UScraper is a desktop no-code tool for people who need reliable web scraping and browser automation without maintaining custom scripts. Instead of writing code for every workflow, users build automations visually with blocks for navigation, clicks, form input, waits, data extraction, screenshots, scheduling, and export. This makes it useful for founders, operators, researchers, QA teams, marketers, and anyone who repeatedly collects or checks information across websites.
The product is designed for practical scraping workflows where a normal browser session matters. Users can open a target site, teach UScraper which elements to interact with, extract structured data from pages, and export results to CSV or JSON. The same workflow can be reused later, adjusted when a website changes, or scheduled for repeated runs. Because UScraper runs locally on Windows and macOS, users keep more control over their sessions, browser behavior, and collected data than they would with a fully hosted scraping service.
UScraper is also useful beyond classic data extraction. It can automate repetitive browser tasks such as opening pages, filling forms, clicking through steps, capturing screenshots, and checking whether expected content appears. That makes it a fit for lightweight QA, lead research, competitor tracking, content audits, market research, directory checks, and internal operations tasks. The visual workflow approach keeps the tool approachable for non-developers, while still giving technical users a faster way to build and adjust repeatable browser jobs.
A common problem with scraping projects is that small website changes can break hard-coded scripts. UScraper reduces that friction by keeping the workflow visible and editable. If a selector or step needs to change, the user can update the block-based workflow instead of digging through a codebase. This is especially helpful for small teams that need automation but do not want to allocate engineering time to every data collection task.
For launch week, UScraper is a good fit for makers who want to turn manual browsing work into repeatable workflows: collecting pricing data, monitoring pages, building lead lists, validating content, exporting research, and creating internal automations that are too specific for generic integrations. It gives teams a practical middle ground between manual copy-paste work and fully custom engineering projects.
The main value is speed and maintainability. A user can start from a real browser session, map the steps they already perform manually, test the workflow, then reuse it without rebuilding the same process from scratch. This is useful when the target website does not have an API, when an API is too expensive, or when a one-off script would take longer to maintain than the workflow itself.
UScraper is positioned as a paid desktop product with a one-time USD 99 license. It is not a freemium SaaS subscription, and it is not just a browser extension. The goal is to give users a focused local tool for building visual scraping and browser automation workflows that can be run repeatedly, exported cleanly, and modified as needs change.

