The Best Read-It-Later App for OBSIDIAN | Free & Powerful!

Ranbir Singh · 2026-05-22 ·▶ Watch on YouTube ·via captions ·1 min read
TL;DR

Omnivore is a free, open-source read-it-later app that integrates directly with Obsidian, syncing highlights as Markdown notes with custom metadata. The core workflow is: capture everything through Omnivore, highlight while reading, and auto-sync those highlights into your Obsidian vault to build a connected knowledge graph. ---

Key Concepts

Read-it-later app
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A tool to save web articles, newsletters, and videos for later consumption rather than binging or losing them
Omnivore
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Free, open-source read-it-later app with a browser extension, mobile app, and native Obsidian plugin integration
Highlight-to-vault sync
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Omnivore automatically converts your highlights into Markdown notes inside Obsidian, preserving metadata (title, author, save date, publish date, source URL)
Non-destructive re-sync
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Re-syncing from Omnivore adds new highlights without overwriting custom links or notes you've already added to existing entries

Notes

§The Core Problem

  • Most read-it-later apps with full effectiveness require paid plans
  • The average person consumes ~64 GB of data per day with little retention
  • Content consumed without a capture system disappears — YouTube binges, newsletters, articles leave no lasting knowledge

§Omnivore Setup

  • Install the browser extension (Chrome supported)
  • Install the mobile app
  • Install the Omnivore community plugin in Obsidian (search "Omnivore" in Community Plugins)
  • Connect via API key in plugin settings

§Plugin Configuration Options

  • Set highlight ordering (e.g., by location in article)
  • Customize metadata fields imported with each note
  • Designate a specific folder in your vault for synced highlights (keeps vault uncluttered)

§What Synced Notes Look Like

  • Each note includes: unique identifier, article title, author, save date, publish date, source URL, omnivore tag, and all highlights
  • Highlights are formatted in Markdown, ordered by position in the article
  • Multiple highlights from one article are grouped in a single note

§The Killer Feature: Linking Out from Highlights

  • Inside a synced highlight, you can create an Obsidian [[wikilink]] to spin off a new note and develop ideas further
  • When you re-sync Omnivore later (e.g., to pull in new highlights), those custom links are preserved — nothing is overwritten
  • This allows highlights and original notes to coexist and interconnect in the vault graph

§Recommended Mindset Shift

  • Funnel all content consumption through Omnivore first
  • Highlight while reading instead of passively consuming
  • Return to highlights over time rather than letting content vanish

Actionable Takeaways

  1. Install Omnivore browser extension and mobile app today (free)
  2. Install the Omnivore plugin from Obsidian's Community Plugins
  3. Configure a dedicated folder in your vault for incoming highlights
  4. Stop saving links to "watch later" lists — save them to Omnivore instead
  5. When reviewing a highlight that sparks an idea, immediately create a [[linked note]] to capture and expand on it

Quotes Worth Keeping

Funnel everything through your read-it-later app, consume it through your read-it-later app, take highlights on it, auto-sync those highlights into your Obsidian vault, and then come back to that knowledge over time.