
What is Design Audit?
A design audit is a structured evaluation of your digital product to assess usability, visual design, and user experience.

Why do you need Design Audit?
Most digital products slowly build UX issues over time, causing confusion and inconsistency, so a design audit helps fix problems early before a full redesign is needed.
Dropping Conversions
Users visit your site but don’t finish checkout, we find and fix what’s stopping them from purchase.
Pre-Redesign Clarity
A design audit shows what works, what to fix, and what to remove so you can redesign with clarity instead of guessing.
Business Contribution
A design audit helps your business grow by improve your product, increase sales, and reduce drop-offs.

Scaling Your Product
As your product grows, small design issues can slow it down, and design audit helps fix them early so it runs smoothly.

Fast Decision Making
We turn complex design problems into simple actions so you can decide faster and move your product forward.

Competitive Pressure
When users compare options, better experience wins design audit shows where you lose and how to fix it fast.
Discovery and Goal Alignment
We understand business goals, target users, and key success metrics. This helps us focus on the right focus and direction during the audit.
Product Deep-Dive and Exploration
Our team checks key actions. This helps us understand the structure and design, and find anything that might confuse users.
Heuristic and Expert Evaluation
We evaluate your design using industry best practices to identify usability issues, improve visual clarity, and helping you deliver a better user experience.
Findings Documentation
We list all the issues in a simple way, showing how serious each one is (Critical, Major, or Minor). Each issue includes a screenshot and a clear reason for the problem.
Solution Recommendation and Roadmap
We then organize them by priority what to fix now, what to improve next, and what to plan for later so your team can move quickly and focus on what delivers the most impact.
Benefits of a Design Audit
A design audit helps you find problems, fix them quickly, improve conversions, save time and cost, and make your product easy for everyone to use.
01 Improved Conversion Rates
Improve your conversions by fixing the exact points where users drop off whether it’s during sign-up, onboarding, checkout, or feature usage.
02 Actionable Quick Wins
We quickly prioritized, what to fix first based on impact and effort helping your team take quick action and get the best results without wasting time.
03 Reduced Redesign Risk
A design audit helps you clearly understand what needs fixing what to keep saving time, cost, and unnecessary effort.
04 Accessibility Compliance
We make sure your website or app is easy for everyone to use, including people with disabilities. This helps you reach more users and avoid potential issues.
When Should I get a design audit done?
Audits are most valuable before a major redesign, before a funding round, when conversion rates are dropping, when onboarding is underperforming, or proactively every 18–24 months. The earlier you audit, the cheaper the fix.
What’s the difference between an audit and a redesign?
An audit diagnoses the problem it produces findings and recommendations. A redesign implements the solution. Most clients do an audit first to ensure any redesign investment is targeted and evidence-backed, not based on taste or assumption.
Do you audit mobile apps as well as websites?
Yes, we audit iOS apps, Android apps, web applications, marketing websites, SaaS dashboards, e-commerce storefronts, and enterprise platforms. We follow platform-specific design guidelines alongside universal UX principles.
How long does a typical design audit take?
Most audits take 2–4 weeks depending on the scope (number of screens, platforms, and user journeys). A focused audit of a single product flow can be completed in one week. Enterprise-grade audits may run 4–6 weeks.
What team will work on my audit?
A typical audit team includes a Senior UX Researcher, a UX Designer, and a UI Designer. Larger scope projects include a Design Lead and Project Manager for co-ordination and strategic framing.


