DebugBear vs Little Warden in 2026: Core Web Vitals regression tracking vs proactive site-change alerting
DebugBear tracks whether your pages are getting slower and whether Lighthouse scores are slipping. Little Warden tracks whether the site itself is quietly breaking, a lapsed domain, an expired SSL cert, a robots.txt edit nobody meant to ship.
DebugBear tracks performance regressions, real-user data, synthetic tests, and Lighthouse scores, while Little Warden tracks configuration failures like domain expiry, SSL lapses, and robots.txt changes. They cover almost no overlapping ground.
Little Warden's 30+ pre-built checks include Core Web Vitals as one item on a long list; it is not a dedicated performance monitoring layer the way DebugBear is.
DebugBear requires the Pro plan (~$149/month) to unlock real-user monitoring; the ~$68/month Starter tier covers synthetic testing and Lighthouse tracking only.
Little Warden alerts through Slack, email, API, and webhooks on Small Team plans and above. DebugBear's standout for delivery is Looker Studio dashboards rather than multi-channel alert routing.
DebugBear includes unlimited domains on every paid plan. Little Warden caps URLs by tier, from 20 on Freelancer up to 5,000 on Large Agency.
DebugBear offers white-label exports from the Pro plan up. Little Warden has no white-label reporting on any plan, a gap the vendor itself acknowledges limits its use as a standalone client deliverable.
Little Warden's trial runs 40 days plus a 30-day money-back guarantee. DebugBear's trial is 14 days with no card required.
DebugBear and Little Warden get grouped together because they are both monitoring tools built for people managing more than one website, but they are watching for completely different failure modes. DebugBear is a performance platform: real-user monitoring, synthetic tests, and Lighthouse score tracking, all built to catch the moment a page gets slower or a Core Web Vitals score drops before it costs rankings. Little Warden does not measure performance at all. It runs 30-plus scheduled checks for the kind of configuration failures that take a site down or quietly deindex it, domain expiry, an SSL certificate nobody renewed, a robots.txt edit that blocks a whole folder, a tracking tag someone accidentally stripped during a redesign. DebugBear starts around $68 a month and requires the Pro tier before real-user monitoring kicks in. Little Warden starts at £24.99 a month and offers a 40-day trial with a money-back guarantee on top. Picking between them only makes sense once you are clear on which failure mode you are actually trying to prevent.
The tools at a glance
DebugBear
Web performance monitoring that combines real-user data, synthetic testing, and Lighthouse score tracking to catch regressions before they affect rankings.
DebugBear runs three types of performance monitoring on the same timeline: real-user data pulled from actual visitor sessions, synthetic tests run on a schedule from controlled environments, and Lighthouse score tracking across Performance, Accessibility, Best Practices, and SEO. The point of stacking all three is that synthetic and real-user numbers frequently disagree, and having both next to Lighthouse's underlying audit data means you can see which specific check failed and when, rather than just knowing a score dropped.
Every paid plan includes unlimited domains, which is the detail that makes DebugBear workable for an agency running a large client list rather than a single product team. Looker Studio integration and white-label exports, available from the Pro plan, extend that agency framing into actual client deliverables instead of just internal dashboards.
The gap is that real-user monitoring, one of the three pillars DebugBear markets itself on, sits behind the Pro tier at roughly $149 a month. The ~$68 Starter plan only covers synthetic tests and Lighthouse tracking, so anyone evaluating DebugBear specifically for RUM needs to budget for the higher tier from the outset rather than assuming it comes standard.
| Feature | Starter ~$68/month | Pro ~$149/month | Enterprise Contact |
|---|---|---|---|
| Synthetic tests | Limited | More | Custom |
| Real-user monitoring | No | Yes | Custom |
| Unlimited domains | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| Looker Studio integration | Yes | Yes | Yes |
| API access | Limited | Yes | Yes |
| White-label exports | No | Yes | Yes |
Little Warden
Website change monitoring tool that alerts you before domain expiry, SSL issues, or critical SEO changes cost your clients rankings
Little Warden does not try to be a performance monitor or a crawler. It runs a fixed library of 30-plus checks, domain and SSL expiry, robots.txt edits, redirect breakage, canonical tag changes, tracking tag removal, Core Web Vitals, and content changes, on a schedule across every URL in your portfolio, and alerts through Slack, email, webhooks, or API the moment something changes.
The pricing model scales by URL count rather than by feature depth: Freelancer covers 20 URLs for £24.99 a month, Agency covers 650 URLs for £59.99 a month. Every check is pre-built, so there is no monitoring logic to configure, and detected changes can be exported to Google Sheets to build a timeline for when a client asks what happened before a ranking drop.
What Little Warden will not do is replace a crawler or a performance monitor. It has no site-wide technical SEO audit, no synthetic or real-user performance data, and no white-label reporting layer, so it works best as an addition to an existing SEO stack rather than the only monitoring tool in it.
| Feature | Freelancer £24.99/month | Small Team £34.99/month | Agency £59.99/month | Large Agency £149.99/month |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| URLs patrolled | 20 | 100 | 650 | 5,000 |
| Data retention | 2 weeks | 1 month | 3 months | 6 months |
| Checks per URL | Up to 10 | Up to 15 | Up to 20 | Up to 30 |
| Team members | 1 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| API access | ✗ | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
Head-to-head feature comparison
| Feature | ||
|---|---|---|
| Overall score | 8.0 / 10 | 7.8 / 10 |
| Primary focus | Web performance monitoring (RUM, synthetic, Lighthouse) | Proactive change monitoring and alerting (30+ checks) |
| Real-user monitoring (RUM) | Yes (Pro and Enterprise) | No |
| Synthetic / scheduled performance testing | Yes | No |
| Lighthouse score tracking | Yes | No |
| Core Web Vitals tracking | Yes | Core Web Vitals is one of 30+ checks, not a dedicated monitoring layer |
| Proactive change monitoring (domain, SSL, robots.txt, redirects) | No | Yes, core feature (domain expiry, SSL, robots.txt, redirects, tracking tags) |
| Alerting channels | Slack, email, API, webhooks | |
| Looker Studio / BI integration | Yes (Looker Studio) | No |
| Google Sheets export | No | Yes |
| White-label reporting | White-label exports (Pro and Enterprise) | No |
| API access | Yes (limited on Starter, full on Pro) | Yes, Small Team plan and above |
| Unlimited domains / URLs | Yes, unlimited on every paid plan | No, capped at 20 to 5,000 URLs by plan |
| Free trial | 14 days, no card required | 40 days, plus 30-day money-back guarantee |
| Starting price | ~$68/month | £24.99/month |
Which should you choose?
These two are not really competing for the same budget line. DebugBear answers whether the site is getting slower or scoring worse on Lighthouse, which is a performance question. Little Warden answers whether something broke that nobody caught, which is a configuration and integrity question. An agency running client sites at scale plausibly needs both: DebugBear to catch a slow regression before it drags rankings down, Little Warden to catch the domain that lapsed over a bank holiday weekend. If forced to pick one first, the honest answer depends on which failure has actually cost you a client relationship before, not which tool lists more features.
Bottom line
Start with DebugBear if page speed and Core Web Vitals are the metric your clients or leadership actually ask about, and be ready to pay for the Pro tier once real-user data becomes non-negotiable. Start with Little Warden if the bigger risk is something breaking silently, a cert, a redirect, a tracking tag, and you want a cheap, fast safety net with a 40-day trial to prove it out. Agencies with a large enough client list tend to end up running both, since neither one covers what the other does.
Frequently asked questions
Does DebugBear alert me if a client's SSL certificate or domain is about to expire?
DebugBear does not track domain registration or SSL certificate status; its monitoring is limited to performance metrics like Core Web Vitals, synthetic test results, and Lighthouse scores. Little Warden covers domain and SSL expiry specifically, as one of its 30-plus pre-built checks, so pair it with DebugBear if both concerns apply to your client portfolio.
Is Little Warden a replacement for a technical SEO crawler like Screaming Frog?
Little Warden is not a crawler and does not replace one. It runs a fixed set of 30-plus scheduled checks, domain expiry, SSL status, robots.txt changes, redirects, tracking tags, rather than a full site-wide technical SEO audit, so pair it with a dedicated crawler for issue-level analysis.
Which tool is cheaper for a freelance SEO consultant managing a handful of client sites?
Little Warden is the cheaper starting point at £24.99 a month for the Freelancer plan, which covers 20 URLs and comes with a 40-day free trial plus a 30-day money-back guarantee. DebugBear starts around $68 a month and does not include real-user monitoring until the ~$149 Pro tier, which is a bigger jump for a solo consultant's budget.
Does DebugBear or Little Warden offer white-label reporting for agency clients?
DebugBear offers white-label exports from the Pro plan upward, making it usable as a client-facing deliverable once you are past the entry tier. Little Warden has no white-label reporting on any plan, which the vendor itself flags as a limitation for agencies wanting a polished client-facing report.
How does DebugBear track Core Web Vitals differently from Little Warden?
DebugBear treats Core Web Vitals as a core, ongoing monitoring layer, tracked across both real-user sessions and scheduled synthetic tests, with historical trend charts and Lighthouse audit context for each regression. Little Warden includes Core Web Vitals only as one of its 30-plus checks, useful as an alert trigger but not built for the trend analysis or root-cause diagnosis DebugBear provides.
Can I use both DebugBear and Little Warden together?
Yes, and for agencies managing a real client portfolio it is a reasonable combination rather than redundant spending. DebugBear catches performance regressions like a slipping Lighthouse score or a Core Web Vitals drop, while Little Warden catches the configuration failures, an expired SSL cert, a blocked robots.txt, a stripped tracking tag, that DebugBear was never built to detect.

