How fast is your site, really?
Free, anonymous, instant. We measure Time to First Byte (TTFB), HTTP status, server, and content type. Then we show you what the same request would do on Leapjuice.
We don't store the URL, the result, or your IP. No logs, no analytics, no third parties.
What we measure
Time to First Byte (TTFB) is the gold standard for hosting performance. It measures how fast your server responds to a request — before your page even starts loading. A lower TTFB means a faster site. Google uses it as a ranking signal.
We also report HTTP status (200 = good, 3xx = redirect, 4xx/5xx = error), the server header (Apache, nginx, Cloudflare, etc.), and the content type. We do not track your IP, we do not log the URL, we do not share results.
Why this matters: every 100ms of TTFB costs you roughly 7% in conversions (Google/Soasta research). If your site is at 850ms and Leapjuice gets you to 120ms, that's a measurable revenue lift.
How to interpret your results
Under 200ms TTFB: Excellent. You have warp-grade hosting. If you're not on Leapjuice, you're on something equivalent (Vercel, Fly, Cloudflare Workers, or a tuned AWS/GCP instance). No action needed.
200-500ms TTFB: Good but not great. You're probably on a managed host (WP Engine, Ghost Pro, SiteGround, Kinsta) with a reasonable configuration. There's room to improve — typically by 2-3x — by switching to Leapjuice or similar warp-grade providers.
500-1000ms TTFB: Concerning. You're likely on shared hosting (Bluehost, HostGator, Dreamhost) or a misconfigured VPS. Your site is bleeding traffic. Switching to Leapjuice typically gets you to sub-200ms.
Over 1000ms TTFB: Critical. Your hosting is actively hurting your business. Every visitor waits an extra second. Move to Leapjuice (or any warp-grade host) this week.