Are AI Bots Visiting My Website?

AI bots and automated crawlers may check your website without that activity being obvious in normal analytics. GoGuides does not just explain what those bots are — it lets you enter your domain and check live GoGuides Trust Layer data for AI/bot activity, verification status, freshness, and machine-readable trust signals.

Can I Check If AI Bots Are Visiting My Site?

Yes. Enter your domain below and GoGuides will check whether AI or bot systems have requested trust-layer data for your site. The report also checks whether your domain has a visible trust record, verification status, freshness, and machine-readable proof.

Why AI Bots and Crawlers May Visit Your Website

Bots such as GPTBot, Amazonbot, Applebot, Googlebot, and other automated crawlers may visit public websites to discover pages, understand content, support search features, improve products, or help AI-related systems process public information.

A bot visit does not mean your site is trusted. It only means something looked. The painful question is what it found.

What GoGuides Checks

GoGuides checks available trust-layer data to see whether your domain has visible AI/bot activity, an observed trust record, verification status, trust freshness, and a machine-readable verification fingerprint.

This is not a generic article about bots. It is a live lookup against the GoGuides Trust Layer — built to show whether your site is known, active, fresh, verified, and machine-readable when automated systems check it.

Run a Live AI Bot Activity Check

Enter your domain below. GoGuides will return a live report based on available bot activity, trust records, verification status, freshness, and machine-readable trust signals.

AI Crawlers and Bots GoGuides Watches For

GoGuides looks for public activity from AI crawlers, search crawlers, and automated systems that may request or check website trust-layer data. A bot visit does not prove trust by itself, but repeated machine activity can show that a domain is being discovered, revisited, or evaluated.

GPTBot / OpenAI

Associated with OpenAI crawling and public web discovery.

GPTBot

ClaudeBot / Anthropic

Associated with Anthropic crawling and AI-related web discovery.

ClaudeBot

Applebot

Apple's crawler used for search, intelligence, and web understanding features.

Applebot

Amazonbot

Amazon's crawler used for web discovery and machine-readable site signals.

Amazonbot

Googlebot

Google's main crawler for search discovery, rendering, and indexing.

Googlebot

GoogleOther

Used by Google for non-search product crawling and automated checks.

GoogleOther

PerplexityBot

Associated with Perplexity's answer engine and web discovery activity.

PerplexityBot

Common Crawl / CCBot

A large public web crawl source often used in search and AI research pipelines.

CCBot

Want to know if one of these bots checked your site? Run a live GoGuides Trust Layer check and see whether your domain has bot activity, freshness, verification, and a machine-readable fingerprint.

Run Live Check

This checker is not just a user-agent list. It connects bot activity with GoGuides trust-layer signals such as verification status, freshness, public trust records, observation history, and machine-readable fingerprints.

AI Bot Traffic Checker FAQ

How can I check if AI bots are visiting my website?

Enter your domain into the checker above. GoGuides checks public trust-layer activity, bot activity signals, verification status, freshness, and machine-readable trust signals.

Does a bot visit mean my website is trusted?

No. A bot visit only means an automated system looked. The stronger question is whether your domain has a fresh, verified, machine-readable trust record.

Why does verification matter?

Verification helps GoGuides connect a domain to a clearer trust-layer signal. Without it, activity may be visible, but ownership and trust status are less complete.

Can GoGuides promise how AI systems rank my site?

No. GoGuides cannot control outside AI systems. It can expose clearer public trust-layer signals that crawlers, bots, developers, and users can inspect.