Trackleon monitors prices, job listings, and content updates 24/7 in the background. We notify you the second something changes.
Price dropped from £100 to £79
Trusted for tracking
Smart monitoring tools designed to save you time and missed opportunities.
Whether it's a high-frequency stock ticker or a weekly newsletter, you set the pace. Monitor as frequently as every 10 minutes or as rarely as once a week.
Get notified via Email, Discord, or Telegram only when it matters.
Close your browser. Turn off your PC. Trackleon runs 24/7 on our secure servers.
Don't track the whole page. Use our visual selector (or custom CSS) to track just the price tag, the stock status, or a specific paragraph.
Paste the link of the website you want to monitor.
Click the specific part of the page (like a price) to watch.
We'll email you the moment we detect a change.
Join the early adopters saving hours every week with Trackleon.
Free account includes 5 active trackers.
No! Trackleon runs in the background on our servers, so you don't need to keep your browser or computer running. Your trackers work 24/7 automatically..
Yes, we offer a free tier that allows up to 5 active trackers. We plan to introduce premium features for power users later, but the core features will remain free.
Trackleon can send notifications through email, push or telegram. You can customize which notification methods you prefer and set up filters to only receive alerts for significant changes.
It depends on your schedule. You can set trackers to check as frequently as every 10 minutes. Notifications are sent instantly once a change is detected during a check.
No, Trackleon currently only works with publicly accessible pages. Tracking password-protected or authenticated content is technically challenging and raises security concerns. We focus on monitoring public websites to ensure reliable and secure tracking for all users.
Trackleon makes standard HTTP requests similar to regular browser visits. We respect rate limits to ensure responsible monitoring. Websites see our requests as normal traffic, and we never overwhelm servers with excessive requests.