Paste HTML, Markdown, or plain text to extract and validate links instantly. This page is built for marketers, founders, SEO freelancers, and creators who want fewer broken links, cleaner redirects, and better pre-publish QA without opening a heavyweight crawler.
A weak link audit usually does not fail loudly. It quietly leaks traffic, damages authority, and creates friction in launch pages, newsletters, resource hubs, affiliate roundups, and evergreen blog content. Use this checker as a fast final pass before you publish or refresh a page.
Think of it as a lightweight link QA layer inside your content and landing-page workflow.
Use HTML, Markdown, or plain text. The tool extracts URLs automatically and checks them in batches right inside your browser.
This page was upgraded for higher-intent publishing and growth workflows, not just generic URL testing.
Use it before publishing campaign pages, blog updates, comparison content, and internal linking refreshes.
Protect launch pages, pricing pages, docs, and investor or partner resources from avoidable trust leaks.
Check blog posts, lead magnets, newsletter links, sponsor placements, and resource lists before distribution.
Use it as a lightweight QA checkpoint between draft approval and final publishing.
These are the moments where a fast link audit creates outsized value.
Run a final pass on reference links, internal links, and cited sources before an article goes live.
Validate CTA destinations, docs links, product tour links, and supporting proof pages before launch-day traffic hits.
Catch expired, redirected, or broken monetized links before they cut revenue or damage credibility.
Use it when updating aging posts, resource hubs, and comparison pages that accumulate stale outbound URLs.
Paste draft text with multiple links to reduce embarrassing broken destinations in scheduled sends and posts.
Spot avoidable redirect chains and outdated references that weaken UX and waste internal link equity.
Use this four-step process to turn one-off checks into a repeatable publishing habit.
Grab the exact HTML, Markdown, or content block you plan to publish. Final-copy QA catches the real links that matter.
Paste everything into the checker, choose a reasonable concurrency level, and let the page validate all extracted URLs.
Prioritize broken CTAs, monetized links, internal links, and strategic references first. Redirects and low-value links come after.
Once links are clean, review titles, metadata, internal linking, and CTA alignment so the page is strong both technically and commercially.
Start with the Content Creator Toolkit for faster production, then use AI SEO Pilot to audit pages more broadly after link QA is done.
Most link-checking mistakes come from checking too late or treating all links as equally important.
A clean report is useful, but the bigger win comes from turning QA into better traffic and better pages.
Quick answers for common pre-publish and SEO workflow questions.
It extracts URLs from HTML, Markdown, and plain text, then checks each link in the browser. You get a quick view of which URLs appear healthy, redirected, broken, timed out, or blocked from inspection by browser limitations.
No. It is also useful for founders shipping launch pages, creators sending newsletters, marketers updating campaign assets, and agencies standardizing final QA before publishing.
Because this is a browser-based checker. Some websites do not expose enough response detail to client-side requests. Those links may still work, but they deserve a manual check if they are commercially important.
Usually yes, especially for important internal links, CTA paths, affiliate links, and heavily trafficked pages. Redirects are not always bad, but unnecessary ones can add friction and hide outdated destinations.
Absolutely. It is especially helpful when updating old blog posts, resource hubs, link roundups, or knowledge-base pages that have accumulated stale references over time.
Start with Content Creator Toolkit if you need better publishing assets, or go to AI SEO Pilot if you want a broader SEO and on-page audit.