Insights

How to Monitor Webflow Website Uptime

Webflow site owner tracking website uptime and response time

Webflow offers fast, reliable hosting, but your site can still fail if a custom domain, CMS collection, or embedded script breaks. Monitoring the right pages ensures you catch problems quickly and keep marketing campaigns live.

This guide shows what to monitor for Webflow sites and how to set up alerts without extra complexity.

Cover the pages tied to conversions

Do not just monitor the homepage. Include the pages that drive inquiries or sales:

  • Your homepage and top product or service pages.
  • High traffic blog or CMS pages.
  • Landing pages connected to ads.
  • Contact or form pages.

Check the custom domain and redirects

Webflow hosting is stable, but custom domain settings can cause outages. Monitor your canonical URL and confirm the final redirect goes to the right domain and protocol. A bad redirect can break every page at once.

Watch for CMS publishing issues

CMS collections power many Webflow sites. If a collection fails to publish or a template breaks, multiple pages can return errors. Add checks for a popular CMS page to detect issues early.

Team reviewing a Webflow site performance report

Track response time and status codes

Performance problems often show up as slower response times before an outage. Monitor TTFB and HTTP status codes on key pages. This is especially helpful if you use custom scripts or third-party widgets.

Use multi-location confirmation

A single failed check does not always mean your site is down. Use confirmation checks from multiple locations to reduce false alerts. This keeps your alerts actionable.

Establish a fast response loop

When an alert hits, verify the page on mobile, check the Webflow status page, and review the most recent publish. If you added custom code, disable it temporarily to isolate the cause.

Keep your Webflow site always available

Get uptime alerts and performance signals that keep your marketing pages live.