reviewed by Eduardo personally. They describe what a tool does and where it sits with data protection, but they do not constitute legal advice.
