Here's how Inoreader and SMRY compare across the features people actually look for. They share 6 core capabilities; the differences show up in what each tool focuses on.
Feature
Inoreader
SMRY
Keep
Capture and save
Browser extension
Chrome extension captures from your authenticated session for paywalled and JS-rendered pages
Chrome, Firefox, Edge, Brave
Mobile apps
iOS, Android
Save from email
Forward to in.keep.md
Save tweets
Save YouTube videos
Via channel feed
Paste a YouTube URL to get a readable transcript, summary, and TTS
With transcripts
Save GitHub stars
Save PDFs
Converted to markdown
Save files (docs, spreadsheets)
Word, Excel, CSV, HTML, OpenDocument
Save audio files
With Whisper transcription
Save via API
Auto-sync sources
RSS auto-sync
YouTube channel sync
X bookmarks sync
Auto-sync on paid plans; manual import from extension export on free
GitHub stars sync
Newsletter inbox sync
Pro
Library and reading
Reader view
11 themes, custom typography, 6 interface languages
Offline reading
Partial
Full-text search
Supporter+
No personal library to search across
Semantic / AI search
Pro (AI Q&A via Inoreader Intelligence)
Highlights
5 colors, notes per highlight, syncs across devices on Pro
Highlight from the extension or from inside the reader, with optional notes; renders inline
Notes
Per-highlight notes
Tags
Collections
Folders
Public sharing
Share quote links with rich social previews
Partial
Full-text RSS extraction
Pro
AI and agents
Markdown export for AI agents
Manual highlight export to Markdown only, no per-item markdown URL
Per-item .md URL
Bulk markdown export
Highlights export to Markdown / Notion / Obsidian on Pro, not the full article
MCP server
CLI tool
keep-markdown npm package
Claude Code skill
AI summaries
Pro (Inoreader Intelligence)
Summaries in 6 languages, plus chat with the article
AI summary and AI tagging on every saved article
Public API
Import and export
OPML import / export
Import from and export to any OPML-compatible reader
Pocket import
ZIP, CSV, and legacy HTML exports
Instapaper import
CSV export with folders, archive, and starred state
CSV / JSON export
Highlights only, Pro feature
Export to CSV or JSON. Import plain CSV/TSV plus Omnivore, Raindrop.io, Pinboard, and Wallabag export files.
Send to Kindle
Pro
EPUB delivered to your Kindle email
Import Kindle highlights
From My Clippings.txt, no Amazon login required
Pricing
Inoreader is free, paid from $4.99/mo and SMRY is free, paid from $6/mo. The tier that fits best usually comes down to how many items you save each month.
Keyword and brand monitoring across all subscribed feeds
Where it falls short
UI is dense, with a steep learning curve for casual readers
The best power-user features require Pro
No structured markdown export for LLM or agent workflows
Not designed for long-form read-later use cases
What SMRY does well
Zero-friction reading: paste a URL or prepend smry.ai/ and you have an article in seconds, no signup
Genuinely cheap: $3/mo on annual for unlimited summaries, 10 voices, and ad-free reading
Multiple extraction paths under the hood, so it works on more sites than a single-method bypass tool
AI summaries available in six interface languages (EN, PT, DE, ZH, ES, NL)
Chat with the article, with your highlights used as context
Highlight export to Notion, Obsidian, Markdown, and JSON
YouTube transcript view with summary, chat, and TTS
Where it falls short
No personal library: SMRY is a single-article tool, not a place where your saves accumulate, search, or organise
No auto-sync from RSS, X bookmarks, YouTube channels, GitHub stars, or a newsletter inbox
No mobile app and no offline reading
No public API, no MCP server, no agent-ready markdown URLs
Highlights export, but the article itself doesn't export as a clean per-item markdown URL for AI agents
Rate limited to 20 AI summaries per day on the free tier and 6 per minute per IP
Paywall access depends on extraction methods that publishers can patch, with no guarantee for any specific site
About Inoreader
Inoreader is an RSS reader built for people who subscribe to a lot of feeds and want tight control over what they actually read. It supports RSS, Atom, JSON Feed, newsletter-to-RSS, and has keyword-level filtering, rules, and automations across every feed you follow.
The product skews toward researchers, journalists, OSINT analysts, and anyone who treats feed reading as a daily workflow rather than background entertainment.
About SMRY
SMRY started life in late 2023 as an open-source paywall bypass tool that piped articles through archive.org and ran a ChatGPT summary on top. Two years on it has been repositioned as a full AI reading app. You paste a URL (or prepend smry.ai/ to it) and get a clean reader with 11 themes, an AI summary, text-to-speech in up to 10 voices, highlights in 5 colors, an article chat, and a YouTube transcript mode.
The product is intentionally narrow. There is no personal library, no inbox, no RSS, no auto-sync from anywhere, and no mobile app. The pricing matches that scope: free with a daily summary cap, or $3 per month on annual ($6 monthly) for unlimited summaries, the premium voice, highlight export, and ad-free reading. The Chrome extension is optional and captures from your authenticated session so JS-rendered and paywalled pages render cleanly.