Comparison

GTmetrix vs Little Warden in 2026: page speed diagnostics vs proactive site change alerts

One tells you exactly why a page loads slowly, waterfall chart included, for free. The other watches your whole site portfolio for the quiet failures, expired SSL, an edited robots.txt, that a speed test would never catch.

Updated July 3, 2026
GTmetrix
Little Warden
Key takeaways
  • GTmetrix has a genuinely usable free tier with waterfall charts and Core Web Vitals, no credit card required. Little Warden has no free tier at all, only a 40-day trial.
  • Little Warden runs 30+ pre-built checks including domain expiry, SSL certificate status, and robots.txt changes, none of which appear anywhere in GTmetrix's feature set.
  • GTmetrix tests one page at a time; Little Warden patrols a whole site portfolio on a schedule, from 20 URLs on Freelancer up to 5,000 on Large Agency.
  • Little Warden alerts through Slack, email, webhooks, and API on every plan above Freelancer. GTmetrix's monitoring is email-based and tied to test thresholds rather than site-configuration changes.
  • GTmetrix API access starts at $18/month (Starter). Little Warden API access starts at £34.99/month (Small Team), and neither tool offers white-label reporting.
  • GTmetrix scores 8.1/10 in our review, Little Warden 7.8/10, but the two are rated against different jobs: speed diagnostics versus incident alerting.

GTmetrix and Little Warden end up in the same "technical SEO tools" lists but answer different questions entirely. GTmetrix is a page speed testing tool: point it at a URL and get a waterfall chart, a Lighthouse score, and Core Web Vitals, free tier included. Little Warden is a change-monitoring tool: it runs 30-plus pre-built checks, domain expiry, SSL certificates, robots.txt edits, tracking tag removal, on a schedule across a whole site portfolio and pings Slack or email the moment something breaks. GTmetrix will never tell you a client's domain is about to lapse. Little Warden will never show you a waterfall chart of what is slowing a page down. Most agencies running both a crawler and a client roster end up needing something like each of these for different reasons, not one instead of the other.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
GTmetrixFreeDevelopers, freelancers, and agencies who need fast, trustworthy page speed diagnostics and are willing to run a separate tool for site-wide incident monitoring.
Little Warden£24.99/monthAgencies and freelance consultants managing a portfolio of client sites who need automated, scheduled alerts for domain expiry, SSL issues, robots.txt changes, and other silent failures.

GTmetrix

Page speed analysis with Lighthouse, Web Vitals, waterfall charts, and performance monitoring.

Full review →
GTmetrix screenshot

GTmetrix runs a page through a real Chromium browser and returns a waterfall chart, Core Web Vitals, and a Lighthouse-based score, all without a credit card on the free tier. The waterfall view is the reason it has stayed a default bookmark for developers: it makes render-blocking scripts and oversized assets visible at a glance, in a way a raw Lighthouse report does not.

Paid plans start at $5.50 a month for Solo and add monitoring slots, more test locations, and mobile device emulation, turning GTmetrix from a one-off diagnostic into light ongoing performance tracking. API access unlocks at the $18 Starter tier, useful for pulling results into a CI/CD pipeline.

What GTmetrix does not do is watch for anything outside performance metrics. It has no concept of domain expiry, SSL status, or robots.txt changes, and it tests the pages you tell it to test, not your whole site automatically. If a client's certificate lapses overnight, GTmetrix has nothing to say about it.

Pricing
Feature
Free
Free
Solo
$5.50/mo
Starter
$18/mo
Growth
$40/mo
On-demand testsLimited50/mo200/moUnlimited
Monitored pages01520
Test locations171422+
Mobile testingNoYesYesYes
API accessNoNoYesYes
Best for: Developers, freelancers, and agencies who need fast, trustworthy page speed diagnostics and are willing to run a separate tool for site-wide incident monitoring.

Little Warden

Website change monitoring tool that alerts you before domain expiry, SSL issues, or critical SEO changes cost your clients rankings

Full review →
Little Warden screenshot

Little Warden exists to catch the failures nobody notices until a client does. It runs more than 30 pre-built checks, domain expiry, SSL certificate status, robots.txt edits, redirect chains, canonical tags, tracking tag presence, content changes, on a schedule across an entire site portfolio, then alerts you through Slack, email, webhook, or API the moment something changes.

Core Web Vitals is one of the 30-plus checks Little Warden runs, but it is a change-detection signal rather than a diagnostic one: it tells you a score moved, not why. That is the tradeoff for covering an entire portfolio automatically instead of testing pages one at a time. Pricing runs from £24.99 a month for 20 URLs up to £149.99 for 5,000, with a 40-day free trial and no card required to start.

What Little Warden will not do is replace a speed testing tool. There is no waterfall chart, no resource-level breakdown of what is slowing a page down, and no white-label reporting layer for handing a client a branded deliverable. It is a monitoring and alerting tool, deliberately narrow, meant to sit alongside whatever crawler or speed tool an agency already runs.

Pricing
Feature
Freelancer
£24.99/month
Small Team
£34.99/month
Agency
£59.99/month
Large Agency
£149.99/month
URLs patrolled201006505,000
Data retention2 weeks1 month3 months6 months
Checks per URLUp to 10Up to 15Up to 20Up to 30
Team members1UnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
API access
Slack alerts
Best for: Agencies and freelance consultants managing a portfolio of client sites who need automated, scheduled alerts for domain expiry, SSL issues, robots.txt changes, and other silent failures.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
GTmetrix
Little Warden
Core functionPage speed testing and diagnosticsChange monitoring and alerting
Free tierYes, full diagnostic on the free tierNo (40-day trial only)
Waterfall / resource-level diagnosticsYes, core featureNo
Domain and SSL expiry alertsNoYes, core feature
Robots.txt and redirect change monitoringNoYes, core feature
Core Web Vitals monitoringYes, via its own test runsYes, as one of 30+ checks
Scheduled monitoring across a site portfolioIndividual monitored pages, capped by tierYes, whole portfolio on a schedule
Multi-channel alerts (Slack, email, webhook, API)Email alerts on paid plansYes, Slack, email, webhook, API
White-label reportingNoNo
API accessStarter plan and aboveSmall Team plan and above
Starting priceFree£24.99/mo

Which should you choose?

Anyone who needs to know why one page is slow, right now, for freeGTmetrix
Agencies needing alerts before a client site breaks (domain, SSL, robots.txt)Little Warden
Teams that want a resource-level waterfall chart to diagnose a slow pageGTmetrix
Freelancers watching a portfolio of client sites between check-insLittle Warden
Teams that need scheduled monitoring across their whole site, not just chosen pagesLittle Warden
Developers wanting API access to feed speed data into a CI/CD pipelineGTmetrix

These two are not competing for the same job, which is why the comparison keeps coming up without a clean winner. GTmetrix answers "why is this page slow" better than almost anything else at the price. Little Warden answers "did anything on this site quietly break since yesterday" for an entire portfolio at once, a question GTmetrix never asks. An agency that only owns one of these tools is missing half the picture: either they can diagnose speed but will not know a certificate is expiring, or they will catch the SSL lapse but have no waterfall chart to fix the next slow page.

Bottom line

Reach for GTmetrix's free tier the moment a page needs a speed diagnosis, it costs nothing and the waterfall chart usually points straight at the fix. Add Little Warden once you are managing more than a couple of client sites and need something watching for domain expiry, SSL, and robots.txt changes without you having to remember to check. They are cheap enough, £24.99 and up for Little Warden, free to start for GTmetrix, that running both is a reasonable default for any agency with a real client portfolio.

Frequently asked questions

Can Little Warden replace GTmetrix for diagnosing a slow page?

No, Little Warden tracks Core Web Vitals as one of its 30-plus change-detection checks, but it has no waterfall chart or resource-level breakdown of what is causing the slowdown. GTmetrix is built specifically for that diagnosis, showing exactly which script, image, or third-party resource is holding up the page load.

Does GTmetrix alert me if a client's domain or SSL certificate is about to expire?

No, GTmetrix has no domain or SSL expiry monitoring of any kind, its feature set is entirely about page speed and Core Web Vitals testing. Little Warden is purpose-built for exactly this, tracking domain and SSL expiration dates and sending advance warnings before they lapse.

Which tool is cheaper for a freelancer managing a handful of client sites?

GTmetrix is cheaper to start with, its free tier covers basic speed diagnostics with no cost at all, and Solo is $5.50 a month. Little Warden starts at £24.99 a month for 20 URLs, higher upfront, but it is solving a different problem, portfolio-wide change alerting, that GTmetrix does not attempt.

Does either tool offer white-label reporting for client deliverables?

Neither one does. GTmetrix has no white-label option at any price, and Little Warden confirms it has none either, listing it as a limitation for agencies wanting a polished, branded client deliverable. Both tools are better suited to internal dashboards or manual exports than client-facing white-label reports.

Is Little Warden worth it if I already run scheduled monitoring in GTmetrix?

Yes, because GTmetrix's scheduled monitoring only covers the specific pages you configure and only tracks speed metrics. Little Warden monitors an entire site for 30-plus non-speed issues, domain expiry, SSL, robots.txt, tracking tags, that a GTmetrix monitoring slot was never built to catch, so the two forms of monitoring genuinely do not overlap.

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