Best Website Feedback Tools for WordPress in 2026 (10 Compared)

June 18, 2026

Why your website feedback process feels broken

If you build websites for clients, you know the pattern. Feedback arrives as a pile of emails, blurry screenshots, vague Slack messages and the dreaded “can you make it pop?” Nobody can tell which comment maps to which page, revisions drag on, and approval is a moving target. A good website feedback tool fixes this by letting people comment directly on the live page, in context, so every note is clear and nothing gets lost.

Below are ten of the best website feedback tools in 2026, with where each one fits. We build Reviso, so we have put it first and been upfront about that, but we have tried to be fair about the rest.

What to look for in a website feedback tool

  • On-page, pinned comments so every note has context.
  • No client login, because every extra signup kills participation.
  • Approvals and sign-off so you can actually close a project.
  • Fair pricing that does not punish you per seat as your team grows.
  • Fits your stack, ideally native to how you already build.

The 10 best website feedback tools in 2026

1. Reviso (best for WordPress and page builders)

Reviso is a WordPress plugin where clients click any element on the live page and pin a comment right there, with no login required. You see and resolve every pin natively inside Bricks, Elementor or the Gutenberg block editor, so feedback lives where you already work. The free tier covers in-editor pinned commenting on unlimited sites; Pro adds multi-page review links, client approvals with PDF sign-off, white-label and AI triage. If you build on WordPress, it is the most native option on this list.

2. BugHerd

One of the original visual feedback tools. Clients pin feedback via a browser extension and it lands on a built-in kanban board. Strong for bug tracking and QA across any site, though it is not page-builder native and the team-friendly features sit on higher-priced plans.

3. Marker.io

Built for bug reporting and QA, with two-way sync to Jira, GitLab and other dev tools. Great for development teams, though clients collaborate through a separate guest portal rather than fully in context.

4. Atarim

A visual feedback and collaboration platform with broad builder support and an expanding AI feature set. Capable, but priced per seat, which can add up for larger teams.

5. MarkUp.io

Collaborate on live sites, images and PDFs from one place, with a clean commenting experience. Worth checking current pricing, as recent plan changes pushed some users to look for alternatives.

6. Ruttl

Website and design feedback with handy live editing of text and styles before you hand changes to a developer. Covers WordPress, Shopify and custom sites.

7. Userback

A user-feedback platform aimed more at product teams than agencies, with in-app widgets, bug reports and feature requests. Powerful, but broader than a pure client-review tool.

8. SureFeedback

A self-hosted WordPress option (formerly ProjectHuddle) with sticky-note style feedback. Appealing if you want to own your data, with the trade-off that you handle hosting and updates yourself.

9. Feedbucket

A straightforward, agency-focused website feedback and annotation tool with flat pricing. A solid no-frills pick for collecting client notes on live sites.

10. Pastel

Website annotation and client approval with a focus on speed. Leans toward Webflow and Shopify rather than WordPress.

How to choose

If most of your work is on WordPress, prioritise a tool that lives inside your builder and does not make clients log in, because that is what actually gets feedback completed. If you are a dev-heavy team shipping bugs into Jira, a QA-first tool may fit better. And if budget matters, start with a tool that has a genuine free tier so you can prove the workflow before you pay. And if you build in a specific editor, see our deeper comparisons of the best feedback tools for Elementor and for Gutenberg.

Try Reviso free

Reviso is free to start on unlimited WordPress sites, with no client logins and pinned feedback right inside Bricks, Elementor and Gutenberg. See how it works.