Client feedback that lands on the actual element. Not in a screenshot caption.
A web review tool lets your client click the exact heading, button, or image and leave a note pinned right there — no account, no extension, no red-circle screenshot. Drafty turns any live site into a review board anyone can open from a link.
The feedback you're getting today
Scattered across chat — every note a guess at which version, which element.
Every message here is a comment that belonged on the artifact. In Drafty they tap the exact spot and the note pins there — threaded, on one link that's always the current version. No “which one,” no screenshots, no “FINAL.html.”
How it works
Drop in the URL and share
Paste the live or staging site into Drafty. It becomes a review board — one link you send the client. No install, no account on their end.
They click the element, not the screenshot
The client hovers any part of the page, clicks once, and a note pins to that exact element. The nav, the hero image, the pricing table — anchored, not described.
All feedback in one threaded board
Every comment from every reviewer lands in one place, anchored and threaded. Resolve each one as you fix it. Nothing lost in a Slack thread at 11pm.
Why people switch
- Client emails a photo of their screen with a red circle and no coordinates
- Reviewer won't download an extension or create another account
- Feedback scattered across three emails, a Loom, and a Slack DM
- Element-anchored comments on a link — Every note is pinned to the exact spot — zero guessing
- Guest commenting with no signup — They open the link and type — done in under a minute on any device
- One review board per site — All notes in one thread, open or resolved, nothing buried
Who it's for
Share the staging build as a review link. The client marks up the exact button — not a paragraph describing which button.
Hand off the live site for sign-off. Stakeholder notes land on the page, not in an email thread you have to parse.
Send beta testers a review link before launch. They comment on what's confusing — you ship the fix on the same URL.
Questions
- What is a web review tool?
- A web review tool lets clients or teammates leave feedback directly on a live website — clicking the exact element rather than sending a screenshot. The tool pins each comment to the spot so nothing needs to be re-described or hunted down.
- Does my client need an account to use it?
- No. With Drafty, they open the link and comment as a guest — no signup, no extension, no download. Works on desktop and phone.
- Can I use it on a staging site, not just production?
- Yes — paste any URL you have access to, staging or live. Share the review link with reviewers who also have access, and their comments land in one board.
- How is this different from emailing screenshots?
- Screenshots lose the element. Drafty pins each comment to the exact spot on the live page — "move the CTA" is anchored to the button, not described next to a cropped image.
- Can multiple clients or reviewers comment on the same site?
- Yes. Everyone uses the same link — each person's comments land in a shared thread anchored to the element. You see who said what without a coordination meeting.
- Which web review tools are best for designer-to-client feedback?
- For straightforward client sign-off — send a link, get anchored notes back — Drafty, Pastel, and Markup.io all work without requiring your client to install anything. BugHerd wins if you need a full dev/QA Kanban with technical metadata capture, but that's more than most clients need for a simple review round.
Keep exploring
Share a link. Get comments on the page.
Free to start. No account for reviewers. Works on any device.


