Page Speed Monitoring & Website Speed Test Checker
Page speed monitoring helps you track and improve your website's loading speed over time. Use the website speed test checker below to test your site now, then set up ongoing monitoring to track speed changes on a regular basis.
Find slowdowns before they cost you visitors
Every check runs from HostTracker's global network and is re-verified from several independent locations before an alert is sent — so you catch real outages, not one server's network blip.
Full Performance Analysis
HostTracker's page speed monitoring service ensures your website performs well. It checks how quickly pages load, which affects user satisfaction and search engine rankings. The service checks speeds from different locations to give a full analysis. Monitoring helps find and fix problems that slow down a site. This keeps it competitive and efficient.
Desktop & Mobile Reports
Page speed monitoring has lots of advanced features. It measures load times for desktop and mobile versions of websites, in line with Google's mobile-first indexing. The service provides reports with tips for improving page speed. It also lets you check and get alerts, so you can fix any problems quickly. This helps keep users happy and improves the site's performance.
Faster Sites, Better Rankings
It helps users stay on your site longer and be happier, which means more people will buy from you. Faster websites get better search engine rankings, which means more visitors. The service quickly finds and fixes problems, so there is less downtime and less loss of revenue. HostTracker’s monitoring service is a vital tool for maintaining a high-performing, user-friendly website.
Frequently Asked Questions
Page speed monitoring is the ongoing, automated measurement of how quickly your web pages load and respond, tracked over time rather than checked once and forgotten. It matters because load time directly affects whether visitors stay on your site or leave: slow pages increase bounce rates, reduce conversions, and frustrate users who expect near-instant responses. Speed can also degrade gradually and invisibly - a growing database, an unoptimized new feature, or a slow third-party script can each shave fractions of a second off load time without triggering an outright outage, so nothing alerts you unless something is actively watching the trend. HostTracker's page speed monitoring checks how quickly your pages load from multiple locations and tracks that data over time, so a gradual slowdown shows up as a clear trend rather than being invisible until customers start leaving.
A one-time speed test tells you how fast your page loaded at the single moment you ran it - useful for a quick check, but it can't tell you whether that result is typical or a fluke caused by momentary network conditions. Ongoing page speed monitoring runs the same kind of test automatically and repeatedly, building up a history that shows real trends: whether your site is getting consistently faster or slower, whether a recent deployment made things worse, and whether performance varies by time of day or check location. This historical view is what actually lets you catch a gradual regression before it becomes a real problem, since a single bad measurement could just be noise but a sustained upward trend in load time is a genuine signal. The website speed test tool above gives you the instant snapshot; continuous monitoring builds the trend data on top of it.
Yes, page speed is one of the factors search engines like Google weigh when ranking pages, particularly through Core Web Vitals metrics that measure loading performance, interactivity, and visual stability. A slow site doesn't just risk a direct ranking penalty - it also damages the user engagement signals search engines watch indirectly, since visitors who face slow load times are more likely to leave quickly, which shows up as a high bounce rate and short time on page. Both effects push in the same direction: slower pages tend to rank worse and convert worse. Tracking page speed over time with ongoing monitoring, rather than only checking it occasionally, makes it easier to catch a performance regression from a recent change before it has enough time to meaningfully affect search visibility or user experience.
Yes, page speed monitoring measures load times for both desktop and mobile versions of your website, which matters because search engines have moved to mobile-first indexing - meaning the mobile version of your site is generally what gets evaluated and ranked. Desktop and mobile performance can differ significantly, since mobile devices often have less processing power and connect over slower or less reliable networks, so a page that loads quickly on a desktop browser can still feel sluggish on a phone. Monitoring both separately means a mobile-specific slowdown - caused by an unoptimized image, a render-blocking script, or a heavy mobile ad script - gets caught even if desktop performance looks perfectly fine. Given how much traffic now comes from mobile devices, checking only desktop speed would miss a large and often more sensitive part of the real user experience.
Slow load times usually trace back to a handful of common causes: unoptimized or oversized images that take longer to download than necessary, render-blocking scripts and stylesheets that delay the page from becoming interactive, a slow or overloaded backend that takes too long to generate the response, too many third-party scripts (ads, analytics, chat widgets) each adding their own delay, and insufficient server resources during traffic spikes. Network distance also plays a role - a server located far from a visitor naturally adds latency unless a CDN is in use. Because these causes can appear and worsen gradually, often introduced by routine changes like a new plugin or a marketing script, ongoing page speed monitoring is what actually surfaces which factor is degrading performance and when the regression started, rather than leaving you to guess from a single slow load.
For most sites, checking page speed at a regular interval - rather than only occasionally and manually - is what actually catches a slowdown before it becomes noticeable to visitors. HostTracker's permanent free plan checks two monitors every 30 minutes, which is enough to catch a sustained regression on a lower-traffic or non-critical site. For a business site where every second of load time affects conversions, more frequent checks give you a finer-grained history and faster detection of a new slowdown, and paid plans support check intervals as fast as once a minute. A 30-day full-feature trial with no credit card required lets you try faster intervals and see how much detail the resulting trend data gives you before deciding what frequency fits your site.
Find slowdowns before they cost you visitors
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