Kliplet vs Notion Web Clipper

The official Notion Web Clipper has 1M+ installs but a 3.4-star rating, and the complaints cluster around two things: it saves to Notion and nothing else, and it has no offline queue — clip something on a flaky connection and it can fail or save a bare "URL only" entry instead of the article. Kliplet takes a different shape: one clipper that saves the full article, your selection, or your highlights to seven destinations — Notion, Obsidian, Logseq, Joplin, Anytype, Bear, or a Markdown file — and queues clips locally (IndexedDB) to retry automatically when you reconnect. Clips go straight from your browser to the tool you chose; they never pass through a Kliplet server.

What Notion Web Clipper does well

It is the official tool, it is free, and for someone who lives entirely in Notion it is a one-click path from a web page to a database. Its newer versions can save a simplified page, a full page as Markdown or HTML, a selection, or a screenshot.

Where it falls short

What Kliplet adds

When Notion Web Clipper is the right pick

If you only ever save to Notion, never clip offline, and want the official first-party tool with zero setup, the Notion Web Clipper is a reasonable default. Kliplet is for people who use more than one tool, clip on the move, or want highlights and templates.

Add Kliplet to Chrome

FAQ

Does Kliplet save to Notion like the official clipper?

Yes. Kliplet saves to Notion through Notion's API, including page content, selections and highlights, and lets you map database properties with a reusable template. It additionally saves to Obsidian, Logseq, Joplin, Anytype, Bear and Markdown files.

What happens if I clip a page while offline?

Kliplet stores the clip in a local IndexedDB queue and retries it automatically when you reconnect, so the full article is preserved. The Notion Web Clipper has no offline queue and can fail or save only the URL.

Does my clipped content pass through Kliplet's servers?

No. Clips go straight from your browser to the destination you chose. Kliplet runs a small backend only for payments, licensing and optional sync/AI — never for the pages you clip, and it ships no analytics.

How much does Kliplet cost?

There is a free tier; Pro is $3/month for unlimited clips, all targets, custom templates and template sync, and there is a $49 one-time Lifetime option. Billing is handled by Polar.

Is Kliplet on the Chrome Web Store?

Yes. Kliplet is a published Manifest V3 extension — add it from the install link on kliplet.com. It works in Chrome and Chromium-based browsers.