Calibre vs Little Warden in 2026: Speed monitoring vs proactive change alerting
Both tools carry the "monitoring" label, but they watch for completely different failures. One tracks how fast your pages load; the other tracks whether your site is still intact.
Calibre combines real user monitoring, synthetic testing, and Google CrUX data in one platform. Little Warden does not track page speed as a primary function, though Core Web Vitals is one of its 30+ checks.
Little Warden monitors domain expiry, SSL certificates, robots.txt changes, and redirect breakage, none of which Calibre checks for at all.
Calibre starts at $75/month with a 15-day free trial and no free tier afterward. Little Warden starts at £24.99/month with a 40-day free trial and a 30-day money-back guarantee.
Calibre gates real user monitoring hard: the Starter plan includes only 5,000 RUM sessions per month, easily exceeded by a moderately trafficked site.
Little Warden sends alerts over Slack, email, webhooks, and API. Calibre relies on email alerts and its API/CLI for automation rather than multi-channel routing.
Neither tool offers white-label reporting, which limits both as a standalone client-facing deliverable for agencies.
Calibre and Little Warden both sit in the technical SEO monitoring space, but a side-by-side only makes sense once you separate what each one is actually watching. Calibre unifies real user monitoring, synthetic testing, and Google CrUX data into one performance dashboard built for teams that treat page speed as a metric worth automating into CI/CD. Little Warden ignores speed almost entirely and instead runs a checklist of 30-plus site-integrity checks, domain expiry, SSL certificates, robots.txt edits, redirect chains, tracking tag removal, on a schedule, alerting you before a client notices something broke. If your problem is "our Core Web Vitals keep slipping," Calibre is the tool built for that. If your problem is "we found out our client's SSL certificate expired from the client, not from us," Little Warden is the one built for that. Agencies running large portfolios often end up wanting both rather than picking one.
The tools at a glance
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 brings together three types of performance data that most teams manage in separate tools: real user monitoring captured from actual visitor sessions, scheduled synthetic tests run from controlled environments, and Google CrUX data showing how Google itself measures your Core Web Vitals. Having all three on the same date range and filtering options removes the guesswork of reconciling exports from different dashboards.
The Automation API and CLI are the feature that separates Calibre from a typical speed-testing tool. Development teams can trigger tests from CI/CD pipelines, fail builds when a performance budget is exceeded, and query historical data from the terminal without opening a browser. That workflow fit is why Calibre tends to win with engineering-led teams rather than marketing-led ones.
The tradeoff shows up in the pricing tiers. Starter includes just 5,000 RUM sessions a month, which a site with real traffic will burn through fast, and the jump from Team at $150/month to Company at $1,500/month leaves nothing in between for a growing team that has outgrown Starter but is nowhere near enterprise scale.
| 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 |
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 built around a specific fear that anyone running client sites knows well: the change nobody notices until it becomes an incident. It runs a configurable set of over 30 pre-built checks on a schedule, domain expiry, SSL certificate status, robots.txt edits, redirect chains, canonical tags, Google Analytics tracking code, Core Web Vitals, content changes, and sends alerts the moment something shifts.
The multi-channel alerting is the practical strength here. Notifications route through Slack, email, webhooks, or API, so a change gets surfaced wherever the team already works instead of requiring someone to log in and check a dashboard. For agencies running a Slack-first operations flow, that's the difference between catching a broken redirect in minutes and finding out from an angry client email.
Little Warden is deliberately narrow. It does not crawl your site for SEO issues, track rankings, or generate content audits, and it has no white-label reporting, so it works better as an internal early-warning system than as a client-facing deliverable. Data retention is also thin on the entry plan, just two weeks on Freelancer, which limits how far back you can investigate after something breaks.
| 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 | No | Yes | Yes | Yes |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Real user monitoring (RUM) | Yes, from 5,000 sessions/month on Starter | No |
| Synthetic/scheduled performance testing | Yes, up to 5,000 tests/month on Starter | No |
| Google CrUX field data | Yes, pulled directly into dashboards | No |
| Domain & SSL expiry alerts | No | Yes, core feature |
| Robots.txt & redirect change detection | No | Yes, core feature |
| Core Web Vitals tracking | Yes, via RUM and synthetic tests | Yes, one of 30+ checks |
| Alert channels | Email alerts | Slack, email, webhooks, API |
| CI/CD automation (API/CLI) | Yes, Automation API and CLI | API only on Small Team and above, no CLI |
| Data export | Yes, CSV export | Yes, Google Sheets export |
| White-label reporting | No | No |
| Free trial | 15 days, no credit card required | 40 days, plus 30-day money-back guarantee |
| Starting price | $75/month | £24.99/month |
Which should you choose?
These tools rarely compete for the same budget line because they solve different failures. Calibre answers "is our site fast, and is it getting slower," with data granular enough to catch a regression after a specific deploy. Little Warden answers "is our site still intact," catching the kind of change, an expired certificate, a robots.txt edit, a stripped-out GA tag, that has nothing to do with speed but can just as easily tank a client relationship. An agency running more than a handful of client sites will likely find it needs both eventually, since neither one covers the other's territory.
Bottom line
Choose Calibre if page speed and Core Web Vitals are the metric you are accountable for and you want RUM, synthetic tests, and CrUX data without stitching together three tools. Choose Little Warden if your bigger risk is a client site quietly breaking, an expired domain, a stripped tracking tag, a robots.txt mistake, before anyone on your team notices. Budget-conscious agencies managing many sites will likely get more immediate value from Little Warden's low entry price and broad check coverage; performance-focused engineering teams will get more from Calibre's CI/CD integration.
Frequently asked questions
Is Calibre or Little Warden better for catching a client site going down overnight?
Little Warden is built specifically for catching a site going down or breaking overnight, with alerts sent to Slack, email, webhooks, or API the moment something changes. Its 30+ checks cover domain expiry, SSL certificate status, and redirect breakage on a recurring schedule. Calibre does not monitor for these kinds of site-integrity issues at all; it focuses on page speed data.
Can Little Warden replace Calibre for Core Web Vitals monitoring?
Little Warden can flag that a Core Web Vitals score has regressed since it is one of its 30+ checks, but it cannot replace Calibre for real diagnosis. It does not offer the real user monitoring, synthetic waterfall data, or Google CrUX comparison that Calibre provides for actually understanding why a page slowed down.
Why does Calibre pricing jump so much between the Team and Company plans?
Calibre's Team plan is $150/month with 10,000 RUM sessions, and Company jumps to $1,500/month with 1,000,000 sessions. There is no plan in between, so a team that outgrows Team's session limit but does not need enterprise-scale volume faces a ten-times price increase with no middle option.
Does either tool offer white-label reporting for agency clients?
Neither Calibre nor Little Warden offers white-label reporting, which is a real gap for agencies that want to hand a branded report directly to a client rather than screenshotting a dashboard.
Is Little Warden priced in dollars or pounds?
Little Warden lists pricing in GBP by default (from £24.99/month), though the site also offers USD and EUR toggle options. Calibre prices in USD only, starting at $75/month.
Which tool has a longer free trial, Calibre or Little Warden?
Little Warden offers a 40-day free trial plus a 30-day money-back guarantee on paid plans. Calibre offers a 15-day free trial with no credit card required, and there is no free tier once the trial ends.

