PageStash vs Raindrop
Raindrop is widely loved for bookmarking: clean UI, collections, and sync. PageStash is purpose-built when the URL is not the source of truth—you need what the page contained when you saved it.
Quick take
| Raindrop | PageStash | |
|---|---|---|
| Core metaphor | Smart bookmarks | Web archive workspace |
| Primary win | Organize links you might open later | Preserve pages and search inside them |
| Best for | Reading lists, design inspo links | Research, CI, evidence habits |
When Raindrop shines
- You mainly need fast recall of destinations you trust to stay online.
- You want beautiful visual grids of saved links.
When PageStash shines
- Pricing, policies, statements, and articles that change.
- Full-text search across saved content, not just titles.
- Page Graphs when you want relationships between captures.
Can you use both?
Yes. Raindrop for lightweight collections; PageStash for anything that must survive link rot.
Try PageStash if your bookmarks keep breaking mid-project.