Frabs
Performance
7 min read

Cache Header Checker best practices for webmasters

A maintenance checklist for using Cache Header Checker during launches, cleanups and regular website reviews.

Open Cache Header Checker

Related tool

Cache Header Checker

Cache Header Checker for performance work, built as a clean Frabs VPS-ready webmaster report.

Tutorial

Step-by-step guide

What to know about Cache Header Checker

Cache Header Checker focuses on response timing, payload weight, optimization hints. Use it when you need a quick, public check that can be repeated before and after changes.

Cache Header Checker runs on public inputs and is suitable for VPS-side checks using HTTP requests, DNS lookups, HTML parsing, validation logic or generated output. It does not need a paid SEO API.

The result should be treated as a practical webmaster report: read the status, confirm the affected signal and retest after you change the source.

Common problems

Common problems include slow response, uncompressed assets, heavy javascript or css. These are usually small in isolation but can become serious during launches and migrations.

On real sites, these issues often appear after CMS updates, DNS migrations, CDN changes, template edits, plugin installs or rushed launch work.

Do not check only the homepage. Run the tool against the exact URL, domain, record or file that matters.

How to fix and retest

Fix Cache Header Checker findings at the source: the CMS, DNS provider, web server, CDN, template, content file or generated configuration that controls the public result.

Change one thing at a time, clear any relevant CDN or application cache, then run Cache Header Checker again from the public Frabs page.

If the result differs between your machine and Frabs, check DNS propagation, CDN edge behavior, bot filtering and whether the URL redirects to a different final page.

Copy and paste checks

Use these examples when you want a second opinion from a terminal. Replace example.com with your own domain or URL.

The command output is not a replacement for the Frabs report, but it helps confirm the raw public signal.

Check response headers
curl -I https://example.com
Download public HTML
curl -L https://example.com

Best practice checklist

Run Cache Header Checker before major changes, immediately after deployment and again once caches or DNS propagation have settled.

Save the result with your launch notes if the page, domain or configuration is important to search, email, security or revenue.

Pair this check with related Frabs tools so you can see whether the problem is isolated or part of a wider technical pattern.