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The Get Source Code of Webpage tool from seochecker.tools allows you to instantly view and copy the complete HTML source code of any live webpage — without needing a browser developer console or browser extension.
This tool is perfect for:
SEO professionals analyzing on-page elements
Developers inspecting page structure
Students learning how websites are built
Bloggers checking competitors' layouts
Anyone curious about how a website works behind the scenes
All you have to do is paste a URL, and our tool will fetch and display the exact HTML used to render the page.
HTML is the foundation of every website. Viewing source code can reveal:
Meta tags used (title, description, keywords)
Structured data and schema markup
Internal and external links
Canonical URLs
Heading tags and content structure
JavaScript, CSS, or third-party scripts
Hidden SEO elements
For developers and marketers alike, having access to a site’s source code is like looking under the hood of a car — you see how it really runs.
Shows complete, unmodified HTML source code
Works with any public webpage
Mobile-friendly and responsive
No ads, no distractions
Completely free and unlimited usage
Copy code directly with one click
Q1. Does this tool show the live source code?
Yes, it fetches and displays the real-time HTML as delivered by the server — not a cached or simplified version.
Q2. Can I see JavaScript content too?
Only HTML code is fetched. If JavaScript content is dynamically loaded, it may not appear unless rendered server-side.
Q3. Is it legal to view a website's source code?
Yes. HTML is sent to your browser for display. It's completely legal to view it, as long as you don’t use it for unauthorized duplication.
Q4. Can I use this for learning web development?
Absolutely. Many beginners use this tool to study how popular sites are structured.
Q5. Does this work for all websites?
It works for most publicly accessible web pages, though some may block source viewing using headers or JS redirection.
SEO audits and competitor analysis
Learning web development from real examples
Copying embed codes or widgets
Checking meta tags and heading structure
Identifying broken or malicious code