Better safe than fined. Check your UK website in 60 seconds.
Nearly 6 out of 10 UK sites we scan miss basic requirements the ICO enforces. We check 150+ points — PECR cookie rules, image rights, Equality Act accessibility, security — and tell you exactly what to fix.
No registration. Result in ±60 seconds. How we scan
I understand this is a technical scan, not legal advice, and I accept the Terms.
- 8 in 10 sites have high-risk issues
- 150+ CHECKS
- NL HOSTED
- NO ACCOUNT NEEDED
Free scan · Full report €2.50 · No subscription — built for UK small businesses
Scanned website
your-website.co.uk
- GDPR & Cookies2 issues
- Security
- Accessibility1 issue
- Legal pages
- Third-party tracking
- DNS & email
2 of 6 categories with problems
Your website needs attention in several areas the ICO and EHRC check.
+7 findings with fix instructions
Still active after 'Reject':
- google-analytics.com
- facebook.net
- doubleclick.net
- +1 more
UK GDPR is not EU GDPR — and most UK websites still treat it like it is
Since 1 January 2021 your website answers to the ICO under UK GDPR, PECR and the Equality Act 2010 — not the EU regime. The substance is mostly the same, but the regulator, the legal citations, and the enforcement record are different. The Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 tightened a few rules in 2025; it did not abolish cookie consent.
- Cookies → PECR Regulation 6 (ICO, not EU ePrivacy) — same reject-as-easy-as-accept standard, separate £500k fine ceiling
- Accessibility → Equality Act 2010 + EHRC enforcement (claim-driven). The European Accessibility Act does NOT apply to UK private-sector commercial sites
- Legal pages → Companies Act 2006 requires your Companies House number, registered office and VAT number on the site
- Sell into the EU? You're caught by BOTH UK GDPR and EU GDPR — and may need an EU Article 27 representative
Three risks we catch before they cost you
Three common sources of UK fines and claims — ICO enforcement, copyright demand letters, Equality Act complaints. We check them automatically.
Would your cookie banner survive an ICO check?
Most UK websites have a cookie popup. But when someone clicks "Reject," do the trackers actually stop? The ICO wrote to the UK's biggest sites about exactly this — and it's what we test on every scan.
Are your images licensed for use in the UK?
Getty, PicRights and Copytrack send £350–£1,500 demands to UK businesses for single images. If your photos came from Google Images or an unclear "free" site, you may not have a valid licence.
One scan covers everything.
Cookies, privacy, accessibility, security and image rights in one report aligned with UK law — UK GDPR, PECR, Equality Act. €2.50 one-time, instead of five separate tools.
Checked against UK law and regulator guidance
Every scan tests your website against UK GDPR, the Data Protection Act 2018, PECR, the Equality Act 2010 and the Companies Act 2006 — the rules the ICO and EHRC actually enforce. The legal basis per area:
Image copyright
- CDPA 1988 s.16
- CDPA 1988 s.97
- Enterprise Act 2016 s.13
UK GDPR & Privacy
- UK GDPR Art. 6, 13, 28
- DPA 2018 s.137
- PECR reg. 6
Accessibility
- Equality Act 2010 s.20–21
- PSBAR 2018
- WCAG 2.2 AA
- EHRC guidance
Security
- UK GDPR Art. 32
- NCSC Cyber Essentials
- ICO security guidance
Legal pages
- Companies Act 2006 s.82
- Companies (Trading Disclosures) Regs 2008
- CPUTR 2008
Newsletter
- PECR reg. 22
- UK GDPR Art. 7
- ICO direct marketing guidance
E-Commerce
- Consumer Contracts Regs 2013
- Consumer Rights Act 2015
- CPUTR 2008
Why pay for 4 subscriptions when one scan is enough?
| What we check | Typical cookie tool | Typical accessibility tool | TrustYourWebsite |
|---|---|---|---|
| Does 'Reject' really stop trackers? | |||
| Unlicensed images | Premium | ||
| Cookies and trackers | |||
| Privacy policy issues | |||
| Accessibility for disabled visitors | |||
| Security problems | |||
| Problematic third-party services | |||
| One-time vs. subscription | Monthly subscription | Monthly subscription | One-time €2.50 |
| Starting price | €30/month | ~€100/month | €2.50 one-time |
Does 'Reject' really stop trackers?
Unlicensed images
Cookies and trackers
Privacy policy issues
Accessibility for disabled visitors
Security problems
Problematic third-party services
One-time vs. subscription
Starting price
What could website issues cost you?
Fines don't just hit big companies. UK solo founders, dentists, online shops — the ICO fines small businesses too, and Equality Act claims don't need a regulator at all.
The 12-point check most UK web designers skip
In 10 minutes you'll see whether your site meets the rules the ICO actually checks. Free PDF, straight to your inbox.
Show 12-point manual checklist
Your website loads over HTTPS (look for the padlock icon in your browser).
Your cookie banner has a visible "Reject All" button — required under PECR, not just UK GDPR.
ICO cookie banner rules→After clicking "Reject," no tracking scripts still run (check with your browser's developer tools).
Your privacy policy exists, is linked from every page, and covers what UK GDPR Articles 13–14 require.
UK GDPR privacy policy→Your Companies House number, registered name and office address are visible — the Companies Act 2006 requires this.
All images on your site are either original, properly licensed, or from a genuinely free stock site (not just Google Images).
Your contact form has a visible label for every field, not just placeholder text.
You can navigate your entire website using only your keyboard (Tab, Enter, Escape).
5 quick accessibility wins→Text on your site has enough contrast against the background (no light gray on white).
Every image has alt text that describes what the image shows.
Your site does not load resources from HTTP (non-secure) sources on HTTPS pages.
Newsletter signup forms have an unchecked consent checkbox — the ICO treats pre-ticked boxes as invalid consent.
Get the free 12-point compliance guide for UK websites: explanations, fix instructions, and links to share with your web designer.
One price, no subscription
Detailed reports from €2.50. No subscriptions required. See all pricing options→
Frequently asked questions
Is the scan really free?
Yes. Every scan gives you a health score and issue counts at no cost. You only pay if you want the full report with detailed findings, screenshots, and fix instructions.
Do I need technical knowledge?
Not at all. Just enter your website address. We explain every issue in plain language and tell you exactly what to ask your web developer to fix.
My web designer built my site, isn't it already up to standard?
In our experience, most web designers focus on design and functionality, not on UK legal requirements like Companies Act disclosure duties, PECR cookie rules, or Equality Act accessibility. Even professionally built sites fail our scan regularly.
What happens with my data?
We don't store the scanned website content and never share your results. We process data in line with UK GDPR and EU GDPR. If you order a report, we only keep your email for delivery.
How long does a scan take?
The free check is done in ±60 seconds. A Premium scan with multi-page coverage and image-rights check takes 2 to 3 minutes.
Which pages are scanned?
The free scan checks your homepage. Premium covers up to 30 subpages and scans your images for licensing issues.
Can I scan multiple domains?
Yes. Each domain needs its own scan — that way results stay neatly separated per site.
Do I get an invoice for the €2.50?
Yes. Right after payment you receive a VAT-compliant invoice by email. Bookkeeping-friendly.
How is this different from other website tools?
Most tools check one thing — cookies OR accessibility OR security. We check all 7 areas in a single scan, aligned with what the ICO and EHRC actually enforce.
See all compliance areas we check→Is this legal advice?
No. We find the technical issues. You (or your solicitor) decide what to fix first. Most findings are clear enough that your web designer can fix them straight from the report.
Does Brexit mean different rules for my UK website?
Yes — and most websites still get this wrong. Since 1 January 2021 UK GDPR (not EU GDPR) applies, the ICO is your regulator (not an EU DPA), cookies sit under PECR Regulation 6, and accessibility on private-sector sites is governed by the Equality Act 2010 (the European Accessibility Act does not apply to UK commercial websites). The Data (Use and Access) Act 2025 tweaked legitimate-interest and analytics rules but did NOT abolish cookie consent. If you also sell into the EU, you face both regimes — and may need an EU representative under Art. 27.
One scan tells you what to fix on your UK website. No jargon, no sales pitch.
You get a health score and a clear issue list mapped to UK law. Full fix instructions for €2.50.
I understand this is a technical scan, not legal advice, and I accept the Terms.
7 compliance areas, from UK GDPR to the Equality Act. One report. No subscription.