You've probably tried at least two or three of these. The screenshot folder that got out of control. The bookmark manager you used for a week and then forgot about. The notes app where you paste links that you never look at again.
Organizing saved links and screenshots is a problem everyone has and almost no app solves well. Here's an honest comparison of the top options, and what each one actually gets right.
1. Sorti
Best for people who save everything from multiple apps and want it organized automatically.
Sorti is the most comprehensive option on this list. It handles screenshots, saved Instagram posts, TikTok links, browser bookmarks, recipe images, product links, place recommendations, all automatically categorized by AI.
What makes it different: you don't have to do anything. You screenshot, and Sorti categorizes. It reads the content of your screenshots with OCR, identifies what the save is about, and files it correctly. Shopping goes to Shopping. Recipes go to Recipes. Travel goes to Travel. Fashion goes to Fashion.
It also has the best search, semantic, meaning-based search that finds things by what they are, not what you happened to call them.
Price: Free, no ads. Monetization is through optional affiliate links that benefit users. Platforms: iOS, Android, Web coming soon. Limitations: Newer than some competitors, still building out Web version.
2. ScreenSorts
Best for Mac users who primarily need screenshot organization.
ScreenSorts is a solid Mac app for organizing screenshots. It uses AI to categorize screenshots automatically and has a clean, minimal interface. If you work primarily on a Mac and your main problem is a chaotic screenshot folder, it does that job well.
The catch: it's Mac-only and paid. No mobile app, no Android, no way to capture things from your phone. If you're saving things from Instagram stories on your phone, ScreenSorts can't help you. Everything Sorti does, Sorti does on mobile, where you actually do most of your saving.
Price: Paid subscription. Platforms: Mac only. Limitations: No mobile, no link organization, no social media saves.
3. Raindrop.io
Best for people who save mostly browser links and want a clean visual bookmarking experience.
Raindrop is one of the best pure bookmark managers. You save links from the browser, it gives them a visual preview, and you can organize them into collections. The interface is genuinely beautiful.
The catch: it doesn't handle screenshots. It doesn't process images. It doesn't capture things you find on Instagram or TikTok. It's a browser-first tool, and if your saving happens across apps on your phone, it covers only a fraction of what you need.
Price: Free tier available, Pro plan for advanced features. Platforms: All major platforms. Limitations: No screenshot processing, limited mobile capture.
4. Google Keep or Apple Notes
Best for quick capture with no setup. Also the least organized option.
Almost everyone already has one of these. They're frictionless for quick capture, paste a link, take a note, screenshot something. The problem is they're not organized. Everything goes into one list. There's no automatic categorization, no content reading, no meaningful search. After a few weeks of use, you have a massive undifferentiated pile of saves.
Price: Free. Platforms: Google Keep is cross-platform, Apple Notes is Apple-only. Limitations: No organization, no AI categorization, no semantic search.
5. Notion for Personal Use
Best for people who want total control and are willing to build and maintain their own system.
Notion is infinitely flexible, which is both its strength and its weakness. You can build any organizational system you want. But you have to build it, maintain it, and manually file every save into the right place.
For saving links and screenshots from social media in real-time, Notion has too much friction. There's no native screenshot reading, no auto-categorization, and the mobile app adds too many steps between "I want to save this" and "it's saved and organized."
Price: Free tier, paid plans for power users. Platforms: All major platforms. Limitations: All manual, no AI categorization, desktop-optimized workflow.
The Verdict
If your saving happens on your phone, which for most people, it does, Sorti is the only tool built specifically for that. Everything else either handles only part of the problem (screenshots only, links only, browser only) or requires too much manual effort to maintain at scale.
The goal isn't to save more. It's to find what you saved when you actually need it. Sorti is the only app on this list built around that goal.
Download Sorti free on iOS or Android.
