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Pocket was discontinued — getpocket.com/export still works

Don't lose your Pocket archive.

Drop your Pocket export. We show you what you saved over the years, AI-organize it into Chrome bookmark folders, and let you import it into any browser — free, no signup, nothing uploaded.

Drop your Pocket export here

Drag ril_export.html or a Pocket CSV. Everything is processed in your browser — nothing uploaded, no signup, no account.

No file? Get one at getpocket.com/export while it still works.

How it works

  1. 1

    Grab your Pocket export

    Go to getpocket.com/export and download the HTML or CSV. Save it before Pocket pulls the export endpoint.

  2. 2

    Drop it into the inspector above

    Parsing happens entirely in your browser. We never upload the file. You'll see your top domains, save frequency by year, top tags, and an AI-generated folder breakdown.

  3. 3

    Download or install

    Take the AI-organized Chrome bookmarks file into any browser (Chrome → Bookmark manager → Import bookmarks), or install LinkBrain to make every saved link searchable by what you remember.

Frequently asked

Is this actually free? What's the catch?

Free. No catch. You can use the Chrome bookmarks download without ever creating a LinkBrain account. We're betting some Pocket migrants will install the LinkBrain extension after seeing how the AI organizes things — but you don't have to.

Does my Pocket export get uploaded somewhere?

No. Parsing and AI categorization use only a small sample of titlessent to a categorization endpoint — never URLs or the full file. The full archive stays in your browser. If you click “Make this shareable” we only persist the aggregate stats (counts, top domains, year breakdown), never the links themselves.

What if Pocket already pulled the export?

If you saved a CSV or HTML file before they took it down, this tool reads either format. If you didn't, check your email — Pocket sent export reminders, and you may have an older copy attached.

Why “LinkBrain” instead of Raindrop or Instapaper?

Pick whatever fits — there's an honest comparison here. LinkBrain's particular angle is semantic search (“find that article about how Netflix picks thumbnails”) rather than keyword + tags. If you save articles you can't remember the titles of, that's the differentiator.