Website monitoring & availability alerts

Track uptime for landing pages, business sites, and client projects from one dashboard. Know about downtime before users report it — with alerts by email, Telegram, or webhook.

What website monitoring checks

HTTP and HTTPS monitors hit your URLs on a schedule you control. You see whether the site responds, how long it takes, and when incidents start and end — without logging into hosting panels for every client.

Why it matters before users notice

Downtime hurts revenue and trust. External checks run outside your hosting, so you still get notified when DNS, TLS, or the origin misbehaves — not only when someone opens a ticket.

Alerts and incident history

Route failures to email, Telegram, or webhook. Each incident records timing and outcome so you can brief stakeholders or dig into what changed. Optional keyword checks help confirm critical text still appears on the page.

Who uses it

Agencies watching many small sites, freelancers with a handful of retainers, and in-house teams protecting marketing sites or internal tools. One lightweight workflow instead of stitching together several products.

Common issues you’ll catch

Unexpected 5xx responses, timeouts, slow TTFB, and broken deploys that leave the homepage empty. Pair website checks with SSL and domain monitors so certificate or renewal problems surface in the same inbox.

Simple alerting workflow

Pick contacts per monitor or reuse company defaults. When something fails, you get a clear signal; when it recovers, the incident closes so you’re not guessing whether the site is back.

Related monitoring types

Combine website checks with uptime-style ping monitoring for reachability, SSL expiry alerts, and API monitors for backends that power the same product. Explore each topic below when you’re ready to go deeper.

Get started

Add a URL, choose an interval that matches your plan, and attach alert contacts. SitePuls runs checks from our infrastructure around the clock so your dashboard reflects real-world availability.

Frequently asked questions

What is website monitoring?

Website monitoring checks your sites and APIs at regular intervals from our infrastructure. If a check fails or response time degrades, you get an alert so you can fix issues before users are affected.

How do I get alerts when my site goes down?

Configure alert contacts (email, Telegram, or webhook). When a check fails, SitePuls notifies your contacts immediately. You can also use smart alerts to get early warnings when response times start to degrade.

Can I monitor APIs and SSL as well?

Yes. SitePuls supports HTTP/HTTPS, REST API (including multi-step flows), SSL certificate expiry, domain expiry, ping, keyword checks, and heartbeat monitoring. You can combine them in one dashboard and share a public status page.

How is this different from only using hosting uptime?

Hosting dashboards focus on the server you bought. SitePuls runs independent checks from our side, similar to how a visitor reaches your site — useful when DNS, CDN, or certificate issues sit outside the host’s panel.

Can I monitor client sites in one account?

Yes. Add monitors for each URL you care about under your company workspace. Use tags and naming to separate clients, and attach the right alert contacts so the right people get paged.

Do you support keyword or content checks?

Yes. Keyword monitors verify that expected text appears on the page — helpful after deploys when the HTTP status is 200 but the content is wrong.

What notification channels are available?

Email, Telegram, and webhooks. Configure contacts under Alert contacts and assign them to monitors so failures reach Slack or your stack via webhook if you wire it up.

Is there a public status page?

You can publish an optional read-only status page for selected monitors so customers see high-level availability without logging into SitePuls.