Understanding Your Report
How to read and use your website health report: scores, categories, issues, and actions.
This guide applies to single-URL reports and to individual page reports opened from a monthly site report. The layout and sections are the same.
On this page
Opening a Report
You can open a report from your dashboard (click any report card), from an email link when a report is ready or shared with you, or by pasting the report URL in your browser. The report page shows one URL’s health analysis. If the report failed to generate, you’ll see an error message at the top; otherwise you’ll see the full report layout described below.
Report Header and Notices
At the top of every report you’ll see the Website Health Report title and the URL that was analyzed (clickable to open the live page). The generation date and time are shown below. On Pro/Enterprise reports you may also see HTTP status, Indexability, and response time.
- Expiration notice — For single-URL reports that expire (e.g. 90 days), a notice shows how many days remain and recommends downloading a PDF or CSV to keep a permanent copy.
- Expired notice — If the report is older than 90 days, you’ll see that the link has expired; the page may still be viewable but we recommend using a saved PDF/CSV.
Privacy Toggle (Logged-In Users)
If you’re logged in and the report belongs to your workspace, a Privacy control appears in the top-right corner. You can switch between Private (only workspace members can view; sharing is restricted) and Public (anyone with the URL can view; you can email the report to anyone). Hover the info icon next to the toggle for a short explanation of each mode.
Overall URL Health Score
The large score (0–100%) is the Overall URL Health Score for this page only. It’s a weighted average of all category scores. The color and short label indicate: 90–100% Very Good, 80–89% Good, 70–79% Fair, 60–69% Needs Work, 50–59% Poor, below 50% Urgent. Hover the info icon for how the score is calculated and what the weights mean.
If available, the Percentile Rank shows how this URL compares to other URLs we’ve scanned in the last 90 days (e.g. “Better than 75% of website URLs”). A note may explain that the score reflects only this URL and which checks are included for your plan (Free/Basic vs Pro/Enterprise). If competitor data is present, a short note explains how competitor benchmarks are derived.
Category Scores
The Category Scores section shows a grid of categories (e.g. Image Alt Tags, Broken Links, Page Title Quality, Headings Structure, Meta Tags, Security). Each card has a category name, score (or N/A if not measured), and an info icon with a short explanation of what that category checks and how it’s weighted. Categories contribute differently to the overall score; higher-weighted categories (e.g. Broken Links, Page Title Quality) have more impact. If there are many categories, the grid is scrollable.
You vs Competitors (Enterprise)
If your report includes competitor data (Enterprise with competitors configured), a You vs Competitors table appears. It lists your overall score and security score plus each competitor’s scores. Delta columns show the difference (your score minus theirs): positive (green) means you’re ahead, negative (red) means they’re ahead. This helps you see how you compare at a glance.
Your Errors and Locations
This section lists the issues found on the page, with options to organize and dig deeper.
- Group by Priority — Orders errors by urgency: High (red) first, then Medium (yellow), then Low (gray). Use this to fix the most critical issues first.
- Group by Error Type — Groups by category (e.g. Missing Alt Text, Broken Links) so you can fix all similar issues together or hand off by type.
- Each error card shows severity, category, the error message, and location (where on the page or in the code). Some entries have a View error type explanation link that expands plain-language “What this means” and “Quick fix,” and optionally View detailed explanation with more context and code examples.
- Many reports also include a separate Your Error Types Explained section (often near the end of the detailed content) that lists each error type found on the page with a short explanation, so you can review all types in one place.
Use the explanations and fixes to address each issue; re-run a report later to confirm the score and error count have improved.
Plan-Gated Sections and Upgrade Prompts
Depending on your plan, the report may show Pro Plan Features or Enterprise Plan Features sections. These can include browser-rendering checks, Core Web Vitals performance, keyboard accessibility, AI-assisted insights (Pro), and security checks, competitor comparisons, Partial WCAG 2.1 AA compliance audit, and AI prioritization (Enterprise). On Free or Basic you may see these as locked or blurred with an upgrade message. An Unlock More Insights area may appear with plan comparison cards and a What You're Missing box describing benefits of the next tier. Enterprise users may see All Insights Unlocked instead.
Contact, Feedback, and Footer
Near the bottom of the report, a Contact / Plans section (#contact-plans) offers a contact form and an AI assistant panel for quick help understanding results or planning next steps. You may also see a feedback option to rate or comment on the report. The report footer includes Logia/Logia Insights branding, links (e.g. Blog, Help & guides), and a short disclaimer. Pro/Enterprise reports show Lighthouse attribution for performance analysis. The report page also includes accessibility and back-to-top widgets.
Related: To learn how to generate reports from the dashboard or homepage, see Using Manually Generated Reports. For managing all your reports and websites, see Using the Dashboard. For aggregated multi-page reports, see Using Monthly Site Reports. For teams, billing, and problems running scans, see Managing Your Team, Managing Your Subscription, and Troubleshooting.
Recommended next: Using Monthly Site Reports
Last reviewed: 2026-05-11