Lakera (Check Point) focuses on runtime llm guardrails. Now part of Check Point, many teams evaluate alternatives for broader agent coverage, different deployment models, or pricing that fits their scale. Here are the top competitors to consider.
Category: Runtime Guardrails & AI Firewall • Last reviewed: 2026-07-03
Lakera built one of the best-known LLM guardrail APIs, Lakera Guard, backed by threat intelligence from Gandalf — its viral prompt-injection game that collected tens of millions of real attack attempts. Check Point acquired Lakera in late 2025 (reported around $300M), and Lakera Guard and Lakera Red continue as live products anchoring Check Point's AI security Center of Excellence. The product remains a low-latency detection API for prompt injection, jailbreaks, and PII leakage, now with Check Point's enterprise distribution behind it.
Lakera concentrates on the prompt/response interaction layer. Teams running autonomous agents increasingly need controls Lakera was not designed for — tool-call authorization, MCP gateway governance, and action-level policy — and post-acquisition, buyers wary of platform consolidation into Check Point's ecosystem often reassess.
GuardionAI covers the interaction layer with comparable accuracy (96.3 F1 on the Prompt Security Leaderboard) but extends enforcement to the action layer: every tool call, MCP request, and data access is governed inline with sub-130ms policy decisions — the part of agent risk a prompt classifier cannot see.
sub-130ms guardrails latency • 96.3 F1 on the Prompt Security Leaderboard with 0.02% false positives • 50M+ agent actions protected per month
A set of LLM safeguards designed to detect violating content across multiple use cases. Model-based guardrail.
Secures the entire lifecycle of Generative AI, protecting employees from risky AI use and developers from insecure model integrations. Acquired by SentinelOne in September 2025 (~$250M reported) and integrated into the Singularity platform for prompt injection, data leakage, and shadow AI protection.
Robust Intelligence pioneered the AI firewall and automated model assessment. Acquired by Cisco in 2024, its technology now ships as Cisco AI Defense — runtime protection, model validation, and AI visibility integrated with the Cisco security stack.
Still a benchmark for prompt-layer detection, now with enterprise backing. Pair it with — or replace it by — an agent-runtime platform if your risk lives in what agents do, not just what users type.
Yes. Check Point acquired Lakera in late 2025 for a reported ~$300M. Lakera Guard and Lakera Red remain available and anchor Check Point's AI security Center of Excellence.
A focused runtime security layer protecting against prompt injection, PII leakage, and hallucinations via API. Acquired by Check Point in late 2025 (~$300M reported); Lakera Guard and Lakera Red remain live products and anchor Check Point's Center of Excellence for AI Security. It is categorized under Runtime Guardrails & AI Firewall in the Guardion AI Security Index.
Lakera was acquired by Check Point. Acquired by Check Point in late 2025 (~$300M reported); Lakera Guard and Lakera Red remain live products and anchor Check Point's Center of Excellence for AI Security.
No, Lakera (Check Point) is a commercial product (Usage-based / Quote).
Teams evaluating Lakera (Check Point) most often compare it with Meta (Llama Guard), Prompt Security (SentinelOne), Cisco AI Defense (Robust Intelligence), and GuardionAI — all listed under Runtime Guardrails & AI Firewall.
Lakera (Check Point) focuses on runtime llm guardrails, while GuardionAI is an agent runtime governance platform ("EDR for AI agents") that governs every agent tool call inline with sub-130ms guardrails latency.
Last reviewed: 2026-07-03
Sources: checkpoint.com · lakera.ai