In May 2025, Mozilla announced it was shutting down its popular read app pocket, which it acquired in 2017 for private amounts.
While Pocket has helped users save and discover millions of articles, Mozilla says the way people browse the web is changing and plans to focus resources on other projects.
Pocket users must export saved articles and other items, including lists, archives, favorites, notes, highlights, and more, until October 8, 2025. This essentially means you will need to find a new home to create a reading list through another Save-it-Later app.
To help users with this transition, we've put together a list of many apps you might want to consider.
Case
Matter is a Google venture company that creates iOS apps of the same name along with browser extensions for Chrome, Safari and Firefox. This app allows you to listen to articles and transcribe your favorite podcasts. The app itself is free to use, but you can pay $79.99 a year to unlock features like improved transcription of podcasts and YouTube videos, tools to adjust reading speeds, and additional integrations with other apps like Notes app, Gmail, Kindle and more.
Image credits: Issue
In March 2025, the company also added AI-powered co-leaders to answer questions about a variety of topics users may have while reading the article.
Matter co-founder Ben Springwater says Pocket users can email him at ben@getmatter.com for personal discount links. The company will soon be offering discounts within the app and launching a migration process for pocket users.
Instapaper
Founded in 2008 by developer Marco Arment, Instapaper is one of the oldest reading apps. Available on both iOS and Android, you can save unlimited articles and videos without paying. It was acquired by Pinterest in 2016.
Image credit: Instapaper
However, for $59.99 a year, you can add notes to saved articles, have a permanent archive of articles in your account, create a playlist of speeches from text to listen to stories, enable full-text search for all saved items, or send articles to Kindle.
The company says that pocket users can import accounts into Instapaper at Instapaper.com/user. Users who import this way will also receive an email offering a 3-month free trial to Instapaper Premium.
raindrop.io
Raindrop primarily serves as an alternative bookmark manager for web browsers. However, the mobile app for iOS and Android allows you to read saved articles and PDFs at any time. The free version offers unlimited bookmark storage, along with integrations such as Zapier and IFTTT.
If you decide to pay $33 a year, you'll get AI-powered suggestions to better organize your content, full-text search, bookmark reminders, replicated and broken link finder, and a file upload limit of 10GB per month.
Image credits: raindrop.io / raindrop.io
Miscellaneous clothes
Former Twitter engineer Joe Fabisevich created Plinky so that you can save and categorize all sorts of links, including articles, videos, recipes, memes and more. The app is available on all Apple platforms, along with a browser extension to store links. Once you sign up, Plinky also allows you to classify links using folders and tags and set them to read reminders at a specific time.
Image credit: Plinky
You can save 50 links, create 3 folders, and use 5 tags in the free version. To remove these restrictions, you can pay a one-time fee of $3.99 per month, $39.99 per year, or $159.99 per year. Pro users can save unlimited links, create unlimited number of folders, use unlimited number tags, and set unlimited number reminders.
On Pocket's Shutdown on the Horizon, Fabisevich says that a dedicated leader mode will soon be added to the Plinky app. The app offers a 50% discount on Protia by the end of May 2025.
Paperspan
Paperspan is a very simple app that provides reading lists across your device. You can add notes. It has a text-to-speech function. The app is free, but offers a $8.99/month subscription to unlock advanced searches, as well as the ability to create playlists, view read statistics and send articles to Kindle. The app works, but PaperSpan hasn't been updated for a while. This may not be a proper signal for its long-term future. This app is available on both iOS and Android.
Reader's Reader
Readwise is a tool that adds notes and highlights to articles, and launched the Reader app in 2021. This app allows you to import RSS feeds, YouTube videos, Twitter threads and more. With its integration with Readivis, the Reader app offers great annotation features. It also features offline text search and AI assistants.
Image credit: Reader's
Additionally, you can integrate readers with knowledge management apps such as Obsidian, Notion, Roam Research, Evernote, and Logseq. The app can be tried for free for 30 days, and then you will need to pay a read subscription of $9.99 per month to access.
Note that in ReadWise, pocket users store the entire pocket archive in a reader, and the app supports many features such as PDF, epubs, X-post, AI, filtering, and more.
doublememory
DoublemeMory is a new indie app focused on the Apple ecosystem, featuring native apps for both MAC and iOS. On a Mac, you can easily save links or content by pressing CMD + C twice. Saved content will be displayed in Pinterest-style tiled format.
This app also allows you to read offline and search for text, notes and tags. You do not need an account to get started with DoubleMemory. Also, if you have multiple apps, use your iCloud account to sync content.
Image credit: doublememomory
DoublemeMory is free with in-app purchases. We offer a monthly subscription of $3.99 or an annual subscription of $17.99.
Reminiscence
Recall acts as a browser extension and mobile app that allows users to save content from the web, including articles, PDFs, blog posts, podcasts, Wikipedia pages, YouTube videos, recipes, and more. However, unlike traditional Read-it-Later apps, Recall uses AI to automatically summarise content, categorize it, and resurface it if it relates to a new thing you want to learn.
Image credit: Recall
Designed to enhance your ability to remember information, you can view summary from your personal knowledge base with a recurring schedule of saved intervals.
Recall supports up to 10 free AI-generated summaries to try out for free. You can then continue to use Recall as a reading tool or upgrade to a $7/month plan for unlimited AI summary and other features.
Warabug
Wallabag is an open source reading app that can also be used as a hosted subscription for 11 euros per year, if necessary. The app itself works between browsers and mobile devices, provides a reader mode for a more comfortable reading, and supports the import of data from other services such as Pocket, Instapaper, etc.
Image credits: Wallabag
Please read
The open source web app Readeck is designed to help you organize web content you will later revisit, whether it's an article, video, or photo. You can also use this service to highlight text, export articles to e-book format, and save video transcripts.
Image credit: Readeck
Readeck acts as a browser extension, allowing you to save bookmarks when surfing the web. Users can host Readeck itself, but the company says it will offer a hosted version in 2025. We are also developing mobile apps.
Obsidian Webclipper
Obsidian's Web Clipping Service allows you to highlight and capture the web pages you want to save simply by clicking on a browser extension. You can also use templates that customize how certain types of web pages are saved. For example, articles are saved with quotes and footnotes, but recipes contain ingredients, steps and nutrition. You can also set up your custom template to save from your favorite website.
Image credit: Obsidian
As an open source app, Web Clipper is freely available and can highlight text, images, and content blocks for saving in the Obsidian Note-Taking app.
Karakeep
Karakeep's Bookmarks app allows you to save links, notes, and images, then use AI to automatically tag items and retrieve them faster. The app includes other features such as list support, bulk actions, dark mode, full-text search, and more.
Image credit: Karakeep
Open source apps are available on iOS and Android as browser extensions for Chrome and Firefox. You can support the developer here.
Dewey
Dewey is another “Everything” style app that allows you to save and organize web links, videos and images, including posts from social media sites such as X, Tiktok, Bluesky, Threads, Reddit, Instagram, LinkedIn.
Image credit: Dewey
The service offers organizational tools such as folders and tags, AI bulk tagging, keyboard shortcuts, automatic synchronization to concepts, exports, and personalized RSS feeds. Dewey offers multiple plans starting at $7.50 a month. This can be chosen to pay annually with a $30 off.
This is not an exhaustive list. Continue to add more tools when it is discovered.