My Favorite Wayback Machine Alternatives

That’s where web archiving tools come in. They allow you to access saved versions of web pages, even if they get taken offline. The Wayback Machine is the best-known option, but it isn’t perfect—it’s slow, sometimes misses snapshots, and...

My Favorite Wayback Machine Alternatives

The internet never forgets… unless the page vanishes, the site goes offline, or the content quietly changes overnight.

That’s where web archiving tools come in. They allow you to access saved versions of web pages, even if they get taken offline.

The Wayback Machine is the best-known option, but it isn’t perfect—it’s slow, sometimes misses snapshots, and doesn’t offer much customization.

I’ve tested half a dozen web archiving tools over the years. Here are the best Wayback Machine alternatives I’ve found—each with its own strengths, depending on what you’re trying to do.

How I use page archiving tools

I use web archiving tools almost daily in my SEO and content work. Here are the main ways they help my workflow:

Analyze how competitors update their content. If a rival page is ranking well, I want to know how it evolved to get there. Has the structure changed? Did they update the intro? Add new sections? Seeing the version history of high-performing content often reveals the strategy behind it, which can help improve our content updating strategy in turn.Build links with broken link building. Another underrated use case: broken link building. With Ahrefs, you can find dead outbound links on high-authority sites, then use web archiving tools to see what those pages used to contain. From there, you can create a replacement asset and pitch it to the site owner as a relevant, working alternative. (For more on this strategy, check out our guide to broken link building.)Recover deleted content during site migrations. Web archiving tools can also be a lifesaver during a botched site migration. If pages were accidentally deleted or overwritten, you can recover the original content and republish or redirect as needed.Track how content changes impact performance. If traffic to a blog post drops suddenly, I’ll pull up older versions of the content using Ahrefs’ Page Inspect to see what changed—and whether those edits may have triggered the decline. It’s a great way to actually see how specific content changes impact your traffic.

(If you’re in this situation, check out our full guide on how to diagnose traffic drops: How to Analyze a Sudden Traffic Drop.)

What to look for in a Wayback Machine alternative

Not all web archiving tools are created equal. If you’re evaluating alternatives to the Wayback Machine, here are the most important things to consider:

Page coverage: How many URLs does the archive contain? Tools like the Wayback Machine have massive databases, while newer or niche alternatives may cover fewer sites.Snapshot history: How far back do the archives go, and how frequently are pages captured? For tracking changes over time, you’ll want tools that support both long-term history and customizable capture frequency.Integration with other tools: Some archiving tools connect with SEO platforms, cloud storage, or offer APIs—useful if you’re trying to use page snapshots as part of a bigger, automated workflow.Data fidelity: Does the archive capture full HTML and scripts, or just visual screenshots? Depending on your use case, you’ll want the right balance of accuracy and completeness.Cost: Some tools are completely free. Others—especially those designed for legal or enterprise use—can be pricey. Make sure the pricing matches your needs.Compliance and permanence: If you’re working in a regulated industry, look for solutions that support tamper-evident records, legal holds, and permanent citations.

Archiving tools can be used in a bunch of different ways, so it’s up to you to find the right one for your specific use case—whether you’re debugging SEO issues, doing historical research, or (hopefully not) preparing for court.

Ahrefs Page Inspect saves HTML and text snapshots of page changes (and coming soon, it will store visual snapshots too).

The best Wayback Machine alternatives (and who they’re for)

Here are my favorite alternatives for different uses:

Ahrefs’ Page Inspect—for marketers who care about what changed (and why)

Page Inspect lets you inspect any page in Ahrefs’ index and compare how its HTML content has changed over time. This heatmap shows all the captures for the Ahrefs blog:

You can toggle between text and HTML modes, with the option to beautify the HTML for better legibility:

And, like a diffchecker, you can compare any two page versions to see the changes that happened, like this before and after of my update to our keyword research guide:

It also shows how those changes correlate with organic traffic and ranking shifts. SEOs and content strategists use it to diagnose traffic drops, identify content decay, and analyze competitor changes. What makes it unique is how it blends page archiving, diffchecking, and SEO data—so you can actually see how content edits impact search performance.

Learn more: https://ahrefs.com/academy/how-to-use-ahrefs/site-explorer/page-inspect

archive.today–for quick, anonymous archiving

Archive.today is a free, no-login tool that lets you capture a web page instantly and store it on its own domain.

It’s a favorite for researchers, journalists, or anyone who wants to preserve a web page before it disappears. The tool is incredibly fast and supports complex, JavaScript-heavy pages better than most public archives.

It’s a great choice for saving a page before it disappears, but it’s not the best for finding a webpage after it’s disappeared, because it relies on someone manually triggering the capture. Case in point: the latest shanpshot for the Ahrefs blog is from 2016.

Learn more: https://archive.ph. Free to use, no registration required.

Stillio–for marketers, compliance teams, and brand monitors

Stillio is a paid web archiving service that captures automated screenshots of web pages on a schedule—daily, weekly, or customized to your needs.

Marketing teams use it to track A/B tests and page updates. Legal and compliance teams rely on it to ensure ad and regulatory compliance.

Its standout feature is automated snapshot scheduling with useful integrations like Dropbox and Google Drive.

Learn more: https://www.stillio.com. Starts at $29/month for 5 URLs.

Perma.cc–for legal teams, academics, and journalists

Perma.cc was built by Harvard Law School to fight link rot in scholarly and legal contexts. It allows users to create permanent, time-stamped records of web pages that are stored by a consortium of libraries.

Legal professionals, journalists, and researchers rely on it when they need immutable citations for court filings, academic references, or public records. Its standout feature is the ability to generate tamper-evident, permanent archive links that are widely trusted by legal and academic institutions.

Learn more: https://perma.cc. Free for academic use, with paid plans available for institutions and individuals.

Pagefreezer–for enterprises with legal or regulatory requirements

Pagefreezer is an enterprise-grade archiving platform designed for industries that require secure, compliant records of websites and digital communications.

Governments, banks, insurance firms, and healthcare providers use it to maintain legally admissible records of online content and social media. It stands out with its support for legal holds, audit trails, and exportable archives—key features for audits and litigation.

It’s expensive, but if you have these kinds of enterprise-sized problems to solve, hopefully you’ll have an enterprise -sized budget to match.

I don’t have a screenshot of me using this service because, let’s face it, I can’t afford it.

Learn more: https://www.pagefreezer.com. Pricing by quote only.

Memento Project–for researchers and digital historians

The Memento Project is a federated tool that connects multiple web archives—like Wayback, Archive.today, and others—and lets users “time travel” across archived versions of a URL. It’s especially useful for historians, academics, and journalists conducting deep research into how web content has evolved over time.

Its most compelling feature is archive aggregation: you’re not limited to one platform’s coverage, and can browse across multiple archiving services in one place.

Learn more: http://timetravel.mementoweb.org. Free and open to the public.

Webrecorder and GitHub–for developers and DIY archivists

Webrecorder is an open-source tool that lets you build interactive, high-fidelity archives of websites, especially those that rely heavily on JavaScript.

Developers and digital preservationists use it when they need precise control over how a page is captured and stored. You can even record dynamic user sessions for full playback—a level of fidelity public archives often can’t match. GitHub is commonly used to store or share these archives.

Learn more: https://webrecorder.net. Free and open-source.

If you’re an SEO and you’ve ever wished the Wayback Machine could show why a traffic drop happened—not just when a page changed—give Ahrefs’ Page Inspect a try. It connects historical page content with search performance, helping you spot exactly what went wrong (or right).