Your browser's bookmark bar gave up somewhere around link number 300. The folders nest four deep, half of them point at dead URLs, and the only way you find anything is by remembering a fragment of the page title and hoping Cmd+L autocomplete bails you out. We hit that wall too, which is why we ran Raindrop.io as a daily driver for several weeks across a Chrome extension, the macOS app, and the iOS share sheet to see whether it holds up once you push past a few thousand saved links.
The short version: Raindrop.io is a bookmark manager that treats a large library as the normal case rather than an edge case. It is not a read-it-later app like Pocket, and it is not a knowledge base like Notion. It does one job — store, organize, and retrieve links — and it does that job at a scale most browsers and most lightweight tools fall apart at.
What it does well once your library gets large
The core model is collections (folders, but nestable) plus tags (cross-cutting labels). A link about Postgres indexing can live in a databases collection while also carrying performance and read-later tags, so you reach it from two directions. Nested collections go several levels deep, and a left sidebar keeps the whole tree visible without forcing you to drill in and back out.
The part that matters at scale is retrieval. Free-tier search matches titles, URLs, tags, and the short excerpt Raindrop scrapes on save. Upgrade to Pro and search extends to full text inside the saved page, which is the difference between "I think the title had the word webhook in it" and "find the article that explained idempotency keys." In testing, full-text search on a library of a couple thousand links returned results fast enough to feel instant, and it surfaced pages whose titles gave no hint of the content.
A few details that add up once you live in it daily:
- Saved metadata is rich. Each bookmark stores a cover thumbnail, a type (article, video, image, document), a domain, and a created date, so the grid and list views are scannable instead of a wall of blue text.
- Filters stack. You can narrow by type, by tag, by "broken," or by "duplicates" and combine those with a text query.
- Highlights live with the link. On Pro, you can highlight passages and add notes that travel with the bookmark, which turns a saved article into something closer to an annotated reference.
- The browser extension is the real entry point. One click saves the current tab; a keyboard shortcut opens a save dialog where you assign a collection and tags before the page even finishes loading.
Before you import anything, decide on a shallow collection structure (5–10 top-level buckets) and lean on tags for everything else. Deeply nested folders feel organized on day one and become a maze by link 1,000. Tags scale; folder hierarchies don't.
Where the free tier stops being enough
Raindrop's free plan is genuinely usable — unlimited bookmarks, unlimited collections, nested folders, tags, the browser extensions, and the mobile apps all ship at zero cost. That alone beats most browsers. But the features that justify calling it a tool that "scales" sit behind Pro, which runs roughly $3/month billed annually (about $28/year).
Here is the split that actually drove our upgrade decision:
The two Pro features that matter most for a large library are full-text search and permanent copies. The latter saves a cached snapshot of each page so that when a link rots — and at scale, links rot constantly — you still have the content. Broken-link detection then surfaces the dead URLs in bulk so you can prune or rely on the cached copy. For a reference library you intend to keep for years, those two features are the whole argument for paying.
Permanent copies are created going forward, from the moment you upgrade and re-save (or trigger a refresh). They do not retroactively snapshot links you saved months ago on the free plan. If link preservation is your reason for upgrading, do it before the pages you care about disappear, not after.
What Raindrop deliberately does not do is also worth naming. It is not a writing surface. There is no wiki, no backlinks, no databases-of-databases, no place to draft your own long-form notes around the links. If your real goal is "capture links and build a knowledge base around them," you are using the wrong category of tool, and you'll feel the ceiling within a week.
The honest trade-off: Notion's web clipper and database views can replicate a chunk of what Raindrop does, but retrieval at scale is slower and clunkier, and you give up the dedicated save-and-go speed. Raindrop wins on capture friction and search; Notion wins on what you can build after the link is saved. Pick based on which half of that you actually need.
Who should actually use it
Raindrop.io earns its place if you are a heavy link collector who keeps references for the long haul — engineers hoarding documentation, articles, and Stack Overflow threads; researchers; anyone whose "open tabs" number is a personality trait. The free tier is enough to test the organizational model honestly, and you'll know within a few hundred imported links whether the collections-plus-tags system fits your brain.
Upgrade to Pro when two things become true at once: your library is large enough that title-only search stops finding things, and the links you've saved are valuable enough that losing them to link rot would actually hurt. If neither is true yet, stay on free — there's no artificial bookmark cap pushing you to pay.
Where it's the wrong tool: if you save links to read once and discard, a read-it-later app fits better. If you want to write around your links, you want a notes app. Raindrop is for the case where the links are the asset and you need them findable for years.
Originally published at pickuma.com. Subscribe to the RSS or follow @pickuma.bsky.social for new reviews.
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