Free Website Status Checker — Is This Website Down? | Linkrify
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Free Website Status Checker — Is This Website Down?

Check if any website is down or just you. Enter a URL to get HTTP status code and response time. Free website status checker.

Enter a URL. We'll check from our server to see if the site is up and how fast it responds.

🔍 Enter a URL to check status
HTTP Status Code
Response Time
IP Address

You try to load your website. It spins. Then it times out. "Is it down for everyone, or just me?"

This linkrify free website down checker answers that question. Enter any URL. Our server checks the site from an external location. If it loads for us but not for you, the problem is on your end. If it fails for both, the site is genuinely down. No sign-up. No guessing.

Below the tool, you'll learn why sites go down, how to tell if it's your fault, and what to do when your own site crashes.

Why Check If a Website Is Down?

When a site won't load, you need to know where the problem lives.

The "Is it just me?" problem

Your browser shows an error. But is the site actually down? Or is your internet flaky? Did your ISP block it? Is your browser cache corrupted?

Checking from an external server (like our tool) tells you the truth. If we can reach the site, the problem is on your side. If we can't, the site is genuinely offline.

Two scenarios, two fixes

Scenario A: Our tool shows "UP" but you can't load it.
Problem: Your internet, DNS cache, browser, or firewall
Fix: Clear cache, restart router, check VPN settings

Scenario B: Our tool shows "DOWN" and you can't load it.
Problem: The website's server is offline
Fix: Wait. Check the site's status page. Contact the owner.

Common Reasons Sites Go Down

Websites fail for many reasons. Here are the most common.

Server overload (traffic spike)

What happens: Your post goes viral. 100,000 people visit at once. The server can't handle the load. It crashes.

How to check: Response time will be slow (5+ seconds) before complete failure. You might see 503 Service Unavailable errors.

How to fix: Upgrade hosting. Add caching. Use a CDN. For shared hosting, move to VPS or dedicated.

Expired hosting or domain

What happens: You forgot to renew your hosting plan. Or your domain registration expired. The site disappears.

How to check: Use our Whois Lookup to check domain expiration. Check your hosting billing emails.

How to fix: Renew immediately. Set up auto-renewal. Add calendar reminders 30 days before expiration.

DNS misconfiguration

What happens: You changed nameservers or DNS records. You made a typo. Now the internet can't find your server.

How to check: Use our DNS Lookup tool. Compare records against your hosting provider's documentation.

How to fix: Correct the DNS records. Wait 24-48 hours for propagation. Lower TTL before making changes.

DDoS attack

What happens: Attackers flood your server with fake traffic. Legitimate visitors can't get through.

How to check: Your hosting provider will usually notify you. You'll see massive traffic spikes from random IPs.

How to fix: Use DDoS protection (Cloudflare, AWS Shield, hosting provider). Contact your host immediately.

Code error (white screen)

What happens: You updated a plugin, theme, or custom code. A syntax error crashes the site. You see a white screen or PHP error.

How to check: Enable WordPress debug mode or check server error logs. The site might load for some pages but not others.

How to fix: Roll back the last change. Fix the code error. Test on a staging site before pushing live.

SSL certificate expired

What happens: Your SSL certificate expired. Browsers refuse to connect. Visitors see a security warning.

How to check: Use our SSL Checker. Look at the "Valid To" date.

How to fix: Renew your certificate. Install the new one. Set up auto-renewal.

What to Do If Your Site Is Down

Stay calm. Follow this checklist.

Step 1: Verify it's not just you

Use our website status checker. If it's up for us but down for you, the problem is local.

Local fixes:

  • Clear your browser cache (Ctrl+Shift+Del on Windows, Cmd+Shift+Delete on Mac)
  • Flush your DNS cache (ipconfig /flushdns on Windows, dscacheutil -flushcache on Mac)
  • Restart your router and modem
  • Disable VPN or proxy
  • Try a different browser or device

Steps 2-5

  1. Check your hosting provider's status page — Search "[Your Host] status page". If they're having an outage, you just have to wait.
  2. Check domain and SSL expiration — Use our Whois Lookup and SSL Checker. Renew if expired.
  3. Check DNS configuration — Use our DNS Lookup tool. Verify A record points to correct IP.
  4. Contact support — Give them: your domain, error message (screenshot), when it started, what you've tried.

What the HTTP Status Codes Mean

Our tool shows HTTP status codes. Here's what they tell you.

Code RangeMeaningExample
2xx (Success)The site is working200 OK — Site is working perfectly
3xx (Redirection)Site redirects301 Moved Permanently — Normal redirect
4xx (Client errors)Your fault or missing content404 Not Found — Page doesn't exist
5xx (Server errors)The site's fault503 Service Unavailable — Server overloaded

Detailed codes

  • 200 OK: The site is working perfectly
  • 301 Moved Permanently: Site redirects to a new URL (normal)
  • 403 Forbidden: Access denied (check file permissions)
  • 404 Not Found: Page doesn't exist (broken link)
  • 500 Internal Server Error: Generic server error (code problem)
  • 502 Bad Gateway: Server received invalid response
  • 503 Service Unavailable: Server overloaded or down for maintenance
  • 504 Gateway Timeout: Server didn't respond in time

How to Use This Status Checker

  1. Enter a URL: https://example.com or example.com (both work)
  2. Click Check Status: Our server attempts to connect
  3. Read the result: UP (green) or DOWN (red)
  4. Check the HTTP code: 200 = good. 404 = missing page. 5xx = server problem.
  5. See response time: Under 1 second = fast. Over 3 seconds = slow.

The tool checks from a single external location (our server). For global checks, use a separate uptime monitoring service.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is this website down checker really free?
Yes. No sign-up. No limits. Check as many URLs as you want.
What does "Website is UP" mean?
Our server successfully connected to the website and received a response. The site is online and reachable from our location. If you can't load it, the problem is on your end (internet, DNS cache, browser, firewall).
What does "Website is DOWN" mean?
Our server could not connect to the website. The site is offline or unreachable. Possible causes: server crash, expired hosting, DNS issues, DDoS attack, or network problems at the hosting provider.
The tool says UP but I can't load the site. Why?
The problem is on your side. Try clearing your browser cache, flushing your DNS cache (ipconfig /flushdns on Windows), restarting your router, or disabling VPN. Also check if your ISP is blocking the site.
What's a good response time?
Under 1 second is excellent. 1-2 seconds is average. 2-3 seconds is slow but acceptable. Over 3 seconds indicates a problem — check your hosting, optimize images, use caching.
What's the difference between 404 and 503?
404 means the page doesn't exist (broken link). The website is still online. 503 means the server is down or overloaded (no pages work). Our tool shows the exact code.
Can I use this to monitor my own site's uptime?
For occasional checks, yes. For 24/7 monitoring, use a dedicated uptime monitoring service (UptimeRobot, Pingdom, StatusCake). They'll alert you when your site goes down.
How often should I check my website?
For personal sites, once a week is fine. For business sites, use uptime monitoring (checks every 5 minutes). This tool is for ad-hoc checks — "Is it down right now?"
Does this tool check from multiple locations?
No. This tool checks from one location (our server). For global checks, use a dedicated uptime monitoring service that checks from 5-10 locations worldwide.
Why does a site show "UP" but load slowly?
The server is responding, but slowly. Possible causes: overloaded server, large images, unoptimized database, or too many plugins. Check response time in our results. Under 2 seconds is fine. Over 5 seconds needs optimization.
What's the difference between website status checker and DNS lookup?
Status checker tests if the website is reachable (HTTP). DNS lookup shows your DNS configuration (A records, MX records, etc.). Use both: DNS lookup to check settings, status checker to test reachability.
Can I check if a specific page is down?
Our tool checks the homepage (root URL). For specific pages, use the HTTP Header Checker to test individual URLs.
How do I know if my site is blocked in another country?
Our tool checks from one location (likely your country or nearby). For geo-blocking tests, use a global uptime monitoring service with multiple locations, or manually test using VPNs in different countries.
Why does a site show "DOWN" but I can load it?
Our server couldn't reach the site, but you can. Possible causes: you're accessing a cached version, the site blocks our server's IP, or the site is only available in your region. Try clearing your cache and refreshing.

Check Your Site Status Now

You've got the tool at the top of this page. Enter your domain. Find out if it's really down.
Before you panic, check. Before you email support, verify. Before you assume the worst, get the facts.
Next, verify your SSL certificate with SSL Checker. Inspect your DNS records with DNS Lookup. Or debug HTTP headers with HTTP Header Checker.

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