We monitor the pages your business depends on.
Every modern company runs on a small set of pages — the homepage, pricing, signup, checkout, key docs. When those pages break silently, deals stall, search rankings slip, and AI assistants start describing your product wrong. KeyPages.ai exists to catch that drift the moment it happens.
Our mission
The web has gotten harder to trust. Pages render client-side, content is fetched from a dozen services, deploys ship hourly, and AI agents now read your site for millions of users who will never visit it themselves. A green status page no longer means a working business. We built KeyPages so teams can finally answer one question with confidence: are my most important pages actually working — for humans, for Google, and for AI?
What we believe
Page-first, not domain-first
Uptime monitors tell you a domain returned a 200. We tell you whether the page actually rendered, kept its content, and stayed readable.
Signal over noise
Alerts fire only when something that matters changes — content drops, broken metadata, missing CTAs — not on every byte that wiggles.
Built for modern discovery
Search engines, social previews, and AI agents all read your pages differently. We grade for all of them in one place.
Made for JavaScript-heavy sites
Real browser rendering means we catch the regressions that HTML-only checks and traditional crawlers silently skip over.
Why we built this
KeyPages started after watching the same pattern repeat at company after company: a deploy ships, the status page stays green, and three days later someone notices the pricing page lost half its content. By then the damage is done — lost signups, a dip in organic traffic, AI summaries describing a product that no longer exists.
We kept asking the same question: why does monitoring stop at “the server responded”? The page is the product. Its content, structure, and machine-readability are the things customers and crawlers actually care about. So we built a monitor that grades those things directly.
Today, KeyPages watches the pages teams cannot afford to lose — and tells them the moment something starts to slip.