What is Crazy Egg?
Crazy Egg is a web analytics bot that takes screenshots of pages, collects assets, and tests script installation to help optimize website user experience. Agent Analytics can track when it visits your website.
Category
Expected Behavior
Crazy Egg's traffic is as regular as a cron job, because it usually is one. Uptime monitors hit the same endpoint every few minutes, while performance and audit tools run deeper scans on demand. Expect narrow, repetitive access to specific pages rather than crawling.
Overview
| Operated By | CrazyEgg |
| Expected To Follow Robots.txt | No |
| Insights Last Updated | July 6, 2026 |
Robots.txt Blocked Percentage
Country of Origin
Robots.txt Blocking Trend
As of July 6, 2026, 0% of top websites block Crazy Egg in their robots.txt files.
Overall Developer Helper Traffic
As of July 6, 2026, 0.6% of all web traffic came from developer helpers.
This data reflects agent visits measured across thousands of websites using Agent Analytics, combined with daily scans of the world's top 1000 websites and their robots.txt files.
How To Block Crazy Egg
Add this rule to your robots.txt file to request that Crazy Egg not access your website. You can customize which pages are blocked by swapping out / for a different path.
User-agent: Crazy Egg # https://knownagents.com/agents/crazy-egg
Disallow: /
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I Block Crazy Egg?
Only if nobody you work with uses it. Crazy Egg is the kind of tool a team points at its own site for uptime checks, performance tests, and audits. If someone on your team relies on it, blocking it silently breaks their monitoring. Almost none of the top websites we track have robots.txt rules for Crazy Egg right now.
Does Crazy Egg Respect Robots.txt?
No. Crazy Egg is not expected to honor robots.txt, so a disallow rule only states your preference. Enforce the block with firewall or server rules, then confirm in Agent Analytics that its requests actually stop.
Does Crazy Egg Access Private Content?
Only if its owner sets that up. Monitoring tools check whatever they are configured to check, which can include staging sites and private health endpoints when a team grants access. Uninvited, Crazy Egg sees only public pages.
Why Is Crazy Egg Visiting My Website?
Someone pointed Crazy Egg at your site, most likely your own team. Uptime monitors, performance testers, and audit tools only visit the sites they are configured to watch.
How Can I Tell if Crazy Egg Is Visiting My Website?
Agent Analytics tracks Crazy Egg visits in real time alongside every other known AI agent, crawler, and scraper. You can also check your server logs for requests whose user agent string contains "Crazy Egg". Look for regular checks of the same pages or endpoints, often minutes apart. Keep in mind that Crazy Egg doesn't publish a verification method, so any client can claim its user agent string and a log match is a hint rather than proof.