Public online booking, appointment, consultation, schedule, and provider links visible from medical spa pages
Med spa problem
When medical spa online booking is not working, check the public path first.
Online booking can stop working without the whole medical spa website going down. The homepage loads, treatment pages look current, and staff may still see the booking tool internally, while public visitors hit a dead scheduler, a mobile button that appears hidden or covered, a disabled consultation form, or a provider path that changed. SiteLeak gives the operator a fast public check before guessing whether the problem is the website, the widget, the form, or the booking provider.
Visitor paths this page checks
Dead scheduler URLs, redirect loops, missing pages, unavailable provider destinations, and old campaign paths
Consultation forms with missing contact fields, disabled submit actions, or hidden mobile placement
Mobile evidence for Book Now, call, contact, form, and consultation actions when public evidence supports it
Repair and retest notes without medical, advertising, or compliance review claims
Start with the public visitor path
Internal booking dashboards can look fine while the public page points to the wrong place. A public scan shows what a visitor can actually reach without credentials.
What to do with a strong finding
If the free preview names a real booking blocker, use the Fix Packet to hand affected URLs, evidence, priority, and retest steps to the person editing the site or provider settings.
Why this page should capture intent
The query is problem-aware. A visitor searching this phrase wants diagnosis, not education. The scan form and evidence examples should appear before generic website advice.
What this page helps you decide
Use this page when a medical spa operator believes online booking is not working and needs public evidence before escalating to a website editor or booking provider.
Practical fixes after the scan
Update stale booking provider URLs and remove links to inactive appointment pages.
Add a clear backup call, contact, or consultation path while the booking widget is being repaired.
Repair disabled consultation forms or missing follow-up fields tied to the booking flow.
Rerun the scan after provider, widget, form, or page-template changes are published.
Use weekly monitoring after repair so the public booking path is checked without manual testing.
Evidence examples
Online booking URL no longer loads for public visitors
The public booking link resolves to an error response instead of a live appointment or scheduler page.
Fix: Replace the destination with the current booking provider URL and retest the public path.
Backup consultation form appears unavailable
The public form evidence shows fields near the consultation path, but the submit action appears disabled.
Fix: Repair the form state or widget script so visitors have a usable fallback while online booking is checked.
Mobile page hides the online booking action
The public page check reaches the page, but the first screen does not expose a visible online booking, call, contact, or consultation action.
Fix: Move the booking or backup contact 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
Can SiteLeak tell whether the booking provider is down?
It can report public evidence from links and pages it can safely check. It does not access private provider dashboards or internal status data.
Will SiteLeak make a test booking?
No. It does not submit forms, reserve times, create appointments, or enter patient information.
What should I check before paying?
Run the free scan and look for concrete public evidence such as a dead booking link, hidden mobile action, disabled form, or missing consultation path.