Huddle Kit Review: A Better Way to Manage Webflow Client Feedback
See the video by Magnaem for Memberstack here!
TL;DR
Huddle Kit is a tool for gathering website feedback from clients. It offers a few features Webflow's native commenting does not, including a canvas view that lets you scroll through multiple breakpoints side by side, an inspect view for checking element styles, and a task management workflow that tracks feedback from open to completed. Plans start at $24 per month. Webflow's built-in commenting is free and works fine for basic feedback, but Huddle Kit adds structure and polish that can make a real difference for freelancers managing multiple clients.

All images sourced from the above linked video unless otherwise stated.
What Huddle Kit Does
Huddle Kit is a visual annotation and feedback tool built for website projects. You create a project (website, media, or web app), sync it with your client's site, and use it as a centralized hub for gathering and managing design feedback.
The tool has four main views:
Browse view. Switch between breakpoints and navigate the site the way a client would see it.
Canvas view. This is the standout feature. It displays multiple breakpoints side by side and lets you scroll through all of them simultaneously. You can see exactly how layouts shift across desktop, tablet, and mobile without toggling between views one at a time. Webflow has breakpoint previews, but you cannot view them all at once or scroll them together.
Commenting view. Leave visual annotations tied to specific areas of the page. Comments pin to the element or section they reference, which keeps feedback organized by location rather than buried in a long thread.
Inspect view. Click on any element to view its CSS properties: font size, colors, spacing. Useful for handoff scenarios where someone needs to verify styles without opening the Designer.
The Client Experience
Clients receive a shareable link and do not need a Webflow account or any special access. On the client side, they can browse the site, switch between breakpoints, and leave comments pinned to specific areas. Each comment requires a name (so you know who left it on larger teams) and email is optional.
Clients can also take screenshots of specific areas or layouts for reference.
Task Management
Every comment automatically becomes a task. On the freelancer side, tasks can be moved through stages (open, in progress, reviewing, completed) as you work through the feedback. This gives client feedback a simple project management layer without needing a separate tool like Trello or Asana.

Huddle Kit vs. Webflow Native Commenting
Webflow's built-in commenting works and it is free. Comments live inside the Designer panel, organized by page. You can reply directly and manage feedback without leaving the Webflow interface.
Where it falls short is organization at scale. On large builds with many stakeholders, comments pile up quickly and the panel can get overwhelming. There is no task status tracking, no multi-breakpoint canvas view, and no way for clients to leave feedback without Webflow access.
Huddle Kit adds structure on top of the feedback process. The canvas view, task workflow, and client-facing shareable link reduce friction between freelancer and client. The trade-off is cost: plans start at $24 per month, which is a reasonable investment if client feedback is a regular part of your workflow.
Is It Worth It?
For freelancers who work with clients regularly and want a more polished feedback process, Huddle Kit is worth trying. The canvas view saves time when reviewing responsive layouts, and the task management layer keeps feedback from falling through the cracks. Webflow's native commenting is sufficient for simpler projects or smaller teams, but for anyone managing multiple clients or large builds, the added structure pays for itself quickly.
Written by
Neal
Content Writer