Run a comprehensive technical SEO, on-page, crawlability, performance, security, image, link and structured-data audit.
Public HTTP/HTTPS sites only. Private networks are blocked. The crawler reads source HTML but does not execute page JavaScript.
Enter a public webpage URL to review important on-page and technical signals such as title, meta description, headings, canonical URL, indexability directives, links and image attributes. The audit identifies observable issues; it cannot guarantee rankings, indexing or traffic.
Explain that robots.txt controls crawling, not guaranteed removal from search results.
Do not score title or description solely by character count. Assess presence, uniqueness within the crawled sample, clarity and topical alignment.
Clarify that empty alt text can be correct for decorative images.
Only display lab or field data that the tool actually obtains. Label lab tests as a controlled snapshot and avoid claiming that one run represents every user.
Audit summary: [number] checks passed, [number] need review and [number] could not be tested. Highest-priority issue: [issue], because [plain-language impact]. Use priority labels:
The tool cannot know Google’s final canonical choice, guarantee crawling or indexing, assess every off-page signal, understand all business context or predict a ranking. It also cannot replace Search Console, server logs, analytics, accessibility testing or a complete human review.
No. Search visibility depends on relevance, quality, competition, authority, technical accessibility and many query-specific factors.
Not unless a secure, authorized method is specifically implemented. Do not request account passwords.
Search engines may generate a snippet from page content when it better matches the query.
Not by itself. Use appropriate index controls or authentication for content that must not appear in search.
Informative images should have useful alternatives; decorative images can use empty alt text.
Download the audit, then open a prioritized implementation checklist. Any paid consultancy or partner offer must appear after the free findings.