drafty

Your client's feedback is somewhere in their inbox. Drafty puts it on the page.

A website feedback tool is only useful if your client actually uses it. Drafty turns any live or staging site into a review board — share one link, they click the element and leave a note pinned right there. No account. Nothing to install. Works on their phone.

Share one linkNo installAny live site
drafty.im/canvas/portfolio-sitev1v2
portfolio site
the hero text is too small on mobile
claude code
$ drafty comments inbox
the hero text is too small on mobile· portfolio site
✦ Claude is working…
pushed v2 — same link · thread resolved
Your client clicks the exact element. The note pins there — no screenshot, no "the section near the top."

The feedback you're getting today

Scattered across chat — every note a guess at which version, which element.

Maya (client)
Today 4:12 PM
saw the landing page, looks great 🙌
can you make the logo bigger though
which one — header or footer?
this one
that's the old version 😅 are you on the link I sent, or a screenshot?
…the screenshot

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

01

Drop in any URL

Paste the live site or staging domain — Drafty turns it into a review board. No code snippet to add, no access to the server needed. Your client gets one link.

.html.md
drafty.im/x9k
02

They click the exact element

Your client hovers the header, the CTA, the footer copy — clicks once, types the note. It pins to that element on the live page. No red circles on screenshots. No "the blue button, I think it's in the nav."

03

Every note in one thread

All feedback lands in a shared thread, anchored to the element. You can reply, resolve, or reopen each note — and the whole conversation stays tied to the exact spot they meant.

YouJaneLove this line

Why people switch

The old way
  • Client sends a screenshot with a red arrow and "this bit looks off"
  • Client won't create an account just to give one round of feedback
  • Feedback split across three emails, a Loom, and a Slack DM
With Drafty
  • Element-anchored comments on the live pageThe note is pinned to the exact element — in context, on the real site
  • Guest commenting on a shared linkThey open the link and click to comment — done in under a minute, on phone or desktop
  • One threaded review board per siteEverything in one place — resolved or open, nothing lost in a chain

Who it's for

Freelance web designer

Send the client a Drafty link instead of a staging URL. They leave notes on the actual elements — not a word doc describing them.

Solo consultant

Share the deliverable before handoff. Your client marks up the live page and you both know exactly what still needs to change.

Indie builder

Drop your v0 site and share it with early testers. They comment without signing up — you see every note in one thread.

Questions

What is a website feedback tool?
A website feedback tool lets reviewers leave comments directly on a live or staged web page — pinned to the exact element they mean — instead of describing it in email or marking up a screenshot. The best ones work for non-technical clients with no account or extension required.
Does my client need to install anything to leave feedback?
No. Drafty loads the site through a shared link. Your client opens it in any browser — on their phone or desktop — and clicks to comment. Nothing to install, nothing to sign up for.
Can reviewers comment without creating an account?
Yes. Comments are guest-by-default. Your client opens the link and types their note — Drafty keeps it anchored to the element and visible to you without them ever logging in.
Does it work on a staging site or password-protected URL?
Yes — paste any URL you have access to. For password-protected staging sites, share the Drafty link with reviewers who also have staging access. Drafty captures the notes; it doesn't handle the auth layer.
How is this different from sending a screenshot?
Screenshots detach from the live page and arrive in email. Drafty pins each note to the actual element — so "the CTA" is anchored to the button, not described in a caption on a JPEG.
Can multiple people review the same site at once?
Yes. Everyone uses the same link. Each reviewer's notes land in the shared thread, anchored to their element. You see who said what, resolve what's done, and nothing gets lost when the email chain gets long.
Is there a free plan?
Yes — you can publish your first canvas and collect feedback for free, no card required.

Keep exploring

Share a link. Get comments on the page.

Free to start. No account for reviewers. Works on any device.