Last updated April 2026

A Bookmarking Tool with Tags

Save This One is a free bookmarking tool with tags. Every bookmark can have multiple tags, so you organize links without choosing a single folder. Tag a link with 'react', 'hooks', and 'project-x' at the same time.

Sound familiar?

You saved a useful article and put it in a folder called 'React'. But it was also about testing. And it was for a specific project. Folders force you to pick one place. So the article disappears into the wrong category, and you never find it again.

How Save This One helps

Multiple tags per link

Tag a single link with 'react', 'hooks', and 'project-x' at the same time. No more choosing one folder and hoping you remember which one.

Combine tags to narrow results

Search two or three tags together to find exactly what you need. Looking for React articles from a specific project? Search both tags.

Tags work everywhere

Add tags from the browser extension, Raycast, iOS Shortcuts, or cURL. Your tags travel with you across every integration.

Save fast. Find fast. Move on.

Three steps. No folders to babysit.

Save a link

Paste a URL, use the browser extension, or send from your phone. It takes a second.

Leave a breadcrumb

Add a tag or a short note so future-you knows why this link mattered.

Come back later

Search, skim, and reopen what you need without digging through old tabs.

Keep the link. Keep the context.

A saved link is only half the job. The other half is remembering why you saved it.

launchpricingdesign-systemread-later

Tags that help

Keep related links together without making a big filing system.

Good example for the launch page hero.

ycombinator.com

Notes that explain

Write one short line so the next visit starts with context.

launch
Launch notes
Onboarding refs
Pricing ideas

Search that works

Find by title, source, or the clue you left for yourself.

Why this matters

Folders force you to pick one location for each link. That decision takes time and is often wrong. Tags let you skip the decision and still find things later. People who use tags instead of folders find their saved links three to four times faster.

Common questions

Folders let a link live in one place. Tags let a link belong to many groups at once. A link about React testing can be tagged 'react', 'testing', and 'project-alpha' all at the same time. No duplicating, no choosing.

Keep the good parts of the internet.

Save the links you actually want to come back to.

Start saving