Home Feedback tool for website
Feedback tool for website
A feedback tool for a website lets people leave comments, screenshots, and short recordings right on the live page instead of pasting screenshots into Slack or Figma. The comments stay pinned to the exact element or area, so whoever reads them later sees what the reviewer saw.
Website Feedback Tool does that as a browser extension. No new tab, no account, no cloud upload — the page you're already looking at is where feedback lands.
What a feedback tool for a website actually does
Every review is three moves — point at what's off, say what should change, hand it to whoever will fix it. The extension keeps those three and cuts everything in between.
- Pin a comment to a specific button, image, or block — it doesn't drift when the page changes.
- Every note gets a screenshot attached automatically.
- Record a short screen clip when a bug only makes sense in motion.
- Every comment from one round of review lands in the same share link.
How it works
Click the icon in the toolbar. Pick a mode — Select area, Select element, or Screen Record. Add a note. Save. The comment is now attached to the page you were on, along with its URL and viewport size.
Repeat as many times as you need. Every comment lands in the same review, so at the end you send one link instead of a folder full of screenshots.
Who uses a feedback tool for a website
Three jobs on a team, one extension:
- Designers use it for pixel-level handoff — spacing, alignment, and copy tweaks straight from the live page instead of a fresh round of Figma exports.
- Developers and QA use it for bug reports that carry the URL, viewport, and screenshot without needing to be rewritten into a ticket first.
- Clients and stakeholders use it for approval rounds where «change this exact thing» beats a long email thread.
Why an extension, not a cloud tool
Most website feedback tools are cloud apps — you paste your URL, they load your page inside their iframe on their domain, reviewers comment there. Works, but every review has to go through their infrastructure.
An extension doesn't. Your browser loads the page on the real domain, with real cookies and real login. Nothing depends on a third-party service staying up. It's the difference between reviewing on production and reviewing on a screenshot of it.
Sending it to whoever will fix it
Hand off the review in whatever format fits the team:
- Share a link — the developer opens it and sees every comment overlaid on the page.
- Download HTML or PDF — drop it into Slack, email, or a ticket.
- Send it to an AI coding agent (Claude Code, Codex) — it gets a structured list and starts on the fixes directly.
Install it and try it on your own page
The extension is free and installs in one click from the Chrome Web Store. Pin it to the toolbar and it stays out of the way until you press it.