I am an end-user of Red Hat Quay, having just used it for one more year, and I haven't found any issues. I use this to store my images to share with my colleagues, and I store multiple applications in this one. My usual use cases for Red Hat Quay involve using it for container storage and deploying the application with OpenShift. I develop using the deployment tool and Docker tool, and I'm familiar with Docker. Compared to Docker, Red Hat Quay is superior because we can create an organization for free, and it offers cloud-on-premises solutions. We can also create multiple organizations in the same profile, which means the same account. This is the basic case compared to the others.
Sr. DevOps Engineer (OpenShift/Kubernetes) at a insurance company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 5
2025-08-18T13:11:46Z
Aug 18, 2025
The main use case is to use Red Hat Quay for image management as an enterprise image registry in our organization. All the container images, whether from AKS, GKE, or OpenShift, are stored on Red Hat Quay and are used for application deployments. This is the only major use case we have.
Sr. DevOps Engineer (OpenShift/Kubernetes) at a insurance company with 10,001+ employees
Real User
Top 5
2024-06-11T20:09:00Z
Jun 11, 2024
We use Red Hat Quay as a single source of truth for all of our container images. We store all the container images that are used in the OpenShift platform.
Cloud Specialist at a tech services company with 51-200 employees
Real User
2021-03-16T12:00:23Z
Mar 16, 2021
I am a system administrator and engineer. I am using this product for the customers I work with, for the workload mainly. They have many different solutions. At the moment, we are using it for a single customer that has many clusters and platforms installed. We also use it in our lab to train people and for developing things. I use it for the customer's requirements. We use it as a registry repository for different containers and applications that our customers are using. The purpose of the product is pretty defined by the product itself. It's a registry repository. It works as a repository for all of the different containers that our customers are developing and building. It has a wide use case.
Red Hat Quay is a private container registry that stores, builds, and deploys container images. It analyzes your images for security vulnerabilities, identifying potential issues that can help you mitigate security risks.
I am an end-user of Red Hat Quay, having just used it for one more year, and I haven't found any issues. I use this to store my images to share with my colleagues, and I store multiple applications in this one. My usual use cases for Red Hat Quay involve using it for container storage and deploying the application with OpenShift. I develop using the deployment tool and Docker tool, and I'm familiar with Docker. Compared to Docker, Red Hat Quay is superior because we can create an organization for free, and it offers cloud-on-premises solutions. We can also create multiple organizations in the same profile, which means the same account. This is the basic case compared to the others.
The main use case is to use Red Hat Quay for image management as an enterprise image registry in our organization. All the container images, whether from AKS, GKE, or OpenShift, are stored on Red Hat Quay and are used for application deployments. This is the only major use case we have.
We use Red Hat Quay as a single source of truth for all of our container images. We store all the container images that are used in the OpenShift platform.
I am a system administrator and engineer. I am using this product for the customers I work with, for the workload mainly. They have many different solutions. At the moment, we are using it for a single customer that has many clusters and platforms installed. We also use it in our lab to train people and for developing things. I use it for the customer's requirements. We use it as a registry repository for different containers and applications that our customers are using. The purpose of the product is pretty defined by the product itself. It's a registry repository. It works as a repository for all of the different containers that our customers are developing and building. It has a wide use case.