Compare · search data
ReachKit vs Google Search Console
Let's be clear up front: you should have Google Search Console. It's free, it's first-party, and nothing else tells you how Google actually sees your site. The comparison isn't whether to use it — it's what GSC was never built to do: decide what you should fix, in what order, and confirm that you fixed it.
What Search Console is genuinely great at
GSC is the ground truth. Impressions, clicks, and average positions for the real queries people typed; indexing status page by page; crawl errors, mobile usability, structured-data validation — straight from Google, at no cost. Every serious site should have it verified from day one, and any tool that contradicts GSC's numbers is wrong.
For confirming whether Google can see a page at all, and which queries you're already surfacing for, it is simply the authoritative source.
Where it leaves a solo founder stranded
GSC reports; it doesn't advise. It will show you 300 queries with impressions and a position of 40 — and offer no opinion on which matter for your business, why you rank where you do, or what to change. Its issue reports flag problems without ranking them against each other, let alone against content and positioning problems it can't see at all.
There's a colder gap, too: GSC only shows demand you already intersect. The queries your buyers use that you never appear for — the demand you're missing entirely — are invisible, along with your competitors, your app-store presence, and your reviews. It's a rearview mirror: accurate, essential, and silent about the road ahead.
What ReachKit does instead
ReachKit is the decision layer on top of exactly this class of signal. It scans your live site, listings, and reviews; measures the full buyer search demand in your category — including everything you don't yet rank for — and where competitors show up; and computes a 0–100 score from 18 deterministic signals across three weighted pillars (SEO 45%, Content 30%, Outreach 25%).
Instead of reports to interpret, you get a ranked weekly action plan with evidence cited per item, and every shipped fix is re-checked live before it counts. Keep GSC verified — its numbers will confirm the trend as your score climbs. Use ReachKit to decide what moves the numbers.
A useful way to hold the pair: GSC is the scoreboard, ReachKit is the coach. The scoreboard is authoritative and free, and you should absolutely watch it — but no one ever won a game by watching the scoreboard harder.
First scan free; $59/month Solo or $129/month Growth.
The honest verdict
Use Google Search Console when…
- Always — GSC is free and first-party; every founder should verify it.
- You need Google's own word on indexing or a manual action.
- You want first-party query data to confirm your progress.
Choose ReachKit when…
- You want the demand you're missing, not just the queries you touch.
- You want issues ranked by impact and explained in plain English.
- Your discoverability includes app stores, reviews, and positioning.
Capability by capability
| Capability | ReachKit | Google Search Console |
|---|---|---|
| Discoverability score (0–100) | ✓ | ✕ |
| Covers web + app-store listings | ✓ | web search only |
| Shows demand you don't yet rank for | ✓ | ✕ |
| Ranked, prioritised fixes | ✓ | flags issues, no priorities |
| Plain-English explanations + draft copy | ✓ | ✕ |
| Fixes verified by live re-check | ✓ | ✕ |
| First-party Google impression + query data | ✕ | ✓ |
| Free to use | first scan free | ✓ |
See the difference on your own product
One free scan: your 0–100 discoverability score, the findings behind it, and the part Google Search Console leaves to you — a ranked plan, verified live.
Free scan · then $29/mo Solo or $129/mo Growth