Save Anything, Find it in 200ms

A quiet, private library for the links, references, and ideas you want back later — saved from Chrome, iOS, and Raycast, found the instant you need them.

Saving Was Never the Problem, Finding Was

You saved it two weeks ago. You search a half-remembered word. It’s there before you finish typing.

You Saved an Article
You Half-Remember
It Surfaces!
That 200ms is where a library earns its keep.

Built for Where You Actually Scroll

Most “save it for later” tools assume you’re at a desk. SaveToFav meets you on your phone, where the good stuff actually shows up — then it’s waiting when you get back to your laptop.

Save from anywhere on your phone
iOS Share Sheet
Raycast Extension

Built for Getting Back to What Mattered

Every feature leads back to the same moment: finding what you saved when you need it again.

Instant Search
Smart Tags
Auto Thumbnails
Private by Default

Your library is personal

Fair Questions

Yes. Save to Fav is free while it is being built, and there is no pro plan yet. If pricing changes later, it should be communicated plainly — no fake scarcity, no surprise lock-in.

The homepage should present the three primary capture surfaces: Chrome, iOS Share Sheet, and Raycast. These answer the setup question for browser, phone, and keyboard-first users.

Yes. Data export should be treated as a trust feature, not a footnote. The page should make it clear that your saved library remains yours.

Save to Fav is personal and search-led. It is not a feed, not a social discovery layer, and not another place to collect saves you never retrieve. The product is built around finding things later.

The site should answer this confidently but honestly: Save to Fav is designed around instant retrieval and search-first behavior. Avoid unsupported technical claims, but make the performance promise concrete.

The founder note and FAQ should directly address longevity. The promise is simple: this is a focused product built to last, with export as the safety valve if your needs change.