Search Docs…

Search Docs…

Guide

Share a Website Report

How to Share a Website Check Report

Sitepager makes it easy to share your check results with others—whether it's a teammate, client, or stakeholder. Once you've run a check, you can generate a public link that anyone can view, no login required.

Sharing a Check Report

1. Open the Check You Want to Share

  • Go to the All Checks tab in your dashboard.

  • Click on the check result you'd like to share.
    This opens the Site Review Summary for that specific check.

2. Click the Share Button
In the top-left corner of the report, you'll see a share icon (next to the back arrow).

  • Click this icon to make the report public.

  • Once clicked, a new button will appear that lets you copy the link.

The report remains private until you take this step.

Sitepager report sharing view showing how to make a website check report public with one click

3. Copy the Link

  • After clicking the share icon, you’ll see a Copy link button in the same spot.

  • Click Copy link to share the public URL to your clipboard.
    You can now share it with anyone—no Sitepager account needed to view.

Copy public link for Sitepager website check report after enabling sharing

Notes

  • You can unshare the report at any time by clicking the share icon again.

  • Shared reports are view-only and cannot be edited.

Practical Use Cases

Here are some common ways teams use shareable reports:

  • Internal Reviews: Share results with design, SEO, or dev teams for quick feedback.

  • Async Updates: Let stakeholders view results without needing a walkthrough.

  • Issue Reporting: Share a link directly in Jira, Slack, or Notion for easy triage.

  • Customer Reports: You can send website check reports before launches or as part of maintenance reports to your clients.

Best Practices

  • Unshare the link after the review if it’s no longer needed, and to keep things private.

  • Label your configs clearly so viewers understand the purpose of the check.

Next Steps

Learn more about baselines to understand how comparisons work before sharing. Or, run your first check if you haven’t already.