What agencies and freelancers need is a completely different kind of commenting: pinned, contextual, actionable notes placed directly on the design.
Divi website commenting, done properly, means every comment is tied to the exact element it refers to. No more "the thing at the top" or "the blue section on the left." The comment is right there, on the element, visible in context.
That is what Divi Review Hub delivers.
The Problem with Traditional Website Feedback
Before tools like Divi Review Hub, the typical feedback workflow looked like this:
- You share a preview link with your client.
They screenshot the page, circle something in red, save the file, attach it to an email. - You receive three emails with different screenshots, a voice note, and a WhatsApp message.
- You spend an hour correlating all of it with the actual page.
- You make the changes, and the cycle starts again.
Every step in that process is overhead. A Divi website commenting plugin eliminates most of it by putting the feedback directly where it belongs: on the page.
How Divi Review Hub Handles Website Commenting
The Review Hub Toolbar
When review mode is enabled on a page, a floating toolbar appears at the edge of the screen. It is minimal and non-intrusive: a toggle to enter comment mode and an indicator of how many open comments the page has. Users with appropriate permissions can enter comment mode with a single click or by pressing C.
Placing and Reading Comments
In comment mode, clicking anywhere on the page opens a comment bubble. Submit the comment and a numbered pin appears at that location. Every pin is clickable — click it to expand the full comment thread, see the status, reply, or change the assignment.
All pins on a page are visible simultaneously, giving reviewers an immediate sense of what has been flagged and what is still outstanding.
Threaded Conversations
Each pin supports full threaded replies. The initial comment can be responded to by any team member with access, and each reply can trigger email notifications. Use @mentions to pull in a specific person: type @TheirDisplayName and they receive an email with a direct link to the comment thread.
Comment Status and Resolution
Comments are not just notes — they are tasks. Each one carries a status: Open, In Progress, Stuck, or Resolved. The developer working through the feedback can update the status as they work, giving the client and project manager a live view of progress without a status meeting.
When a comment is marked Resolved, it can be automatically archived after a configurable delay, keeping the page clean without losing the record.
Per-Page Control Over Review Mode
You do not want review mode active on every page of your live site at all times. Divi Review Hub gives you two options: enable review mode globally (useful while a site is in active development) or enable it per page from the Review Hub tab in the admin. This means you can leave production pages untouched while keeping development and staging pages open for feedback.
Export Your Comment Threads
When a review cycle is complete, you can export an HTML report of all comments on a page. This is useful for client sign-off documentation, project handovers, or simply having a written record of what was changed and why. The report includes timestamps, statuses, and the full text of every thread.
Permissions: Who Can Do What
Not everyone reviewing a page should have the same capabilities. Divi Review Hub lets you configure three permission levels separately: Who Can View and Comment, Who Can Resolve, and Who Can Assign. This means your client can leave comments but cannot accidentally mark things as resolved, and your project manager can assign tasks without being able to delete comments.
The Right Kind of Divi Website Commenting
Divi Review Hub was built specifically for the design review and client approval workflow — and it integrates natively with Divi's frontend rendering, guest access, and role system. If you regularly review Divi pages with a team or with clients, it is the most direct solution available.








