Free Tools for Makers & Founders
A growing set of free online tools to research, check, and prep your product before you launch — website traffic and ranking checkers, AI traffic insights, favicon tools, and more. No signup to browse, no cost to use.
Traffic CheckerCheck estimated visits, rankings, traffic sources, and engagement.Domain Rank CheckerSee any domain's global, country, and category traffic rank.AI Traffic CheckerSee traffic from ChatGPT, Gemini, Perplexity, and Claude.Favicon GeneratorCreate ICO, PNG, Apple Touch Icon, Android, and manifest favicon packages.Favicon CheckerTest favicon.ico, Apple Touch Icon, web manifest, and install markup.YouTube Playlist Length CalculatorCalculate playlist duration, speed-adjusted watch time, and daily viewing plans.
Built for the Pre-Launch Grind
Most launch advice assumes you already have data. These tools hand you the quick reads you actually need before going live: how much traffic and rank a competitor really has, whether AI assistants are sending it visitors, and whether your own site basics — like favicons — are in order.
They're free because they're meant to be used often, not gated. When your product is ready, submit it to LaunchVault to get in front of early users.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Are these tools really free?
- Yes — every tool here is free to use. No credit card, no trial, no per-day cap. A free LaunchVault account is all you need for the traffic and ranking tools.
- Do I need to sign up?
- Most tools work instantly. The traffic, ranking, and AI traffic checkers ask you to sign in with a free account to prevent abuse of the underlying data — that's it.
- What can I use these tools for?
- Quick competitor and market research, pre-launch checks, and SEO basics — estimate any site's traffic and rank, see its AI-assistant traffic, generate and test favicons, and more. They're built for indie makers and founders getting a product ready to launch.
- How accurate is the traffic and ranking data?
- The traffic, ranking, and AI numbers are third-party estimates, not a site's own analytics. Treat them as directional — great for sizing competitors and scanning a market, not for exact reporting.