The Best Technical SEO Tools for Developer-Led Teams in 2026
7 technical SEO tools compared on the things a developer-led team checks first: whether crawl and log data ships out through a real API, whether performance checks slot into CI/CD, and whether the tool works self-hosted or from the command line instead of a vendor dashboard.
Oncrawl's REST API is genuinely one of the strongest in the category, piping crawl, log, and performance data into BigQuery, Looker Studio, or Tableau, but there is no self-serve plan: every engagement starts with a demo and a custom quote.
Screaming Frog SEO Spider pairs a scriptable API and custom XPath, CSS, and regex extraction with a flat £199-a-year license, so you own the data pipeline outright with no per-seat SaaS tax.
WebPageTest is open source and self-hostable outright, and the $9.89/month Pro API tier is the cheapest programmatic access to deep waterfall and filmstrip data in this list.
Calibre's Automation API and CLI are built specifically to fail a CI/CD build when a performance budget is breached, with API and CLI access included on every paid tier starting at $75/month.
Treo saves you from hand-rolling a CrUX API wrapper, bundling real Chrome UX Report data, Lighthouse audits, and API access together from $75/month on the Vital plan.
Little Warden ships API access alongside Slack, email, and webhook alerts from its £34.99/month Small Team plan, turning site-integrity monitoring into an incident feed instead of a dashboard you have to remember to check.
ContentKing's Data API and MCP server exist, but both come with an asterisk: the API is confirmed Enterprise-tier only, and the MCP server's availability on lower tiers is left unconfirmed even by the vendor's own FAQ.
Technical SEO is the one category on this site that was built by and for engineers in the first place, so the API question here is less about whether it exists and more about which layer of your stack it plugs into: a crawl API, a log ingestion pipeline, a CI/CD webhook, or a CLI you can script directly. You are not looking for a nicer dashboard, you are looking for structured crawl and performance data you can pull into your own monitoring, fail a build on, or feed into an internal tool without asking a vendor's sales team first. The tools below range from a £199-a-year desktop crawler with a scriptable API to enterprise log analyzers that gate their REST API behind a demo call, and the difference between them is exactly the difference between a Tuesday afternoon integration and a quarter-long procurement process.
- You find an enterprise crawler or log analyzer you like, then discover you have to sit through a demo before you even know if its API matches your data model
- Performance monitoring tools force you to choose between a clean dashboard and a scriptable API, when you need both feeding the same CI/CD pipeline
- You end up hand-rolling your own wrapper around Google's public CrUX API because the vendor tool in front of you treats that data as a premium add-on
- Desktop and self-hosted tools give you full control over your data, but leave scheduling, team access, and collaboration as your problem to solve
What you should look for
Can you get a working API key, CLI, or export endpoint on a plan you can self-serve into right now, or does the integration you need sit behind a demo call and a custom quote?
Can you trigger the tool from a deploy pipeline, fail a build on a budget breach, or run it headless, or does it assume a human clicking a button in a dashboard?
Once you have crawl, log, or performance data, can you get it out cleanly through CSV, a BigQuery or Looker Studio connector, or webhooks, or are you stuck reading it inside the vendor's UI?
If keeping raw data on your own infrastructure matters to you, can you self-host or run the tool locally, or are you required to send everything through a vendor's cloud?
Tools at a glance
Oncrawl
Cloud-based technical SEO platform combining crawl data, log analysis, and AI bot tracking.
You get one of the most credible REST APIs in technical SEO here: Oncrawl exposes crawl, log, and performance data in a structured format that plugs cleanly into Looker Studio, BigQuery, or Tableau, so the platform can sit behind your own reporting layer instead of being the reporting layer. Log file analysis is a first-class part of the product, not a bolt-on, which matters if your team already has a habit of parsing server logs and wants a vendor that speaks that language natively.
The catch is access: there is no published pricing and no self-serve signup, so before you can test whether the API actually fits your data model you have to sit through a demo and a sales conversation. If your team wants to evaluate an API on your own schedule rather than a vendor's, budget the time for that call rather than expecting to spin up a trial account this afternoon.
| Feature | Enterprise Contact for pricing |
|---|---|
| Pricing model | Custom |
- Log file analysis is a core feature, not an add-on: it tracks how Googlebot and AI crawlers interact with your site at the URL level
- REST API is well-documented and robust, making it practical to pipe crawl and log data into custom reporting pipelines or BI tools
- AI bot crawl tracking and AI-generated answer visibility monitoring are increasingly relevant as AI search grows in share
- Enterprise pricing with no self-serve option creates friction for teams that want to evaluate the product before committing to a sales conversation
- The platform requires significant configuration to get the most out of it: teams without dedicated technical SEO staff may not use it to its potential
- Crawl scheduling and alerting, while present, are less flexible than some competitors at similar price points
Screaming Frog SEO Spider
The industry-standard desktop crawler for technical SEO audits.
At £199 a year for an unlimited-URL license, Screaming Frog is the cheapest way to own your crawl pipeline outright. The API and the custom XPath, CSS, and regex extraction rules mean you can pull any data point off a page, price, review count, a custom meta field, and treat the Spider as a flexible local data source rather than a fixed report generator.
It is a desktop app, though, so there is no cloud scheduling or team dashboard without wiring that up yourself. If your workflow is a script that kicks off a crawl, reads the export, and feeds it into your own pipeline, that constraint barely matters. If you wanted a hosted, collaborative tool your whole team logs into, look elsewhere on this list.
| Feature | Free Free (limited to 500 URLs) | Single License £199/year | 5-9 Licenses £189 per license/year | 10-19 Licenses £179 per license/year | 20+ Licenses £169 per license/year |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| URL limit | 500 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| Server log analysis | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Google integrations | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| JavaScript rendering | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Custom extraction | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
- Unmatched depth of crawl data for the price, including server log analysis at no extra cost
- Cross-platform desktop app with no URL limits on the paid license, making large site audits practical
- Integrates directly with Google Analytics, Search Console, and PageSpeed Insights for enriched reports
- Desktop app model means no collaborative dashboards or scheduled cloud crawls without additional tooling
- Learning curve is steep for non-technical users; the interface prioritizes raw data over guided workflows
- Crawl speed depends on local machine resources, which can be a bottleneck on very large sites
WebPageTest
The open-source gold standard for deep web performance diagnostics, trusted by engineers at Google, Mozilla, and every serious web team.
WebPageTest is open source and genuinely self-hostable, which means you can run the exact same waterfall, filmstrip, and HAR-level diagnostics against an internal staging environment that a vendor's cloud crawler will never reach. The free public instance already outperforms most paid competitors, and the $9.89/month Pro API tier is the cheapest programmatic access to that data in this entire list.
Continuous monitoring and trend dashboards are not the point here: the free tier queues can slow down at peak hours, and you will still want a dedicated monitoring tool like Calibre or Treo for tracking metrics over time. Use WebPageTest for deep, one-off diagnostic work and API-driven experiments, then pair it with something else for the always-on view.
| Feature | Free Free | Pro API (Starter) $9.89/month |
|---|---|---|
| On-demand tests | Shared queue | Priority access |
| Global test locations | 30+ | 30+ |
| Filmstrip and video replay | Yes | Yes |
| Lighthouse integration | Yes | Yes |
| API access | No | Yes |
| Continuous monitoring | No | Yes |
- Deepest diagnostic output of any free performance tool, including filmstrip, waterfall, and raw HAR data
- Real browser testing across 30-plus global locations with full control over connection speed and device profile
- Open-source codebase maintained by Catchpoint with active development and a strong community
- Interface is complex and assumes performance expertise, which makes it inaccessible to beginners
- Continuous monitoring and API access require a paid Pro plan
- Free tier queues can be slow during peak hours at popular test locations
Calibre
Web performance monitoring platform that unifies real user monitoring, Google CrUX data, and synthetic page speed tests for teams serious about site speed.
Calibre's Automation API and CLI are built for exactly the workflow you want: trigger a test from a CI/CD pipeline, fail the build when a performance budget is breached, and query historical data from the command line without opening a dashboard. API and CLI access is included on every paid tier from $75/month, not gated to a top plan.
The constraint is session volume: the Starter plan's 5,000 RUM sessions a month get eaten quickly by any site with real traffic, and the jump from Team at $150/month to Company at $1,500/month leaves no middle tier for a growing team. Budget for that cliff before you build a CI/CD integration around Calibre's real-user data specifically.
| Feature | Starter $75/month | Team $150/month | Company $1,500/month |
|---|---|---|---|
| Real User sessions per month | 5,000 | 10,000 | 1,000,000 |
| Synthetic tests per month | 5,000 | 15,000 | 50,000 |
| Google CrUX data | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Team seats | 3 | 10 | 50 |
| API and CLI access | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| RUM data retention | 90 days | 1 year | 2 years |
| Priority support | No | No | Yes |
- Integrates RUM, synthetic testing, and Google CrUX data in a single platform with a consistent interface
- Automation API and CLI make it straightforward to integrate performance checks into CI/CD pipelines
- Clean dashboard that is actionable without expert configuration
- Starter plan includes only 5,000 RUM sessions per month, which is easily exceeded by moderate-traffic sites
- The jump from Team at $150 per month to Company at $1,500 per month leaves no middle ground for growing teams
- No free tier after the 15-day trial
Treo exists specifically so you do not have to write your own wrapper around Google's CrUX API. It combines real Chrome UX Report field data with Lighthouse lab data and ships API access from the $75/month Vital plan, so you can pull both into your own Looker Studio dashboards or client portals without touching Google's raw API yourself.
Sitemap-based auto-discovery means there is no tagging or script installation, which is convenient until you need tighter control over exactly which URLs get monitored. CrUX data itself only covers URLs with enough real-user traffic too, so new or low-traffic pages will show gaps in field data no matter how good Treo's API access is.
| Feature | Free $0/month | Vital $75/month | Pro $185/month | Scale $375/month | Enterprise Contact for pricing |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Sites monitored | 1 | Up to 5 | Up to 15 | Up to 50 | Custom |
| CrUX field data | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Lighthouse audits | Limited | Hourly | Hourly | Hourly | Custom |
| Competitive benchmarking | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| API access | No | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes |
- Uses real Chrome UX Report data, not just synthetic Lighthouse scores, which reflects how actual users experience your pages
- Competitive benchmarking lets you track Core Web Vitals against competitor domains side by side
- Sitemap scanning automatically discovers and monitors URLs without manual configuration or script installation
- Pricing scales aggressively: the jump from Free to Vital at $75/month is steep for what is essentially a monitoring layer on top of public data
- Feature set is narrower than all-in-one technical SEO platforms; it does performance monitoring well but nothing else
- CrUX data only covers URLs with sufficient real-user traffic, meaning new or low-traffic pages may show no field data at all
Little Warden
Website change monitoring tool that alerts you before domain expiry, SSL issues, or critical SEO changes cost your clients rankings
Little Warden is the one tool here that treats API and webhook access as core plumbing rather than a premium add-on: from the £34.99/month Small Team plan, you get API access alongside Slack, email, and webhook delivery, so a domain-expiry warning or a robots.txt change can land directly in your incident-management tooling instead of a dashboard you have to remember to check.
It is narrow by design. Little Warden does not crawl your site for SEO issues or track rankings, it watches for the specific things that break silently: SSL expiry, redirect chains, tracking-tag removal, Core Web Vitals regressions. Pair it with a proper crawler for full audits, and use it for the alerts a crawler run once a week will not catch in between.
| Feature | Freelancer £24.99/month | Small Team £34.99/month | Agency £59.99/month | Large Agency £149.99/month |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| URLs patrolled | 20 | 100 | 650 | 5,000 |
| Data retention | 2 weeks | 1 month | 3 months | 6 months |
| Checks per URL | Up to 10 | Up to 15 | Up to 20 | Up to 30 |
| Team members | 1 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| API access | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Slack alerts | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Google Sheets export | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
- Monitors 30+ pre-built checks covering domain expiry, SSL, redirects, robots.txt, Core Web Vitals, and tracking tags across your entire site portfolio
- Multi-channel alerting via Slack, email, API, and webhooks routes notifications to wherever your team works
- API access on Small Team and above plans enables integration with custom workflows and incident management systems
- No white-label reporting, which limits its use as a standalone client-facing deliverable for agencies
- Focused exclusively on monitoring and alerting rather than auditing or rank tracking, so you need separate tools for those functions
- Data retention is limited on lower plans (2 weeks on Freelancer), reducing historical context for post-incident investigations
ContentKing
24/7 website monitoring that catches AEO and SEO technical issues before they cost you traffic
ContentKing runs a genuinely different model from everything else here: continuous 24/7 crawling instead of scheduled runs, with a Data API and an MCP server for pulling monitoring data into your own tooling or querying it from an AI agent. For a site where a broken canonical tag needs to be caught in minutes rather than at next week's crawl, that always-on model is a real technical advantage.
Both integration paths come with an asterisk, though. The Data API is confirmed Enterprise-tier only, and Conductor's own FAQ describes the MCP server as available across tiers rather than firmly included, which means you should get the exact scope in writing before assuming your quote covers it. There is also no published pricing at all, so the sales conversation starts before you know whether the access you need is even on the table.
| Feature | Essentials Contact for pricing | Growth Contact for pricing | Enterprise Contact for pricing |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pages monitored 24/7 | Up to 100,000 | Up to 500,000 | Custom |
| Websites tracked | 3 | 5 | 10+ |
| Keywords tracked | 500 | 5,000 | 60,000+ |
| Tracked competitors | 5 | 25 | 75+ |
| Core Web Vitals | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| HTTP header snapshots | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Log file analysis (AI crawlers) | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
| Custom element extraction | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
| Real-time IndexNow | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
| HTTP body snapshots | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
| Data API | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
| SSO | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Enterprise permissions (RBAC) | ✗ | ✗ | ✓ |
- 24/7 continuous monitoring rather than weekly or on-demand crawls
- 60 months of snapshot history for auditing, compliance, and root-cause diagnosis
- Alerts route to the right person and channel at the right sensitivity level
- Issues are ranked by business impact so teams work highest-ROI fixes first
- Log file analysis now covers AI crawlers such as GPTBot and ClaudeBot
- MCP server and Data API available for integration with developer workflows
- No published pricing: requires a demo or sales call to see numbers
- Not designed for freelancers or small agencies on a budget
- AI visibility monitoring is limited to crawl-health signals, not AI citation tracking
- Some advanced features (log file analysis, HTTP body snapshots) locked to Enterprise tier
Which technical SEO tool should you actually build on?
If a REST API you can build a real data pipeline against is the requirement, Oncrawl and ContentKing both have the technical depth, log analysis and continuous crawling respectively, but both also make you sit through a demo before you see a price or confirm what the API actually includes. If you would rather own the pipeline outright and script around it locally, Screaming Frog gives you an API and custom extraction for £199 a year with nobody to call first, and WebPageTest goes further by being fully self-hostable with a $9.89/month API tier on top. For CI/CD specifically, Calibre's Automation API and CLI are built for exactly that workflow from $75/month, while Treo solves the narrower problem of CrUX and Lighthouse data behind an API instead of a custom Google integration. Little Warden rounds this out as the cheapest way to get webhook and API-driven alerts into your own incident tooling rather than a dashboard you have to check. Match the pick to the actual integration you are building, a data pipeline, a CI/CD hook, or an alerting feed, rather than picking whichever tool scored highest on a feature list.
Frequently asked questions
What is the best technical SEO tool for developers who want API access without an enterprise sales call?
Screaming Frog SEO Spider and Calibre are your best bets if you want to start building against an API today. Screaming Frog gives you a scriptable API and custom extraction rules for a flat £199 a year with no sales call required, and Calibre includes its Automation API and CLI on every paid tier starting at $75/month, both self-serve from signup.
Which technical SEO tools support CI/CD pipeline integration?
Calibre and WebPageTest are both built for this. Calibre's Automation API and CLI can trigger tests from a deploy pipeline and fail a build when a performance budget is exceeded, and WebPageTest's Pro API tier at $9.89/month supports the same kind of programmatic triggering for deep diagnostic runs.
Is there a technical SEO tool I can self-host instead of relying on a vendor's cloud?
WebPageTest is the clearest option: it is fully open source and can run on your own infrastructure, which is useful for testing internal staging environments a cloud crawler cannot reach. Screaming Frog also keeps your data local since it is a desktop app, though that is a different kind of ownership than true self-hosting.
Which technical SEO tools gate their API behind an enterprise or demo-only plan?
Oncrawl and ContentKing both require a sales conversation before you see pricing, and their API access follows the same pattern. Oncrawl's REST API is a genuine strength but only available through a custom Enterprise contract, and ContentKing's Data API is confirmed Enterprise-tier only, with even its MCP server's tier availability left unconfirmed by the vendor. Budget time for a demo call if either tool's API is a hard requirement.
What is the cheapest way to get real Core Web Vitals and CrUX data into my own dashboards?
Treo is built specifically for this: it bundles real Chrome UX Report field data and Lighthouse lab data behind an API starting at $75/month on the Vital plan, which is meaningfully cheaper than hand-rolling your own integration against Google's public CrUX API and building the dashboarding yourself.
Can I get webhook alerts for site changes like SSL expiry or broken redirects routed into Slack or my own tools?
Little Warden is built for exactly this. From its £34.99/month Small Team plan, it delivers alerts via API, webhook, email, and Slack simultaneously, so a domain-expiry or robots.txt change can trigger your own incident-management workflow instead of waiting for someone to check a dashboard.