The idea came from a problem I kept running into while doing SEO and technical audits. Many websites either hide their sitemaps, have multiple sitemap files, or end up with broken and outdated ones. Finding them manually across dozens of sites was a repetitive and time-consuming task.
So I built a simple tool to automate the process.
Just paste a domain, and it:
✅ Finds common sitemap locations.
✅ Checks robots.txt for sitemap references.
✅ Detects multiple sitemap files and indexes.
✅ Validates XML sitemap URLs.
✅ Gives you a quick overview for technical SEO audits.
The goal wasn't to build another complicated SEO platform. I wanted something fast, free, and useful for SEOs, developers, marketers, and anyone doing website research.
No signup.
No unnecessary steps.
Just paste a URL and get the sitemap data you need.
It's already helping people save time during site audits, competitor research, and indexing checks, and hitting the first 100 users is a great milestone.
If you're into SEO, web scraping, or technical site analysis, I'd love to hear what features would make it even more useful. It's part of the SERPSpur toolkit, and I'm actively improving it based on feedback.
Congrats on 100 users! That's a solid milestone for a tool that solves a real pain point—I've wasted way too many hours hunting down hidden sitemaps. The no-signup approach is key; it respects the user's time. How do you handle sites that deliberately block sitemaps or use dynamic ones?