How to See Who Visited Your Website Free (2026)
Searching "who visited my website free" gets you two kinds of results: analytics tools that show you numbers instead of names, and identification tools quietly hoping you won't notice their pricing page. This guide is the honest version: what's genuinely possible for free in 2026, what each free option actually shows you, and where the paywalls really start.
The short answer up front: yes, you can see who visits your website for free. Real identification tools have free tiers that resolve visitors to actual names or companies, within monthly limits. What you can't get for free is unlimited volume. For most small sites, the free limits are enough to prove whether the signal is worth anything.
First, What "Free" Analytics Can and Can't Do
Google Analytics, Cloudflare Analytics, Plausible: free (or freemium), excellent, and structurally unable to answer "who." They report aggregates by design, and GA's terms prohibit personally identifying users within it. Same for social platforms: Instagram and Facebook profile-visit myths aside, no analytics product names your website's visitors. If numbers are all you need, stop here and pay nothing. If you need names, you need an identification layer, which works differently, as explained in our guide to identifying anonymous website visitors.
The Three Genuinely Free Ways to See Who Visited
Free tier of a person-level identification tool. Beam's free plan identifies 10 visitors a month at the person level: name, role, company, and matched social profiles across LinkedIn, X, and 10+ platforms, plus an AI-drafted reply for each, with no card required. Ten a month sounds small until you remember they're not random: identification naturally concentrates on the professional, B2B-flavored visitors most worth knowing.
Free tier of a company-level tool. Leadfeeder's free plan shows up to 100 identified companies a month (with 7-day data retention), and Warmly's free tier reveals up to 500 visitors monthly at company and contact level without automation. Generous volumes, with the structural limit that a company name still leaves you finding the person yourself.
Your email tool's click tracking. If you run a newsletter, click and open data ties known subscribers to site visits. Free with the list you already have, but it only re-identifies people who already gave you their email, so it discovers no one new.
The Free-Tier Comparison Table
| Tool | Free allowance | What you see | Catch |
|---|---|---|---|
| Beam | 10 identified visitors/mo | Person: name, role, socials, drafted outreach | Volume cap |
| Leadfeeder | 100 companies/mo | Company name + pages | 7-day retention, no person |
| Warmly | 500 visitors/mo | Company + contact level | No automation features |
| RB2B | 150 resolutions/mo | Company-level only (since Jan 2026) | Person-level now paid, US only |
| Email click tracking | Unlimited | Known subscribers' visits | Nobody new |
Free tiers as of July 2026; all of them shift, check current terms. The full paid landscape is in our software roundup.
How to Get the Most From Free Limits
Run the free tiers like an experiment, not a subscription. Install two or three side by side (each is one script tag; they don't conflict) and let two weeks of your real traffic show which tool identifies the visitors you actually care about. Judge on three things: how many identifications were real people at real companies when you spot-checked, whether the identified visitors matched your buyer profile, and whether you actually contacted any of them. That last one is the tell: if a free tool produced even two real conversations in two weeks, you've validated the channel before spending anything. The economics of going paid, and what identification is worth per lead, are covered in our pillar guide.
One expectation to set: free tiers exist because identification gets more valuable with volume, and vendors know a working sample sells the upgrade. That's not a scam, it's a fair trade, but go in knowing the free plan is the trial, and judge upgrade prices before you're dependent. Beam's paid jump is $19 a month; some competitors' first paid tier is $79 to $99.
FAQ
Can I see who visited my website for free? Yes, within limits. Beam identifies 10 visitors a month free at the person level; Leadfeeder shows 100 companies; Warmly reveals 500 visitors at company and contact level. No tool offers unlimited free identification.
Can Google Analytics show me who visited my website? No. It reports anonymous aggregates, and identifying individuals within it violates its terms. You need a purpose-built identification tool alongside it.
Is there a free app to see who views my website? The tools above install via a script tag rather than an app store, and their free tiers are real. Beware anything promising unlimited free visitor names; the underlying data costs money, so unlimited-free usually means fake or scraped junk.
What's the catch with free visitor identification? Monthly volume caps. The identification itself is real; you just get a sample. For low-traffic sites that sample can cover most of what matters.
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