Logistics and shipment tracking

Shipment tracking website that answers on the first tap

A showcase build for a courier and freight brand: tracking lookup, delivery status and instant quotes, designed to work one-handed on a phone, in three languages.

100Google PageSpeed, mobile
0.9 sLargest Contentful Paint
220 kBPage weight, complete
0.4 sTracking lookup, median

The brief we set ourselves

A shipment tracking website has one job when a customer is waiting on a parcel: take a tracking number and show where the package is. Fast, on a phone, without an app install. Most logistics sites in Prague get this wrong: the tracking box is buried under a carousel, the status page loads a heavy map before it shows a single word, and getting a price means a ten-field form.

This showcase demonstrates how we solve it: the tracking field sits at the top of the page and returns a result in under half a second, the delivery status reads as a plain timeline before any map loads, and a quote is two inputs, origin and weight, not a form.

Decisions worth copying

  • Tracking as the hero, not a footnote. The one reason people open a courier site is to check a shipment. It is the first thing on the page, works on the first tap, and the status timeline renders as text, so it appears instantly even on a slow mobile connection.
  • Honest delivery estimates. A range the customer can trust (for example 2–4 working days) beats an optimistic single date that slips. Transport zones, cut-off times and public holidays are written in plain language, not hidden in the terms.
  • Price transparency up front. A simple origin-to-destination calculator with a visible per-kilogram rate removes the most common reason people leave a logistics site: not knowing what shipping will cost before they commit.
  • Three languages for cross-border trade. Shipping in Central Europe rarely speaks one language. Czech for domestic senders, English and German for cross-border and warehouse clients, each with correct hreflang.

The numbers

Speed figures on this page are measured, not promised. Run the build through PageSpeed Insights yourself. That score is achievable for any logistics site we build, because it comes from the architecture, not from optimisation heroics afterwards.

In practice, a tracking-and-quote site of this scope starts from CZK 25,000 and goes live in 2–4 weeks once we have the content and carrier details. Exact line items are on the pricing page. Want this for your operation? Start with web design or ask us directly via the contact page.

Want your industry done right?

We will show you what a fast, modern site for your business would look like, before you commit to anything.