Website audit. Four categories. One scorecard.
Enter a URL. Get four category scores (Performance, SEO, Accessibility, Best Practices) with the top wins per category. Runs on Google PageSpeed Insights; no signup, no email, no dashboard.
Four numbers. Twenty decisions.
A website-audit scorecard compresses roughly fifty Lighthouse checks into four category scores: Performance, SEO, Accessibility, and Best Practices. Performance drives Core Web Vitals and ranking weight for mobile queries. SEO drives whether the page is findable and crawlable at all. Accessibility drives WCAG 2.1 AA compliance, which is a legal floor in most markets DH ships to. Best Practices drives trust: HTTPS, console cleanliness, no known vulnerabilities. Each score maps to one of Digital Heroes' service categories so the next action is obvious.
Three numbers to memorize. Performance 80 or above on mobile clears the Core Web Vitals threshold that feeds Google's ranking algorithm. SEO 95 or above is table stakes; any site below 95 is missing basic meta, canonical, or structured-data hygiene. Accessibility 90 or above is the WCAG 2.1 AA target; below 70 signals real barriers for users with disabilities and legal exposure in the US, UK, and EU.
The audit uses Google PageSpeed Insights API under the hood, which runs Lighthouse against your URL from a cold Google-hosted mobile Moto G4 profile. The numbers are the same ones ranking engineers use internally; this tool reshapes them for operators.
Tools in the same cluster: Shopify Speed Test for a Shopify-specific performance pass. Meta Tag Generator for the SEO head-tag fixes this audit will flag. Schema Generator for the structured-data findings.
Five answers.
What does this audit measure?
Four Lighthouse categories: Performance (LCP, CLS, TBT, TTFB, speed index, total blocking time), SEO (meta tags, canonical, robots, structured data, mobile-friendliness, link text), Accessibility (color contrast, tap target size, alt text, ARIA, heading order), Best Practices (HTTPS, console errors, deprecated APIs, security headers). Each category scores 0 to 100 against Google's published criteria.
How is this different from PageSpeed Insights directly?
The same Lighthouse data, framed for operators rather than developers. Audit returns the two or three highest-impact wins per category written in plain English alongside which Digital Heroes service solves that class of problem. PageSpeed Insights shows 50+ audit items; this tool surfaces the 8 to 12 that matter for non-technical founders making a scope decision.
Does the audit score my competitors?
Yes. Any public URL works. Running the audit on your own domain plus two or three competitor domains takes 90 seconds and produces a comparative scorecard. The tool does not save results or build a database of audited sites; the data renders in this browser tab and disappears when closed.
What is a healthy score in 2026?
Performance 80 or above on mobile is the cutoff for Core Web Vitals-sensitive queries. SEO 95 or above is table stakes; anything below means meta tags, canonical, or structured data are missing. Accessibility 90 or above is the WCAG 2.1 AA target; below 70 signals real barriers for users with disabilities. Best Practices 90 or above; below usually means HTTPS issues or console errors.
Does this tool save my data?
The URL you enter is sent to Google's public PageSpeed Insights API so the audit can run. Digital Heroes does not receive, store, or log the URL or scores. Nothing persists beyond this browser tab.
Scored below 80? We ship the fixes.
Our engagements take a sub-80 scorecard and ship a 30-day plan across the weakest two categories. Performance and SEO first (rank-sensitive), Accessibility and Best Practices second. Written in 2 weeks, shipped over 4-8.