Med spa tool

Check whether mobile med spa visitors can see the action they came for.

Med spa visitors often browse treatment pages from a phone after a search, social post, ad, or referral. The page can look polished on desktop while mobile visitors never see Book Now, call, contact, or consultation actions near the top. Sticky bars, chat widgets, popups, galleries, and page-builder spacing can all interfere with the first screen. SiteLeak checks public mobile CTA evidence and keeps the report grounded in what can be repaired and retested.

SiteLeak report preview showing score and visitor path sections

Visitor paths this page checks

Mobile first-screen evidence for Book Now, consultation, call, contact, schedule, and form actions

Visible phone numbers, tel links, booking CTAs, consultation links, and treatment-page action paths

Browser evidence when overlays, sticky bars, scripts, or layout changes hide the next step

Broken links and missing contact signals around public med spa mobile pages

Repair steps that prioritize mobile visitor paths before generic design or metadata cleanup

Mobile intent is direct

A mobile visitor often wants to book, call, or request a consultation quickly. If the action is buried or covered, the public path can fail even when the page loads.

Evidence beats subjective design feedback

The scan does not score whether the page looks attractive. It looks for public evidence that a visitor can reach the action path from the mobile layout.

Why this can be a strong SEO page

Mobile CTA problems are concrete, easy to understand, and tied to the med spa booking path. That makes the page more useful than a generic mobile-friendly article.

What this page helps you decide

Use this page when a med spa wants to know whether mobile visitors can see and use booking, consultation, call, or contact CTAs on public pages.

Practical fixes after the scan

Move Book Now or consultation actions into the first mobile screen on high-intent treatment pages.

Add tap-to-call links where phone numbers are intended to drive mobile calls.

Remove or adjust overlays, sticky elements, or popups that cover the primary action.

Rerun the scan after mobile template, page-builder, chat, or booking-widget changes.

Monitor the site when campaigns and provider scripts frequently alter mobile action areas.

Evidence examples

conversion.no_above_fold_ctaMedium priority

Mobile treatment page hides the consultation action

Browser evidence does not find a visible booking, call, contact, consultation, or form action in the first mobile viewport.

Fix: Move the consultation or booking CTA into the first mobile screen and retest the public page.

conversion.phone_number_not_clickableHigh priority

Mobile phone number appears as text only

The scanned page shows a phone number, but SiteLeak does not find a matching tap-to-call link near the contact path.

Fix: Wrap the number in a tel: link and confirm the action remains visible on mobile.

checkout.broken_booking_linkHigh priority

Mobile Book Now action leads to a missing destination

The public booking CTA is visible but resolves to an error during checked booking-path requests.

Fix: Update the mobile CTA destination to the active scheduler and rerun the scan after publishing.

Paid access

Use paid access when the scan finds a repair-ready issue.

The free scan is the decision point. If the result matters, the Fix Packet adds the exact affected path, repair brief, owner and technical PDFs, and retest checklist.

Questions this scan can answer

Does SiteLeak judge med spa page design?

No. It focuses on public action evidence: booking, consultation, call, contact, form, and link paths that can be fixed and retested.

What mobile CTA should appear first?

For most med spa pages, start with the action tied to the page intent: Book Now, request a consultation, call, or contact.

Can monitoring catch mobile CTA problems?

Monitoring can rerun public checks and alert when visitor-path evidence changes or gets worse after site updates.