📚 The "I'll read this later" pile
Long-form articles, essays, that Substack newsletter someone forwarded. Stash it from your phone on the subway, get the email, read it on the couch this weekend. Your inbox is your reading queue.
The bookmark app you'll actually open again.
Tap Share on any link — article, recipe, that tab you're afraid to close. We email it to you and save it to your private library. No social feed, no algorithm, no follower count. Just the things you wanted to remember, where you can find them later.
Free for your first 20 bookmarks · $3/mo unlocks everything.
The really good one. The one you wanted to send to a friend. The one that had that perfect line about — what was it again?
Yeah. It's gone. Buried in a pile of 47 open tabs, lost in a Notion page you forgot about, scrolled past in a "read later" app you opened twice and abandoned.
Stash2Self exists because every other bookmarking tool tries to be a productivity app. We're just trying to be the place where things you wanted to remember don't get forgotten.
Pick the one that makes you nod.
Long-form articles, essays, that Substack newsletter someone forwarded. Stash it from your phone on the subway, get the email, read it on the couch this weekend. Your inbox is your reading queue.
That weeknight pasta thing on TikTok. The bread recipe with the brilliant trick. Your kitchen has flour on the counter — but your inbox has the link, and the search bar can find "miso butter pasta" three months from now.
Buying a new camera. Picking a stroller. Planning that trip to Lisbon. Stash 30 links across two weeks; ask the AI "what was the camera with the best low-light?" — it knows, because you saved it.
"Mom would love this." "Dad needs one of these." Stash it in March. In December, the weekly digest reminds you what you found nine months ago when you weren't panicking.
The tutorial you skimmed. The competitor's pricing page. The Stack Overflow answer that solved your weird thing. All in one place, all searchable, none of them living in 14 different Slack DMs.
47 tabs open. You're scared to close them. Stash them all in 90 seconds. Close the browser. Breathe.
A handful of small differences that make this the bookmark app you'll actually keep using.
Search, threading, forwarding, stars, snoozes — your email client already does all of it. Every Stash bookmark lands as a real email so you can use the tool you already know. The bookmark page is a bonus, not the only place your stuff lives.
Sign in with Apple, Google, GitHub, or email. Your stash is private to your account — never shared, never crawled, never used to train a model. No social feed, no public profile, no follower count.
Phone in line at the coffee shop? Tap Share. Laptop at your desk? One Chrome shortcut. iPad on the couch? Same. Three apps, one library, zero "wait, did I save this on my phone or the computer?"
Filter by source, sort by date, search across the title, URL, and your note. Type three words and the list narrows down. The right link is always a couple of keystrokes away from being on screen.
Save a recipe — it gets tagged recipe. Save a paper — it gets tagged reading. No folders to maintain, no taxonomy to design. The AI watches what you save and labels it for you. Override anything that misses.
"What was that React performance thing from last spring?" Ask in plain English. The AI reads everything you've saved and finds it — even when you can't remember the title, the source, or anything but the vibe.
Four steps. The first three take about ten seconds. The fourth is the rest of your life.
Article, recipe, video, that thing your friend texted you. Doesn't matter where you are — Safari, Chrome, your phone, your laptop, the share sheet on your iPad.
A small sheet pops up with the URL and title pre-filled. Add a note if you want ("the camera one — for next bday"). Tap Send. The whole thing takes less time than reading this sentence.
Boom. There's the link, in your email, like any other email. You can star it, snooze it, forward it to your partner, search for it in three months. It's also waiting in your private library at app.stash2self.com.
Three weeks from now. Three years from now. Search your inbox. Search your library. Or — if you went Pro — just ask: "what was that miso pasta thing?" The AI knows, because you taught it (by saving the link).
Two tiers. No trial games — start free, upgrade when you outgrow it. Apple's standard 14-day refund window applies.
$0
$3/month
Billed monthly · cancel anytime · 14-day refund window
Subscribed via Apple? Manage or cancel in your App Store account settings.
One account, all your devices. Sign in once with Apple, Google, GitHub, or email — every app picks up automatically.
Native Share Extension — the fastest way to stash on the go. Sign in with Apple.
App Store · coming soonNative Share Target — same one-tap flow as iOS. Sign in with Google.
Google Play · coming soon
Toolbar button + right-click + Cmd/Ctrl+Shift+S. Pro only. Works in Chrome, Edge, Brave, Vivaldi, Opera.
Available right now. Open in any browser, install as a PWA. Works offline.
Open the app →Because your email already does what every "save it" app is trying to reinvent — search, threading, snoozing, forwarding, attachments, sharing. Pocket's clunky archive isn't better than Gmail's search. Stash treats email as the storage and the interface, then adds a clean library on top so you have both.
$3/month for Pro. There's a free tier with up to 20 bookmarks if you just want to try it. No annual lock-in, cancel from your App Store settings whenever. Apple's 14-day refund window applies if you change your mind quickly.
Your first 20 bookmarks, the iOS Share Extension, the email-on-bookmark feature, and the web library with full-text search. Free is for trying it; Pro is for keeping it.
No. Your bookmarks stay readable forever. You just can't add new ones once you're back over 20 (delete some, or upgrade to add more). Your emails never go anywhere — they're in your inbox, not ours.
Yes. Each account is fully isolated. We don't crawl your bookmarks, we don't use them to train models, we don't share them with anyone. The AI features only see your bookmarks, not other users'.
When you bookmark something, Stash auto-tags it ("recipe", "tech-news", "for-vacation"). When you re-open a bookmark you saved 6 months ago, it gives you a 2-line summary so you remember what was good about it. And you can chat with your stash — "what was the article about that pasta technique?" — instead of scrolling through a list. It's grounded in your bookmarks alone, no hallucinations from the wider internet.
Today: yes via the web app at app.stash2self.com — install it as a PWA on Android (Add to Home Screen in Chrome), and it works exactly like a native app. Native Android client and a Chrome Web Store extension are landing soon.
No tracking. No analytics on what you read or save. No ads, ever. We don't sell your data, share it with partners, or use it to train models. Your stash is yours; delete your account anytime and everything is gone within 24 hours.
Free for your first 20 bookmarks, readable forever. $3/mo unlocks unlimited — cancel anytime, bookmarks stay readable either way.
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