Links to scanned sites now carry standard UTM parameters (utm_source, utm_medium, utm_campaign) instead of a custom tracking param. Referral traffic from AI Website Detector will now show up correctly in Google Analytics and other tools with no extra configuration needed.
You can now scan any page on a website — not just the homepage. Enter a full URL like example.com/pricing or example.com/about and get a dedicated result page for that exact path. Each scanned page has its own permanent URL so you can share or revisit specific results.
The AI Website Development Trends section now includes a platform breakdown alongside the verdict distribution. You can see how many scanned sites are WordPress-powered, built on a no-code builder, or running another stack — giving a fuller picture of what the web actually runs on.
The 2026 AI Web Builder Report is now available. It summarises key findings from thousands of scans — builder market share, verdict distribution trends, fastest-growing platforms, and which industries are adopting AI builders fastest. Based on real scan data collected by this tool.
A new methodology page explains how AI Website Detector identifies builders, platforms, and AI usage signals. It covers HTML fingerprinting, script analysis, CDN domain matching, header inspection, and how confidence scores are calculated — useful if you want to understand or challenge a detection result.
Scans are significantly faster. Screenshot capture now runs in the background and no longer delays the main result. Domain age lookups are parallelised. The SEO analysis panel streams in after the core result loads — so you see the builder verdict and confidence score immediately while the rest of the page fills in.
Scan result pages now include an SEO & AI Readiness panel. It shows signals like whether the site has a sitemap, robots.txt, structured data, mobile optimisation, and LLMs.txt — factors that affect both search visibility and how AI crawlers like ChatGPT and Perplexity index the site. Each signal is rated green, amber, or red.
The AI Builder Market Share page now shows total scans across all sites as the denominator, not just the subset where a builder was detected. This makes the percentage figures and all-time counts more accurate and consistent with what you'd expect.
The AI Website Gallery (/ai-website-gallery) lets you browse real detected sites grouped by builder. Filter by category (AI builder, CMS, no-code, e-commerce) or search for a specific platform. Each builder card links to a dedicated gallery page with examples, tech stack details, and confidence scores from real scans.
The Popular Analyses page now shows a card grid with live screenshots, builder logos, confidence badges, and direct links to each result page. You can filter by date range and sort by scan count — useful for seeing which sites are most often checked and what stack they run on.
The AI Website Development Trends page now lets you pick your own date window. Choose from preset ranges (30, 90, 180, 365 days) or set a custom start and end date to see how builder adoption and verdict distribution have shifted over any period.
The detection engine now recognises 57 more technologies, spanning 9 new categories: headless CMS platforms, static site generators, JavaScript meta-frameworks, e-commerce platforms, design-to-code tools, low-code app builders, authentication providers, analytics platforms, and CDN/edge providers. Sites running Astro, Gatsby, Next.js, NuxtJS, BigCommerce, Sanity, Supabase, and many others are now identified.
New monthly insights pages (e.g. /insights/2026-04) show a breakdown of scan data for each month — verdict distribution, top builders, key findings, and month-on-month changes. Each month gets a permanent page with an OG image. The insights index page lists all available months with a live banner for the current month.
The AI Builder Market Share page now has filter tabs so you can compare just AI-first builders, just CMS platforms, or just no-code tools — instead of seeing everything mixed together. The chart and table update instantly without a page reload.
Developers can now access AI Website Detector programmatically. Generate an API key from the portal (/portal/api-keys), send a URL, and get back a structured JSON result with the builder verdict, confidence score, detected technologies, and SEO signals. Rate limits apply per plan.
The core verdict system classifies each scanned website into one of three categories: AI-built (built end-to-end by an AI builder platform), AI-assisted (uses AI-generated components or templates on a traditional stack), or Human-engineered (no detectable AI builder signals). The verdict is shown with a confidence score and a breakdown of the signals that led to it.
Every scan now generates a permanent result page at /site/[domain]. Share buttons for Twitter/X and LinkedIn are included on each result page, along with a preview-card image generated automatically from the scan data. Sharing a result lets others see the verdict, confidence, and detected technologies without re-scanning.
Scan results now identify the hosting provider — Vercel, Netlify, AWS, Cloudflare, Hetzner, and more — based on DNS records, response headers, and CDN signals. The hosting provider appears on the result page alongside the detected builder and confidence score.
Builder comparison pages let you put two platforms side by side — for example Webflow vs Framer or Lovable vs Bubble. Each comparison covers detected site counts, pricing, target use case, key differences, and affiliate links where available. Pages are pre-generated for the most-searched pairs.
AI Website Detector is live. Paste any website URL and the scanner analyses its HTML, scripts, CDN domains, response headers, and meta tags to detect whether it was built with an AI builder like Lovable, Framer, Webflow, Bolt, or one of 100+ other platforms. Results are shown with a confidence score and a breakdown of detected signals. No sign-up required.