Comparison

URL Profiler vs WebPageTest in 2026: Bulk desktop SEO data collection vs deep single-page performance diagnostics

One is a Windows/Mac desktop app that pulls link, content, and PageSpeed data across a million URLs in one run. The other is a free, open-source tool that tells you exactly why one page is slow.

Updated July 3, 2026
URL Profiler
WebPageTest
Key takeaways
  • URL Profiler processes up to 1,000,000 URLs per import on its Pro and Agency plans; WebPageTest is built around testing one URL (or a handful for comparison) in deep diagnostic detail at a time.
  • WebPageTest's core product is free with no account required. URL Profiler starts at $19.95/month (Solo, billed yearly) with a 14-day free trial and no credit card needed.
  • URL Profiler pulls Google PageSpeed scores in bulk alongside link metrics, content analysis, and email harvesting. WebPageTest goes far deeper on a per-URL basis with full waterfall, filmstrip, and raw HAR data that URL Profiler does not surface.
  • URL Profiler requires you to bring your own Moz, Majestic, and Ahrefs API keys for link metrics. WebPageTest requires no external API keys for its free-tier diagnostics.
  • WebPageTest is open source and can be self-hosted for testing internal or staging environments. URL Profiler is proprietary desktop software with no self-hosting option.
  • Only WebPageTest offers real browser testing from 30-plus global locations with device and connection throttling. URL Profiler has no location-based or device-emulation testing at all.

URL Profiler and WebPageTest both touch page speed, but they are not really solving the same problem. URL Profiler is a desktop app built to process bulk URL lists, pulling link metrics from your own Moz, Majestic, or Ahrefs API keys, content readability scores, email addresses, WHOIS data, and PageSpeed scores across up to a million URLs in a single import. WebPageTest is a free, open-source diagnostic tool that runs real browser tests from 30-plus global locations and shows you exactly which request, script, or render-blocking resource is making one specific page slow. If you are auditing a whole site or building an outreach list, URL Profiler does the heavy lifting. If you are debugging why a single page has a bad LCP, WebPageTest gives you the waterfall and filmstrip data to find out.

The tools at a glance

ToolStarting priceBest for
URL Profiler$19.95/month (billed yearly)Agency SEOs, link builders, and content auditors who need PageSpeed, link, content, and contact data combined across thousands of URLs in a single export, and are comfortable working with a desktop app and raw CSV output rather than a dashboard.
WebPageTestFreeFront-end engineers and technical SEOs who need to diagnose exactly why a specific page is slow, document evidence-grade before-and-after performance data, or test hypothetical fixes before committing engineering time.

URL Profiler

Bulk URL auditing desktop app that collects link metrics, content data, social signals, and email addresses across thousands of URLs at once

Full review →
URL Profiler screenshot

URL Profiler is a desktop application, not a website, and that single fact shapes everything about how it is used. Run by 301 Media LLC and a fixture in agency workflows for over a decade, it lets you configure one job that pulls link metrics, content readability scores, HTTP status, PageSpeed data, social share counts, and even scraped email addresses across an entire list of URLs, then walk away while it processes.

Its PageSpeed feature connects to Google's PageSpeed API and returns a performance score and supporting stats for every URL in the batch, run in the same pass as everything else. That is genuinely useful for a content or technical audit where you want to flag underperforming pages across a thousand-URL sitemap without opening each one individually, but it is a score, not a diagnosis. It will not tell you which third-party script is blocking render on page 412 of your export.

The trade-offs are the desktop-only interface, the requirement to supply your own Moz, Majestic, and Ahrefs API keys for the link-metric side of the tool, and the complete absence of built-in dashboards or scheduled reporting. Output is a CSV, and what you do with it is up to you. For agencies running content inventories, link audits, or outreach prospecting that need PageSpeed numbers as one column among many, this is a fast way to get there. For anyone trying to fix a slow page, it is the wrong tool.

Pricing
Feature
Solo
$19.95/month (billed yearly)
Pro
$25.95/month (billed yearly)
Agency
$64.95/month (billed yearly)
Max URLs per import5,0001,000,0001,000,000
Bulk PageSpeed + HTTP statusYesYesYes
Link metrics (own Moz/Majestic/Ahrefs keys)YesYesYes
Email + WHOIS harvestingYesYesYes
Free trial14 days, no card14 days, no card14 days, no card
Best for: Agency SEOs, link builders, and content auditors who need PageSpeed, link, content, and contact data combined across thousands of URLs in a single export, and are comfortable working with a desktop app and raw CSV output rather than a dashboard.

WebPageTest

The open-source gold standard for deep web performance diagnostics, trusted by engineers at Google, Mozilla, and every serious web team.

Full review →
WebPageTest screenshot

WebPageTest has been the reference benchmark for front-end performance work for more than fifteen years, originally built by AOL engineer Patrick Meenan and now maintained by Catchpoint. It runs tests through real browser instances at over 30 global locations and produces the kind of diagnostic depth that most commercial tools, including URL Profiler's bundled PageSpeed check, still measure themselves against.

Where a bulk tool gives you a score per URL, WebPageTest gives you the full waterfall behind that score: connection timing, TTFB, render-blocking resources, and a frame-by-frame filmstrip of what a user actually saw as the page loaded. The No-Code Experiments feature lets you simulate the effect of removing a script or switching fonts before any engineering time is spent, which is a meaningfully different use case than bulk scoring an entire URL list.

The public instance is genuinely free with no account required, which is rare for a tool this capable. The Pro API tier, at $9.89 a month, adds priority queuing, continuous monitoring, and programmatic access for teams that want automation. The trade-off is scale: WebPageTest is built to test one page (or a handful side by side) in depth, not to process a sitemap of ten thousand URLs the way URL Profiler is designed to.

Pricing
Feature
Free
Free
Pro API (Starter)
$9.89/month
Real browser testing, 30+ locationsYesYes
Filmstrip + waterfall diagnosticsYesYes
Lighthouse integrationYesYes
API accessNoYes
Continuous monitoringNoYes
Best for: Front-end engineers and technical SEOs who need to diagnose exactly why a specific page is slow, document evidence-grade before-and-after performance data, or test hypothetical fixes before committing engineering time.

Head-to-head feature comparison

Feature
URL Profiler
WebPageTest
Primary use caseBulk data collection across many URLsDeep diagnostics on one URL at a time
InterfaceDesktop app (Windows/Mac)Web-based (webpagetest.org)
Bulk multi-URL processingYes, up to 1,000,000 URLs per importNo (designed for single/comparative URL tests)
Own link metrics (Moz/Majestic/Ahrefs)Yes (bring your own API keys)No
Email / WHOIS harvestingYesNo
Content readability scoringYes (5 readability formulas)No
Deep waterfall / filmstrip diagnosticsNoYes
Real browser testing at global locationsNoYes, 30+ locations
API accessNo (requires own API keys, but no scheduling)Pro tier only
Continuous monitoringNoPro tier only
Starting price$19.95/month (billed yearly)Free

Which should you choose?

Agencies running bulk link, content, or PageSpeed audits across a whole siteURL Profiler
Front-end engineers diagnosing exactly why one page is slowWebPageTest
Outreach and link-building teams harvesting emails and WHOIS data at scaleURL Profiler
Technical SEOs documenting before-and-after performance evidence for a migrationWebPageTest
Teams with zero budget who still need real diagnostic-grade performance dataWebPageTest
Teams who want PageSpeed scores as one column in a larger bulk exportURL Profiler
Anyone testing the impact of removing a script before involving engineeringWebPageTest

These tools rarely compete for the same job. URL Profiler answers "which of these ten thousand URLs have problems," across link authority, content quality, and a PageSpeed score, in one CSV. WebPageTest answers "why exactly is this one page slow," down to the individual render-blocking request. A technical SEO doing a full-site audit reaches for URL Profiler first to triage, then opens WebPageTest on the worst offenders to actually diagnose them. Treating them as interchangeable misses what each one is actually built for.

Bottom line

Get URL Profiler if your job is bulk auditing: link metrics, content quality, PageSpeed scores, and outreach contact data across a sitemap, and you are fine with a desktop app and CSV output. Use WebPageTest, which costs nothing for the core product, when you need to know exactly what is making a specific page slow and want filmstrip and waterfall evidence to back up a fix. Most serious technical SEO workflows end up using both: URL Profiler to find the pages worth investigating, WebPageTest to investigate them.

Frequently asked questions

Is URL Profiler a replacement for WebPageTest, or do they do different jobs?

They do different jobs and are not real substitutes for each other. URL Profiler bulk-collects a PageSpeed score alongside link and content data across thousands of URLs, while WebPageTest performs deep, single-URL diagnostics like waterfall and filmstrip analysis that URL Profiler does not offer at all.

Do I need API keys to use URL Profiler or WebPageTest?

URL Profiler requires your own Moz, Majestic, or Ahrefs API keys to pull link metrics, though its email harvesting and readability scoring work without any external keys. WebPageTest's free public instance requires no API keys or account at all; only the Pro API tier for programmatic access needs a paid key.

Which tool is better for diagnosing why a specific page has a bad Core Web Vitals score?

WebPageTest is built specifically for this. It exposes the full request waterfall, connection timing, and a frame-by-frame filmstrip showing exactly what loaded and when, none of which URL Profiler provides since it only returns an aggregate PageSpeed score per URL.

Can WebPageTest process thousands of URLs in one bulk run like URL Profiler?

No, WebPageTest is designed to run deep tests on one URL, or a small set of URLs for side-by-side comparison, not bulk-process a full sitemap. For bulk processing of thousands of URLs, URL Profiler, which handles up to 1,000,000 URLs per import on its Pro plan, is the appropriate tool.

Is WebPageTest actually free, or does it require a paid plan for real use?

The public instance at webpagetest.org is genuinely free with no account required and includes filmstrip, waterfall, and Lighthouse data. A paid Pro API plan starting at $9.89 a month is only needed for programmatic access, priority queuing, and continuous monitoring.

Does URL Profiler work on Mac, or is it Windows-only?

URL Profiler runs on both Windows and Mac as a desktop application. There is no web-based or cloud version, and the Solo plan is licensed for one device while Pro and Agency plans support two and twenty devices respectively.

Found this useful? Share it: