The world's fastest website intelligence platform for enterprise technical SEO and web governance.
Lumar, evolved from its legacy as DeepCrawl, is a high-performance website intelligence platform engineered for the 2026 digital landscape where technical health and accessibility are paramount. Its architecture centers on a proprietary cloud-based crawling engine capable of processing millions of URLs with high-fidelity JavaScript rendering. As a Lead AI Solutions Architect would note, Lumar distinguishes itself through its 'Protect' module—a CI/CD integration that prevents SEO regressions before code hits production. In 2026, the platform utilizes advanced machine learning to prioritize technical debt based on potential ROI, moving beyond simple error reporting to predictive performance modeling. It serves as a centralized source of truth for SEO, Engineering, and Product teams, facilitating cross-functional alignment on site speed, mobile usability, and WCAG 2.2 compliance. By integrating directly with BigQuery and providing a robust GraphQL API, Lumar allows for deep data democratization across enterprise business intelligence stacks, making it the gold standard for large-scale web ecosystems undergoing continuous delivery.
A QA automation tool that integrates into development pipelines to test code for SEO impact before deployment.
Verified feedback from the global deployment network.
Post queries, share implementation strategies, and help other users.
Uses the latest Chromium engine to crawl and render JavaScript-heavy frameworks like React, Angular, and Vue.
Syncs server log data with crawl data to visualize search engine bot behavior vs. site structure.
Allows users to scrape specific data points from the HTML using Regex, CSS Selectors, or XPath.
Automated WCAG 2.1/2.2 auditing across the entire site architecture.
AI-driven module that correlates technical fixes with projected organic traffic growth.
A modern API architecture that allows for precise data fetching without over-fetching.
Preventing loss of organic traffic when moving to a new domain or CMS.
Registry Updated:2/7/2026
Developers accidentally pushing 'noindex' tags or breaking site structure.
Ensuring Google can see content that is rendered client-side.