Use case

A read-it-later app you return to

Saving to read later is easy. Coming back is the hard part. Notabe is built for the coming-back: a clean Reader, highlights, AI summaries to triage long pieces, and search that finds a save by what it meant.

Read without the clutter

The Reader presents an article as text — no pop-ups, no cookie banners, no sidebar of unrelated links. Highlight the lines worth keeping, and they stay with the save.

Triage before you commit

A three-sentence summary tells you what a long read is about before you spend twenty minutes on it. Reading time is shown too, so you can pick something that fits the gap you have.

A list that stays alive

AI auto-tags every save, so the list organizes itself instead of becoming a pile. When you half-remember something you saved, semantic search finds it by meaning. Native on Mac and iPhone, synced through iCloud.

Frequently asked

What makes Notabe a good read-it-later app?

A clean Reader strips the clutter so you can read; highlights let you mark what matters; and a three-sentence summary tells you whether a long piece is worth the time before you commit to it.

Will my reading list become a graveyard?

That is the usual fate of read-later piles. Notabe pushes back: AI auto-tags everything so the list stays organized, and semantic search means a forgotten save is still findable months later — by meaning, not exact words.

Can I export what I highlight?

Yes. Highlights and saved items export to Markdown, so your reading can flow into your notes or writing.