JSONPath Tester

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JSONPath Tester

Developer
Developer

JSONPath Tester guide

Use this free JSONPath Tester to test a JSONPath-style selector against pasted JSON locally in your browser.

JSONPath Tester helps you test a JSONPath-style selector against pasted JSON for developers, API testers, QA notes, logs, and generated JSON fixtures. It opens the matching Tiny Work Tools utility directly and runs in your browser after the page loads.

Best for

  • checking whether a simple JSON path points to the expected nested value before copying it
  • Fast browser-based utility work without creating an account.
  • Simple checks before moving data, files, or numbers into another workflow.

Not for

  • complete JSONPath engines, filter expressions, API testing, data extraction pipelines, or custom schema validation
  • Regulated, certified, or production-critical decisions that require a specialist tool.

How it works

  1. Open the tool page and use the preselected utility.
  2. Enter the text, numbers, or file requested by the tool.
  3. Review the result and download or copy it when the output looks right.

Limits and privacy

The tester supports common browser-local path checks with dot notation, array indexes, and quoted bracket keys. It does not support filters, wildcards, or recursive search.

Common uses

  • Use JSONPath Tester for developers, API testers, QA notes, logs, and generated JSON fixtures.
  • Prepare a quick result before uploading, sharing, reporting, or pasting elsewhere.
  • Keep small everyday utility tasks in the browser without installing desktop software.

Useful facts

  • Tiny Work Tools JSONPath Tester runs locally in the browser after the page loads.
  • The page is free to use and does not require an account.

FAQ

What does JSONPath Tester do?

It helps you test a JSONPath-style selector against pasted JSON using the matching Tiny Work Tools browser utility.

Does it upload my input?

The tool is designed to run locally in your browser after the page loads.

What should I check before using the result?

The tester supports common browser-local path checks with dot notation, array indexes, and quoted bracket keys. It does not support filters, wildcards, or recursive search.