Free Privacy Checker

Free Privacy Checker

Check a public page for GDPR and privacy-facing signals like policy links, cookie controls, tracking scripts, email capture transparency, and basic security headers.

Privacy policy link detectionCookie banner control detectionModern tracking script detectionEmail capture without privacy cues

Free Privacy Checker

Enter a public page to check for policy visibility, cookie controls, tracking signals, and baseline privacy-facing signals. You can use a full URL or just a domain. This hosted pass is capped at 2 free scans per day. This is not legal advice.

2 free scans/day

Result Panel

Run a first-pass privacy check

You will get a lightweight summary of privacy-facing signals, surfaced issues, tracking detections, and scan limitations for the URL you submit.

Scope

Public privacy signals, not legal theater

The privacy checker is designed to catch obvious public-page gaps around policy visibility, cookie controls, tracking signals, email capture transparency, and baseline security-header presence.

  • 2 free hosted scans per day
  • Focused on public GDPR-facing website signals
  • Useful for quick prospect reviews and pre-launch checks
  • Does not inspect consent platform logic, data storage, or back-office practices

Next Step

How to use the result

Use the findings to review your cookie messaging, privacy-link visibility, and tracking setup. Then move into the desktop app when you need broader local scans and more than the hosted daily limit.

  • This is a public-page standards check, not legal advice and not a formal GDPR opinion.
  • Cookie behavior inside JavaScript flows or consent platforms may need manual verification.
  • Use the findings to tighten policy visibility, consent messaging, and tracking setup.

Other Free Tools

Use the free scans to test the site. Then download the app.

Olite is leading with two free public-page checks so the product stays concrete: accessibility signals and privacy standards. The hosted tools are capped at 2 free scans per day, and the desktop app is the path to broader local-first scanning after that.