Zenoti booking page links, Book Now buttons, location CTAs, treatment-page appointment links, and scheduler-like destinations
Zenoti booking pages
Check the Zenoti booking page behind your Book Now button.
Zenoti booking pages often sit behind multi-location med spa websites, service menus, membership pages, and campaign CTAs. A public button can keep pointing to an old center, retired service, unavailable booking route, or destination that no longer opens cleanly from mobile. SiteLeak checks the public path patients can reach and gives a free preview before asking you to unlock the full repair handoff or weekly monitoring.
Visitor paths this page checks
Status, redirect, final URL, and provider-error evidence from safely checked public booking-page paths
Location, service, membership, campaign, and homepage routes where patients should reach the current appointment step
Mobile evidence for Book Now, call, contact, consultation, and form actions when the browser layer is available
Handoff details for affected URL, observed behavior, priority, repair owner, exact change request, and retest step
Location paths create extra places to break
Multi-location med spas may update the main booking button while older Zenoti links remain on local pages, treatment pages, or campaign pages. Patients can still find those older paths later.
The public page is the first check
SiteLeak looks at the route a patient can reach without a login. If that path shows a broken provider destination, hidden CTA, or missing next step, the repair can start before anyone debates private settings.
Best use for monitoring
Weekly monitoring is useful after a provider migration, location update, seasonal offer, or service menu change. Those are the moments when a working booking path can drift back into a broken one.
What this page helps you decide
Use this page when a med spa wants to check whether a public Zenoti booking page still works from Book Now, treatment, campaign, or location pages.
Practical fixes after the scan
Replace old Zenoti booking URLs with the current public destination for the right location, service, or provider path.
Update location, treatment, membership, and campaign CTAs that still point to retired booking pages.
Add a backup consultation, call, or contact path where a booking page cannot be repaired immediately.
Rerun the scan after provider settings, location pages, or campaign pages are updated.
Use weekly monitoring when location, offer, or provider changes can affect the same public booking paths.
Evidence examples
Zenoti booking page is unreachable from a public CTA
The public Book Now or location CTA resolves to a Zenoti-like destination that does not load successfully during checked requests.
Fix: Replace the destination with the current Zenoti booking URL and retest the public page.
Location page points to a removed booking route
A sampled location-page link with appointment intent resolves to a missing or unavailable public route.
Fix: Redirect the old route or update the location CTA to the current booking page.
Mobile location page hides the appointment action
The checked mobile location page reaches the content, but the first screen does not expose the Zenoti booking page, a call action, or a consultation path.
Fix: Move the Book Now or consultation action higher on mobile and rerun the scan.
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
Is SiteLeak affiliated with Zenoti?
No. SiteLeak is not affiliated with Zenoti. It checks public links and pages that a med spa visitor can reach.
Will SiteLeak book an appointment in Zenoti?
No. It does not choose appointment times, create bookings, enter patient information, submit forms, or log into private provider systems.
Should I scan the homepage or a location page?
Start with the path patients use most. For multi-location med spas, that is often the location page or treatment page rather than the homepage alone.