You save links across work, personal, and client profiles — then can't remember which one holds what. Bookmark OS reads them all at once, merges the duplicates, and opens each link back in the exact profile it belongs to.
🚀 Launching soon. Reserve the $29 launch price · one-time · macOS 12+
Chrome keeps every profile sealed off from the others — so your bookmarks live in six separate silos. Bookmark OS is the one window that sees across all of them, without ever touching the originals.
The same link saved in three profiles becomes one card that shows all three. URLs are normalized — www., trailing slashes and utm_ tracking junk stripped — so near-duplicates collapse cleanly instead of cluttering the grid.
One profile owns a link, it opens directly. Several share it, you get a picker. Launch is a clean --profile-directory call — no copy-pasting URLs between profile windows ever again.
One tab surfaces the mess: exact duplicates, links stale past ~18 months, likely-dead pages (checked on demand), and bookmarks buried three folders deep. Multi-select → archive, tag, or hide.
Flat, fast tags replace the folder graveyard. A command palette jumps to any bookmark, domain, or tag in a keystroke. Grid or list, light or dark — it feels like a native Mac app because the whole thing is built to.
Every organizing action — archive, hide, tag, dead-link results — lives in Bookmark OS's own store, never in Chrome. Your real bookmarks are opened with fs.readFile and nothing else. That's the whole point: reorganize as freely as you want, and there is nothing to undo, because the source was never touched.
No subscription, no seats, no telemetry. One quiet download that pays for itself the first time you stop hunting across profile windows.
No. Bookmark OS only ever reads Chrome's files. Every change you make lives in its own store — there is no code path that writes back to Chrome.
Chrome sandboxes extensions per profile — an extension literally cannot see your other profiles. Reading across all of them requires a desktop app. That's exactly what this is.
They share Chrome's bookmark format, so most work. Chrome is the tested-and-supported target for v1; others are best-effort.
No. It's a normal Mac app — download, open, done. No terminal, no Node, no config.
Never. There's no account and no server. Everything stays on your machine. The future AI feature uses your own API key and is entirely optional.
Free for the life of v1, including the capture extension and AI chat. You buy the app once.
Six profiles, one window, zero risk to your real bookmarks.