Meet Change Radar — your automatic alert system for UX changes.
If your product evolves often (design tweaks, copy edits, layout shifts, experiments, deployments), this feature will save you from hidden UX issues you never saw coming.

🔍 What is Change Radar?
Change Radar continuously monitors your website or app and flags:
- Layout shifts
- Copy changes
- Hidden UI updates
- Structural changes
- Unexpected modifications after deployments
No setup. No tagging. No manual tracking.
When something changes — Change Radar sees it.

📊 Impact analysis powered by real user behavior
When Change Radar detects a change, UXsniff begins collecting the next 7 days of interaction data.
After 7 days:
- UXsniff compares the new version vs the previous version
- Uses your actual user interactions
- Runs a Time-Travel A/B analysis
- Generates an impact report that shows how user behavior shifted
This gives you a clear, data-backed view of:
- Whether the change improved or hurt engagement
- How clarity, friction, and scroll behavior evolved
- Which version users interacted with more naturally
- Whether the update caused confusion or boosted conversions
It’s A/B testing without the setup, code, or traffic split — just real usage data over time.
🤖 AI that explains what changed and why
After the 7-day data window, our AI helps you interpret the results:
- What improved
- What regressed
- Why users behaved differently
- What you should adjust next
You get not just data — but direction.
🛡️ Why this feature matters
Most UX drops come from unnoticed changes:
A headline tweak.
A shifted button.
A spacing update that breaks a layout.
A UI library update that changes behavior.
These small things can quietly impact conversions for days before anyone realizes.
Change Radar keeps you proactive, not reactive.
🚀 Available now for all UXsniff users
Change Radar is live today.
- Free plans get 3 daily detections
- Paid plans unlock higher limits and more detailed impact reports
Thanks for being part of the UXsniff journey.
More automated insights and “your UX fixed itself” moments are coming soon.