PageStash
How to archive a webpage (and actually find it again)
People do not Google “save full webpage tool.” They search **how to archive a webpage**, **save webpage permanently**, and **website archiver tool** — because the problem is **loss**, not “saving.”
If you have ever lost a critical webpage, screenshot, or source while researching — this fixes that. PageStash captures full-page context, metadata, and notes so useful findings do not disappear across tabs, screenshots, and bookmarks.
Why bookmarks and PDF exports fail
Bookmarks point at URLs that change. PDFs often strip structure and dynamic tables. Screenshots are not searchable. A real **webpage archive** preserves what the page showed — including layout cues — and keeps it **full-text searchable** for your future self and your team.
Keyword cluster: webpage archiving
High-intent queries this page maps to
- archive webpage
- save webpage permanently
- website archiver tool
- save webpage with formatting
- how to preserve a web page
How PageStash answers the intent
- One-click capture from Chrome or Firefox: **screenshot + HTML + extracted text** tied to the URL and time.
- **Full-text search** across your library — find a sentence you remember, not a filename you forgot.
- Folders, tags, and notes so captures stay attached to **projects, matters, and reports**.
- Exports when you need to drop evidence into memos, slide decks, or compliance packets.
PageStash is research infrastructure for people who treat the browser as an instrument — not a junk drawer.
ResearchersAnalystsInvestigatorsCompliance
Further reading
- How to archive web content permanently
- Wayback Machine vs personal web archive
- Web clipping & archiving explained
Browse all guides on the PageStash blog.