sunrocksrvpark.com
8-year-old e-commerce site, served through Cloudflare, with email running through custom-or-self-hosted.
Email health56Solid
You have DMARC set up, but in monitor-only mode — it's not actually rejecting spoofed mail.
No MTA-STS or TLS-RPT policy is published — incoming mail could be downgraded to plaintext.
DMARC aggregate reporting enabled (rua=)
No DMARC aggregate-reporting address is published — you wouldn't see spoofing attempts.
Free-email exposure on contact page (gmail/yahoo/outlook visible)
You're showing a free Gmail / Yahoo / Outlook address on your site. Visitors can't tell whether the inbox really belongs to you, and search engines treat the listing as less trustworthy.
Lead magnet / signup incentive detected (free download, ebook, etc.)
We didn't find a lead magnet on your homepage — no free download, sample, or signup incentive. Visitors who aren't ready to buy have nothing to take with them.
Mailto: direct contact link present
We couldn't find a tap-to-email link anywhere on your site.
Email provider class (Workspace / 365 / Zoho / self-hosted / shared)
We couldn't confidently identify which service is hosting your email.
SPF is set and lists your sending services as approved senders.
Branded domain email address (vs free Gmail/Yahoo)
You send email from your own domain, not a free Gmail/Yahoo address.
SPF lookup count (10-limit deliverability check)
Your SPF record uses fewer than 10 DNS lookups — under the spec limit.
Email forwarding service detected (improvmx, forwardemail, etc.)
Mail to this domain is being forwarded — you have working email reachability.
4 additional standards didn't apply to this category
AI-readiness62Solid
JSON-LD richness score for LLMs
We couldn't find any organization details in your page's structured data.
3 additional standards didn't apply to this category
Performance64Solid
Image optimization (WebP/AVIF)
Your images are served as JPEG or PNG when modern formats (WebP, AVIF) would cut their size by 30–60% with no visible loss.
Lazy loading on below-fold images
Images below the fold aren't lazy-loaded — visitors download them up front even if they never scroll that far.
Font loading strategy (FOUT/FOIT/swap)
Your fonts aren't using font-display: swap. Visitors see invisible text for a moment while the font downloads — Google penalises this.
Mobile PageSpeed score + Core Web Vitals (LCP, FCP, CLS)
Your homepage is slow on mobile. The data Google uses to rank pages says real visitors wait too long for it to feel ready.
Your homepage is heavier than it should be on mobile — pages are slow to start painting.
Your server compresses pages with Brotli or gzip — visitors download a fraction of the raw size.
5 additional standards didn't apply to this category
Brand presence68Excellent
We couldn't find a Trustpilot listing. Many consumers check Trustpilot before buying — a missing listing reads as a missing reputation.
We couldn't find a Facebook Page linked from your site. Many consumers still check Facebook before booking or buying.
Instagram presence (link from site → IG profile)
We couldn't find an Instagram profile linked from your site. For local / consumer-facing brands, Instagram is the lead channel.
tools=DoubleClick|Facebook Pixel|LinkedIn Insight|Twitter/X Ads, count=4
Your domain has been registered for years — long enough to clear fraud-detection signals.
Wayback Machine site age & last snapshot
Your site has been online for years — public archives have a long history of it.
8 additional standards didn't apply to this category
Security79Excellent
There's no CAA record at your registrar saying which companies are allowed to issue certificates for you.
Your server doesn't staple OCSP. Visitors' browsers may have to contact the CA themselves, slowing first connects.
Neither OCSP stapling nor Must-Staple is in play. A revoked cert wouldn't be caught quickly.
Embedded SCT count (Certificate Transparency)
Your certificate carries only one embedded SCT — modern browsers want at least two. Reissue from a CA that includes them.
SSL certificate validity & expiration window
Your SSL certificate is valid and not close to expiring.
Sensitive path exposure (.git, .env, /admin, xmlrpc.php, wp-login.php)
None of the common admin or developer paths are publicly reachable.
Only modern TLS (1.2 and above) is offered — TLS 1.0 and 1.1 are turned off.
Modern cipher suite preference
The handshake negotiates a modern AEAD cipher (AES-GCM or ChaCha20-Poly1305).
Forward secrecy is guaranteed by the negotiated handshake — past traffic stays unreadable even if your key leaks.
Certificate key strength and signature algorithm
Your certificate uses strong modern math (ECDSA P-256+ or RSA-2048+ with SHA-256+).
Certificate chain completeness
Your server sends the full certificate chain — every device builds the path to a trusted root cleanly.
Certificate validity-period brevity
Your certificate uses a short validity window (≤ 90 days) — auto-renewal keeps revocation fast and frictionless.
Your certificate is issued by a tier-1 publicly trusted CA (Let's Encrypt, DigiCert, Google Trust, Sectigo, etc.).
Your TLS handshake completes quickly — under 300ms on a cold connection.
5 additional standards didn't apply to this category
Privacy80Excellent
Your homepage loads a high number of third-party trackers. Each one slows the page, leaks data, and increases your compliance surface.
3 additional standards didn't apply to this category
SEO81Excellent
No breadcrumb schema is published. Search engines can't show breadcrumb trails under your listings, and visitors lose the trail to important pages.
Title, meta description, OG, Twitter cards, canonical
Your homepage is missing one or more of the standard social-share and search-preview tags.
Schema.org structured data presence
Your homepage doesn't publish any Schema.org structured data. Search engines and AI tools fall back to guessing what your site is — and they guess wrong more often than not.
Your homepage has a clear H1 heading — search engines and screen readers know what the page is about.
Schema.org type validity (parsed JSON-LD)
Your structured-data tags parse cleanly against Schema.org.
FAQ / HowTo schema (where applicable)
Your pages publish FAQ / HowTo schema — eligible for rich-result panels in search.
hreflang for multi-language sites
Your hreflang tags are published — visitors get routed to the right language version.
Internal link depth (clicks from homepage to deepest content)
Important pages are reachable in just a click or two from your homepage.
3 additional standards didn't apply to this category
Accessibility82Excellent
No skip-to-content link is published. Keyboard users have to tab through every nav item on every page before reaching the content.
Your heading levels skip — for example, an H1 followed by an H3 with no H2 in between. Screen reader users lose the outline of the page.
Text on your homepage meets WCAG AA contrast minimums — readable by visitors with low vision.
Your accessibility statement page is published — visitors can find out what standards you commit to.
Every image on your homepage has alt text — screen readers can describe them.
ARIA labels presence and validity
Interactive elements have proper ARIA labels — screen reader users get a clear description of each control.
1 additional standard didn't apply to this category
View formal standards verdicts → Composite-spec rollups for press, regulators, and compliance auditors.
14 additional standards planned, scorer not yet implemented.
Is email from this domain trustworthy?61Solid
Stops scammers from emailing customers as you
You have DMARC set up, but in monitor-only mode — it's not actually rejecting spoofed mail.
Keeps your email private in transit
No MTA-STS or TLS-RPT policy is published — incoming mail could be downgraded to plaintext.
You get reports when someone fakes your email
No DMARC aggregate-reporting address is published — you wouldn't see spoofing attempts.
A clickable email link on your site
We couldn't find a tap-to-email link anywhere on your site.
What's actually running your email
We couldn't confidently identify which service is hosting your email.
Lists who's allowed to email as your business
SPF is set and lists your sending services as approved senders.
You email from your own domain, not Gmail
You send email from your own domain, not a free Gmail/Yahoo address.
Your email setup is under a hidden limit
Your SPF record uses fewer than 10 DNS lookups — under the spec limit.
Your email is being forwarded, not hosted
Mail to this domain is being forwarded — you have working email reachability.
3 additional standards didn't apply to this site
Is it fast?64Solid
Your photos are saved in modern formats
Your images are served as JPEG or PNG when modern formats (WebP, AVIF) would cut their size by 30–60% with no visible loss.
Photos lower on the page wait their turn
Images below the fold aren't lazy-loaded — visitors download them up front even if they never scroll that far.
Your text shows up while fonts load
Your fonts aren't using font-display: swap. Visitors see invisible text for a moment while the font downloads — Google penalises this.
How fast your site loads on a phone
Your homepage is slow on mobile. The data Google uses to rank pages says real visitors wait too long for it to feel ready.
Your homepage is heavier than it should be on mobile — pages are slow to start painting.
Your site uses a modern web connection
Your server speaks HTTP/2 — page loads multiplex over a single connection.
Pages get squeezed before they're sent
Your server compresses pages with Brotli or gzip — visitors download a fraction of the raw size.
5 additional standards didn't apply to this site
Does this look like a real business?74Excellent
We couldn't find a Trustpilot listing. Many consumers check Trustpilot before buying — a missing listing reads as a missing reputation.
Whether anyone's written about you lately
No news mentions of this domain in the last 30 days.
How long your domain has existed
Your domain has been registered for years — long enough to clear fraud-detection signals.
How long your site has been online
Your site has been online for years — public archives have a long history of it.
A contact form people can actually find
A visible contact form is reachable from your homepage.
6 additional standards didn't apply to this site
Can people find this site?79Excellent
A trail showing where visitors are on your site
No breadcrumb schema is published. Search engines can't show breadcrumb trails under your listings, and visitors lose the trail to important pages.
How your site appears when shared or in search results
Your homepage is missing one or more of the standard social-share and search-preview tags.
Hidden labels that explain your business to Google
Your homepage doesn't publish any Schema.org structured data. Search engines and AI tools fall back to guessing what your site is — and they guess wrong more often than not.
How well your site feeds AI the right facts
We couldn't find any organization details in your page's structured data.
A clear headline on every page
Your homepage has a clear H1 heading — search engines and screen readers know what the page is about.
Whether your behind-the-scenes labels are valid
Your structured-data tags parse cleanly against Schema.org.
Common questions answered in a Google-friendly way
Your pages publish FAQ / HowTo schema — eligible for rich-result panels in search.
Telling Google which language a visitor should see
Your hreflang tags are published — visitors get routed to the right language version.
How easy it is to reach your deepest pages
Important pages are reachable in just a click or two from your homepage.
6 additional standards didn't apply to this site
Is it safe to visit?79Excellent
Only your approved vendors can issue your padlock
There's no CAA record at your registrar saying which companies are allowed to issue certificates for you.
Visitors connect faster on the first click
Your server doesn't staple OCSP. Visitors' browsers may have to contact the CA themselves, slowing first connects.
Strict mode for your padlock check
Neither OCSP stapling nor Must-Staple is in play. A revoked cert wouldn't be caught quickly.
Your certificate is publicly logged
Your certificate carries only one embedded SCT — modern browsers want at least two. Reissue from a CA that includes them.
Your padlock isn't about to expire
Your SSL certificate is valid and not close to expiring.
Private files aren't open to the public
None of the common admin or developer paths are publicly reachable.
Old TLS versions are turned off
Only modern TLS (1.2 and above) is offered — TLS 1.0 and 1.1 are turned off.
The padlock uses strong, modern math
The handshake negotiates a modern AEAD cipher (AES-GCM or ChaCha20-Poly1305).
Old recordings stay locked even if a key leaks
Forward secrecy is guaranteed by the negotiated handshake — past traffic stays unreadable even if your key leaks.
Your padlock isn't using outdated keys
Your certificate uses strong modern math (ECDSA P-256+ or RSA-2048+ with SHA-256+).
Your padlock loads cleanly on every device
Your server sends the full certificate chain — every device builds the path to a trusted root cleanly.
Your padlock renews on a healthy schedule
Your certificate uses a short validity window (≤ 90 days) — auto-renewal keeps revocation fast and frictionless.
Your padlock comes from a reputable vendor
Your certificate is issued by a tier-1 publicly trusted CA (Let's Encrypt, DigiCert, Google Trust, Sectigo, etc.).
Your site finishes its handshake quickly
Your TLS handshake completes quickly — under 300ms on a cold connection.
5 additional standards didn't apply to this site
Does it respect visitor privacy?80Excellent
How many outside companies you let watch your visitors
Your homepage loads a high number of third-party trackers. Each one slows the page, leaks data, and increases your compliance surface.
You have a terms of service page
Your terms of service page is reachable from the homepage.
3 additional standards didn't apply to this site
Can everyone use it?82Excellent
No skip-to-content link is published. Keyboard users have to tab through every nav item on every page before reaching the content.
Your headings are in a sensible order
Your heading levels skip — for example, an H1 followed by an H3 with no H2 in between. Screen reader users lose the outline of the page.
Text on your homepage meets WCAG AA contrast minimums — readable by visitors with low vision.
You have an accessibility statement
Your accessibility statement page is published — visitors can find out what standards you commit to.
Your photos have written descriptions
Every image on your homepage has alt text — screen readers can describe them.
Your buttons and forms are labeled for screen readers
Interactive elements have proper ARIA labels — screen reader users get a clear description of each control.
1 additional standard didn't apply to this site