You already have a list in your head.
The places worth going. The links you keep re-sending. The products you'd recommend without hesitating. The restaurants a friend asks you about every time they visit. Stacklist is where those lists live — as curated, shareable collections instead of scattered bookmarks, DMs, and Notes app entries.
The idea
Stacklist is a social curation network. You build a profile that holds stacks — themed collections of cards, where each card is a saved link. Over time, your profile becomes a map of what you know and care about: the best Vietnamese restaurants in your city, the podcast episodes you point people to, the tools you actually use.
Two things make Stacklist different from a bookmark tool:
Browsing over feeds. Collections compound value. Feeds bury it. Your stacks stay useful for months; a post scrolls past in seconds.
Aggregation without ownership. Content stays where it lives. Stacklist brings it together so people can find it, use it, and share it.
Who it's for
Stacklist works for three kinds of people:
Local expertise businesses — real estate agents, short-term rental hosts, hotels, hospitality. Instead of a generic website, you share a hub of the places you know.
Creators and curators — anyone whose value comes from taste. Podcast hosts, designers, food writers, fitness coaches.
People who just want better bookmarks — save links, group them, find them again.
The three things to try first
Create a stack. Pick a topic you already think about. Name it.
Add a few cards. Paste any URL — Stacklist pulls in the title, description, and image automatically.
Share it. Send the link to someone who'd find it useful.
That's the whole loop. Everything else — workspaces, integrations, AI tools, your profile page — extends from those three moves.
Where to go next
Create your Stacklist account — if you haven't yet
Your first stack in 3 minutes — the guided first-use walkthrough
Cards, stacks, and lists: what's the difference? — the vocabulary, once