Link rot is what happens to the web over time. Pages move, servers die, organisations dissolve, funding ends. Tim Berners-Lee identified the problem in 1998 and argued for persistent URLs; the web has largely ignored the advice ever since. A Harvard study found that half of all URLs cited in Supreme Court opinions no longer worked. The picture in academic papers, blog posts, and personal reading lists is not much better.
Paste up to 25 URLs below — one per line. Each is checked in turn using a HEAD request, so the check is fast and puts minimal load on the target server. Dead links get an automatic Wayback Machine lookup link; redirected links show where they now point.
The web forgets. This helps you remember.
Check URLs
What the codes mean
Some servers reject HEAD requests with a 405 (Method Not Allowed) response; the checker retries these automatically using a GET request. Results marked “via redirect” resolved successfully after following one or more redirects; the original URL has moved.
The Wayback Machine at the Internet Archive has been archiving the web since 1996. For any live link, you can Save a Page Now — free and account-free. Archiving takes seconds; the window before a page disappears can be much shorter. Save while you can, not after the fact.
Tim Berners-Lee wrote about link rot in his 1998 note Cool URIs don’t change. Twenty-seven years on, the title still says everything there is to say on the matter.