At its homepage, partsgeek.com is protected by Cloudflare. Typical approach to reach it reliably: Matched TLS/JA3-JA4 + realistic headers on open paths. Difficulty is per-URL, so deep pages — profiles, listings, search — are usually harder.
Free WAF/CDN paths weigh IP reputation and header validity; a fingerprint-matched HTTP client usually reaches them. A managed challenge (“Just a moment”) needs a JS-running browser to earn cf_clearance.
Typical access
Headless browser that runs JavaScript
Why it didn’t pass cleanly
Bot challenge
A JS / bot challenge interstitial was served.
Detected vendors
Evidence
Detection confidence: high
Homepage-level, datacenter-IP snapshot, June 12, 2026.
This is a passive, homepage-level snapshot and can be inaccurate or out of date — anti-bot vendors update their models continuously, deep pages are usually more protected than the homepage, and a datacenter IP sees more challenges than a residential one. Treat it as a directional signal, not a guarantee.
The homepage is the open front door. On a automotive site the valuable pages behave differently — here's the plan to characterise partsgeek.com before you build.
Product detail
JS renderUsually open or JS-rendered, but readily CAPTCHA-gated on rapid or referer-less hits.
Search / category listing
CAPTCHA-proneThe most-scraped surface — the first to throw a CAPTCHA or rate-limit.
Cart / checkout
login wallHighest friction: usually login + WAF; not a public surface.
Find a real deep URL cheaply from the site’s robots.txt and sitemap.xml, then run each through the anti-bot checker. This is an advisory based on the category and partsgeek.com’s homepage result — detect the wall, never try to pass a login.