Launching sitespellchecker.com
It's like grammarly but for websites.
That sentence came up in a meeting during a global digital website launch at a Fortune 500 company.
Big room. Lots of stakeholders. Months of work behind us. Designers, engineers, marketers, legal, localization. The whole thing.
And someone said, half joking, half serious:
“I wish we could just run a spell checker on the new website.”
Everyone laughed.
Then the meeting moved on.
But that line stuck with me.
Because… why couldn’t we?
The Weird Gap in Website Tooling
We can:
Run automated tests across thousands of pages
Crawl sites for SEO, performance, accessibility, and broken links
Validate schemas, headings, metadata, and response codes
But somehow, checking spelling across an entire website still feels oddly manual.
If you’ve tried to do it, you know the drill:
Browser spellcheck only works while editing
Grammarly is great for docs, useless for domains
SEO crawlers don’t care about copy quality
Manual review breaks down after 20 pages
At scale, no one actually knows what’s live anymore.
That Fortune 500 site?
It absolutely shipped with typos. They all do.
The Real Problem Isn’t Typos, It’s Visibility
That meeting made something click for me.
This isn’t a writing problem.
It’s a visibility problem.
You can’t fix what you can’t see.
Once a site grows past a certain size, content just accumulates. Landing pages, docs, blog posts, experiments, one-off microsites. Some pages get tons of attention. Others quietly rot.
Spelling errors don’t announce themselves. They just sit there, quietly undermining trust.
The Obvious Tool That Didn’t Exist
What we wanted in that meeting was simple:
Crawl the entire site
Find spelling and grammar issues
Show them by page
Don’t require installing anything
Don’t require a PhD to use
Basically: “Run a spell checker on the website.”
Shockingly, that wasn’t really a thing.
So I built one.
Enter SiteSpellChecker
SiteSpellChecker.com does exactly what we wished for in that meeting.
You enter a domain.
It crawls your site like a search engine.
It surfaces spelling and grammar issues page by page.
That’s it.
It’s not a writing assistant.
It’s not a browser extension.
It’s a site-level visibility tool.
You can run a free scan without signing up: https://sitespellchecker.com
See it in action…
Why This Matters More in 2026
Websites today are:
Larger than ever
Updated constantly
Written by more people and more AI
Ironically, that makes small errors more noticeable, not less. When everything else looks polished, typos stand out.
Trust is built on details.
Spelling errors are one of the easiest details to fix once you can actually see them.
The Thing I Wish Existed Back Then
When I think back to that meeting, what still surprises me isn’t the comment. It’s how reasonable it was.
Of course we should be able to run a spell checker on a website.
Now you can.
Try it here: https://sitespellchecker.com
Worst case, your site is clean.
Best case, you catch things that would’ve lived there forever.
Either way, that meeting comment doesn’t have to be a joke anymore.

