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Website traffic checker

How much traffic does that website actually get?

Enter a domain and get a modeled estimate of monthly organic search traffic, its ranking-keyword count and a recent trend direction. Sized to answer one question fast: is this prospect worth a conversation.

Source
Public search-ranking signals
Returns
Est. visits, keywords, trend
Honesty
Direction and magnitude, not decimals

Traffic estimate

Enter a domain for a modeled monthly organic-visits figure, keyword count and trend.

Modeled from public search signals. Read direction and order of magnitude, not exact counts.

Enter a domain to start
Est. monthly organic visits
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Organic ranking keywords
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Type a domain above and we will pull a live estimate.

Reading an estimate well

A rising line is a stronger budget signal than a single large number. Weight the trend over the absolute.

Triangulate more than one source for any big decision, because no single model has the whole picture. Treat small-site estimates as the roughest of all, because search-rank models see far less of the long tail, so the smaller the site, the wider you should expect the real range to be.

This is built to answer one question, is this worth a conversation, not to settle an analytics dispute. You get order of magnitude and direction, which is what qualifying actually needs.

How it works

Domain in. Decision out.

No account. No setup. Three steps from a name on a list to a yes or no.

01

Enter a domain

Paste any website, a prospect, a competitor, the company in your inbox right now. No account, no setup, no list to upload first.

02

We estimate visits and trend

You get a modeled monthly organic-visits figure, the count of keywords the site ranks for and a recent trend direction. It ships as a modeled estimate, not a false-precision decimal, because it is built from public search signals.

03

Qualify with thresholds

Turn the estimate into a yes or no. Flag prospects above 10k visits per month, or sites growing quarter over quarter, and move the rest down the queue.

Use cases

Built for the way agencies qualify prospects

A prospecting check, not a market-research suite. These are the patterns agencies reach for when deciding who to chase.

Qualify before you reach out

Set a traffic threshold and only spend outreach effort on prospects that clear it. Stop pitching sites with no audience, and stop wondering whether a name is worth the email.

Spot growing businesses

A rising trend is the strongest budget signal you can read from the outside. Growth means money is moving, and money moving means a real conversation is on the table.

Pitch with context

Walk into a call with the prospect compared to two competitors. Nothing earns attention like showing someone where they sit against the sites they actually worry about.

Validate scraped lists

Run the domains you built with the Google Maps and social scrapers through a traffic check, so a raw list becomes a list ranked by who is actually worth working.

Prioritize the outreach queue

Sort a whole prospect list by estimated audience size and work it top down. The biggest, most active sites get your first and best touches.

Sanity-check partnerships

Before you agree a sponsorship, a guest post or a co-marketing swap, get a rough read on the other side’s traffic so the deal is sized to reality, not to a pitch deck.

Size the audience, then grade the site

Traffic tells you whether a prospect has an audience worth pursuing. The 12-point audit scorecard tells you whether their site can convert it into leads.

Run the audit scorecard
Questions

Frequently asked questions

How accurate are website traffic estimates?

Be honest with yourself here: every provider models traffic from partial data, because nobody outside a site can see its real analytics. Expect direction and order of magnitude, not exact counts. A good estimate tells you whether a site gets thousands, tens of thousands or millions of visits, and which way the line is moving. It does not tell you the precise number, and any tool that implies it does is overselling.

How is this different from Similarweb or Ahrefs?

Both are excellent products and we will not pretend otherwise. They are aimed at market intelligence and SEO research, with deep dashboards built for that work. This is a lightweight prospecting check: enter a domain, get a sized estimate and a trend, decide if the prospect is worth pursuing. It is also worth knowing that Ahrefs-style traffic numbers model organic search clicks specifically, which is a different thing from total visits across every channel.

What data does it use?

The estimate is modeled from public search-ranking signals: the keywords a domain ranks for in Google and the clicks those rankings are likely to earn. That makes the number an organic-search traffic estimate specifically, not total visits across every channel. When the underlying data is weak for a given site, the tool says so instead of inventing a confident number.

Why does traffic matter for lead generation?

Audience size is a usable proxy for budget. A site with real traffic is more likely to have the revenue, and the motivation, to pay for what you sell. The 10k visits per month mark is a common qualification line in signal-scoring models, a simple cut between sites worth a touch and sites worth skipping for now.

Is it free?

Yes. Single-domain checks are live and free, with no account required. The estimate is briefly cached to keep the tool fast and cheap, and it reads public search signals only.

How does this fit with the website audit scorecard?

Traffic tells you whether a prospect has an audience worth pursuing; the 12-point audit scorecard tells you whether their site can convert that audience into leads. Use the traffic checker to size the opportunity, then the scorecard to find the gaps you can fix.

More free tools

The rest of the audit stack

Free tools that pair well with the scorecard, from list building to list cleaning. For the full picture, see the agency audit stack roundup.

Find the gaps the SEO tools miss.

Run the scorecard