Inoreader vs Keep

Compare Inoreader and Keep side by side on features, pricing, and the workflows each one is designed for.

Inoreader

A powerful RSS reader for power users, researchers, and journalists.

Free, paid from $4.99/mo

  • Inoreader Intelligence AI summarises, answers questions, and runs custom prompts
  • Advanced rules and filters for keyword-level feed control
  • Supports RSS, newsletters, podcasts, YouTube, Bluesky, Mastodon, Reddit

Keep

Save anything from the web and get it back as markdown for AI agents or a simple reading feed.

Free, paid from $10/mo

  • Markdown output built for AI agents and MCP clients
  • Auto-sync from RSS, YouTube, X bookmarks, GitHub stars, and newsletters
  • Semantic search across everything you've saved

Feature comparison

Here's how Inoreader and Keep compare across the features people actually look for. They share 12 core capabilities; the differences show up in what each tool focuses on.

FeatureInoreaderKeep
Capture and save
Browser extension
Mobile apps
Save from email
Save tweets
Save YouTube videos
Save GitHub stars
Save PDFs
Save files (docs, spreadsheets)
Save audio files
Save via API
Auto-sync sources
RSS auto-sync
YouTube channel sync
X bookmarks sync
GitHub stars sync
Newsletter inbox sync
Library and reading
Reader view
Offline reading
Full-text search
Semantic / AI search
Highlights
Notes
Tags
Collections
Public sharing
Full-text RSS extraction
AI and agents
Markdown export for AI agents
Bulk markdown export
MCP server
CLI tool
Claude Code skill
AI summaries
Public API
Import and export
OPML import / export
Pocket import
Instapaper import
CSV / JSON export
Send to Kindle

Pricing

Inoreader is free, paid from $4.99/mo and Keep is free, paid from $10/mo. The tier that fits best usually comes down to how many items you save each month.

Inoreader

  • Free

    150 RSS feeds, 20 newsletters, 30 rules, 50 filters, ads.

    Free
  • Supporter

    Ad-free, article translations, full-text search.

    $4.99/mo
  • Pro

    $7.50/mo annual or $9.99/mo monthly. 2,500 feeds, unlimited rules and monitoring, Inoreader Intelligence AI, API access.

    $7.5/mo
  • Custom

    Team and enterprise pricing.

    Custom

Keep

  • Free

    50 saved items lifetime, browser extension, MCP server, markdown export.

    Free
  • Pro

    1,000 saves per cycle, all sources, bulk exports, higher API quota.

    $10/mo
  • Max

    5,000 saves per cycle, everything in Pro.

    $25/mo

Strengths and weaknesses

Both tools do their category well, but the specifics differ. Here's what each one is good at and where it tends to fall short.

What Inoreader does well

  • Inoreader Intelligence AI summarises, answers questions, and runs custom prompts
  • Advanced rules and filters for keyword-level feed control
  • Supports RSS, newsletters, podcasts, YouTube, Bluesky, Mastodon, Reddit
  • Keyword and brand monitoring across all subscribed feeds

Where it falls short

  • UI is dense, with a steep learning curve for casual readers
  • The best power-user features require Pro
  • No structured markdown export for LLM or agent workflows
  • Not designed for long-form read-later use cases

What Keep does well

  • Markdown output built for AI agents and MCP clients
  • Auto-sync from RSS, YouTube, X bookmarks, GitHub stars, and newsletters
  • Semantic search across everything you've saved
  • Public API and Claude Code skill from day one

Where it falls short

  • No native mobile apps yet
  • No highlights or annotations
  • No Instapaper import yet
  • No Kindle send

About Inoreader

Inoreader is an RSS reader built for people who subscribe to a lot of feeds and want tight control over what they actually read. It supports RSS, Atom, JSON Feed, newsletter-to-RSS, and has keyword-level filtering, rules, and automations across every feed you follow. The product skews toward researchers, journalists, OSINT analysts, and anyone who treats feed reading as a daily workflow rather than background entertainment.

About Keep

Keep is a save-anywhere tool built around one idea: everything you capture should be available as clean markdown that an AI agent can read. Articles, tweets, YouTube videos with transcripts, GitHub stars, newsletters, RSS, and plain URLs all land in the same searchable library. People read their library in a clean in-app feed. Agents read it through the API, CLI, MCP server, and Claude Code skill, so Claude Code, Cursor, ChatGPT, and other tools can work against the library directly. Auto-sync pulls from RSS, YouTube, X bookmarks, GitHub stars, and newsletter inboxes on a schedule, so the library stays current without manual work. Semantic search runs across everything you've saved.

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