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What Is Jekyll?

Website Builder

Jekyll is a ai coding platform used to build and deploy modern websites.

Detect Jekyll on any website:

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Why Jekyll Matters

If you're weighing Jekyll for a new site, auditing a competitor's stack, or figuring out why a prospect's website looks the way it does, the platform choice drives everything downstream: hosting cost, SEO control, performance ceiling, and migration pain later. Our detector is scanning the web for Jekyll signals continuously — real examples appear below as they're discovered.

How Websites Using Jekyll Work

  • Recognizable runtime and asset loading patterns
  • Consistent layout or component conventions across projects
  • Platform-specific deployment and publishing workflow

Best Practices When Working With Jekyll

Based on patterns in our scan dataset and the detection evidence tiers.

  • Start by running a Jekyll detection scan on any URL you're evaluating — the 80+ signal engine returns a confidence score plus the exact markers it matched, which beats reading view-source by hand.
  • Cross-check the result against the full detection evidence in /how-scores-work — confidence tiers tell you whether a match is strong (headers + scripts) or circumstantial (a single HTML pattern).
  • Pair this page with the builder gallery (/gallery/jekyll) to see how Jekyll sites look in the wild and spot the design patterns that repeat across real deployments.
  • For migration planning, compare Jekyll against other builders in the same category — feature parity usually matters more than raw popularity.

How we detect Jekyll — see our methodology: AI Influence Score calculation, evidence tiers, and fingerprint signal types.

How Our Detector Identifies Jekyll

Our scanner analyzes multiple layers of a website's technical fingerprint to detect Jekyll usage.

  • 0 script-based fingerprints
  • 0 CDN/domain fingerprints
  • 0 HTML structure fingerprints

Websites Built With Jekyll

Real sites detected by our scanner

View all

No examples detected yet — scan any Jekyll website to add it.

Frequently Asked Questions About Jekyll

What is Jekyll?+

Jekyll is a ai coding platform used to build and deploy modern websites.

Why does Jekyll matter?+

If you're weighing Jekyll for a new site, auditing a competitor's stack, or figuring out why a prospect's website looks the way it does, the platform choice drives everything downstream: hosting cost, SEO control, performance ceiling, and migration pain later. Our detector is scanning the web for Jekyll signals continuously — real examples appear below as they're discovered.

How do we detect Jekyll?+

Our scanner checks for these signals: 0 script-based fingerprints; 0 CDN/domain fingerprints; 0 HTML structure fingerprints. Each match contributes to a confidence score, and the full evidence tiers are documented at /how-scores-work.

How many websites using Jekyll are in the database?+

We're still collecting live examples of Jekyll — scan any URL you suspect uses it to add it to the dataset.

What are the typical characteristics of a Jekyll website?+

Recognizable runtime and asset loading patterns. Consistent layout or component conventions across projects. Platform-specific deployment and publishing workflow

Related Tools & Technologies

Other website builders and platforms we detect

Ready to put Jekyll detection to work?

You now know what Jekyll is, why it matters, how to spot it, and where the detection signals come from. The next step is using that knowledge on a real URL — yours, a competitor's, or a prospect's.