Extract all URLs from any block of text using this fast and accurate URL extractor tool. Choose to keep links as-is or add HTTP/HTTPS prefixes automatically.
Data mining shouldn't be a manual chore. We built this URL extractor to solve a specific bottleneck in digital marketing and research: the "messy text" problem. Whether you are auditing a competitor’s sitemap, pulling links from a massive email thread, or scraping references from a document, manually identifying and copying web addresses is prone to error and incredibly slow.
What makes this tool a "decision-support" utility is the automatic protocol prefixing. Often, text contains naked domains like www.example.com or just example.com. Most tools extract them as-is, which means they aren't clickable or ready for bulk-loading into SEO tools. Our extractor allows you to force HTTPS or HTTP prefixes during the extraction process, delivering a "ready-to-use" list that requires zero post-processing.
Workflow Efficiency: By running the extraction logic entirely in your local browser session, your data never touches a server. This makes it a privacy-first tool for processing internal company documents or sensitive chat logs. Use it to quickly turn a wall of text into a clean, vertical list of actionable assets for your next report or outreach campaign.
Pro Tip: If you're building a backlink list, use the "Add https://" option. This ensures that every link you copy is formatted for direct import into SEO crawlers or spreadsheet templates, saving you the hassle of bulk-editing thousands of rows later.
This tool scans any text and pulls out all valid web addresses, helping you quickly collect links from emails, chats, or documents.
Yes. You can choose between “As is”, “Add http://”, or “Add https://” formats before extracting the links.
Currently it does not remove duplicates, but you can copy the output and use a “Remove Duplicate Lines” tool afterward if needed.
Yes. The extractor detects www-prefixed URLs and can optionally prepend them with http:// or https:// based on your selection.
Absolutely. The URL extractor runs entirely in your browser, does not store your data, and works perfectly on mobile devices.