Redirect Checker

Paste a redirect chain or URL hop list to review chain length, repeated URLs, protocol changes, and final destination structure.

Paste one URL per line in the order the redirect chain happens. This tool analyzes the sequence you provide and does not fetch URLs from the web.

Result will appear here.
Metric Value

Privacy: analysis runs locally in your browser. No URLs are stored or transmitted.

How it works

Paste a list of redirect hops in order, then review the chain length and whether the sequence looks efficient or repetitive.

  • Hop count: how many redirects happen before the final destination
  • Duplicates: repeated URLs in the chain
  • Protocol changes: HTTP to HTTPS or similar changes between hops

Examples

  • Single redirect: URL A → URL B
  • Chain: URL A → URL B → URL C
  • Possible issue: repeated or looping URLs in the sequence

When to use this tool

This tool is designed for quick, practical tasks such as everyday calculations, data formatting, or simple conversions. It is best used when you need fast results without installing software or using complex tools.

When to use

  • Quick checks or one-time calculations
  • Validating or converting data before using it elsewhere
  • Simple tasks that do not require advanced software

When not to use

  • Critical financial, legal, or medical decisions
  • Large-scale or automated processing
  • Situations requiring guaranteed precision beyond basic validation

Always review results before using them in important contexts.

About this tool

This tool helps you perform quick utility operations directly in your browser. It runs entirely in your browser without sending data to a server.

You can use this tool when handling simple tasks without installing additional software. The results should be interpreted as a processed output based on your input data.

FAQ

  • What does this redirect checker do?

    This tool analyzes a pasted sequence of URLs as a redirect chain and helps you review hop count, duplicates, protocol changes, and whether the chain ends on a final destination URL.

  • Does it fetch a live website automatically?

    No. This page does not make network requests. You paste the redirect chain or list of hops you want to inspect.

  • What is a redirect chain?

    A redirect chain happens when one URL redirects to another, which then redirects again before reaching the final destination.

  • Why is a shorter chain usually better?

    Shorter chains are generally easier for crawlers and users because they reduce unnecessary hops.

  • Is my pasted URL list stored?

    No. Everything runs locally in your browser.

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