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DoStash vs Wakelet: Privacy, Features, and Simplicity Compared

2026-03-06

Wakelet is one of the most popular content curation tools in education. Teachers use it to share resources, students use it to organise research, and schools use it to build shared knowledge hubs. If you’ve come across a Wakelet collection, it probably looked clean and well-organised.

But Wakelet isn’t built for everyone. It requires an account to use, issues cookies by default, and is primarily designed around school workflows. If you just want to save and share a collection of links — without signing up, without tracking, without the education scaffolding — it can feel like more than you need.

This post compares Wakelet and DoStash honestly. Both tools let you curate and share content. They make different trade-offs, and the right choice depends on what you actually need.

Account and sign-up requirements

This is the sharpest difference between the two tools.

Wakelet requires you to create an account before you can do anything. You can sign in with Google, Microsoft, Apple, or Facebook, or create an account with an email address. The sign-up process is quick, but it is required — you cannot create or view a private collection without being logged in.

DoStash requires nothing. Open the site, create a stash, start adding content. No email, no account, no verification step. You get a unique URL immediately. If you want password protection, you set a password. If you want to share it publicly, you share the link. That’s it.

For many people, this difference doesn’t matter. But if you want to share a quick collection with someone who isn’t already on Wakelet, or if you simply object to creating accounts for tools you use occasionally, DoStash removes the friction entirely.

Privacy and tracking

Wakelet is GDPR and COPPA compliant, and it does not sell personal data. However, it issues cookies by default when you visit the site, and it collects usage data. Their privacy policy notes that cookies are issued automatically unless you have configured your browser to refuse them. For users signed into an account, activity is tied to an identity.

Wakelet’s compliance posture is standard and reasonable for a service of its kind. But it is still an account-based platform, which means your usage is tracked by design.

DoStash has no accounts, which means there is no identity to track. There are no cookies, no analytics, no session tracking. Stashes are accessed by URL. The server does not know who created a stash or who is viewing it. There is nothing to breach because there is nothing stored about users.

If privacy is a primary concern, DoStash wins this comparison by a significant margin — not because it has better privacy policies, but because it has no user data to begin with.

Supported content types

Both tools support a wide range of embeds and content types. This is an area where they are genuinely comparable.

Wakelet supports: web links, articles, images, videos, PDFs, documents, YouTube videos, YouTube Shorts, TikToks, Instagram Reels, Google Maps, Tweets/X posts, Facebook posts, Spotify, SoundCloud, Canva, and a range of EdTech tools including Book Creator, Microsoft Flip, Mote, and Edpuzzle.

DoStash supports: YouTube, Vimeo, Spotify, SoundCloud, TikTok, Twitter/X, Instagram, Apple Podcasts, Google Maps, PDFs, articles (with automatic title, description, and image preview), images, and code or text snippets.

The overlap is substantial. Wakelet has an edge for education-specific tools (Canva, Edpuzzle, Flip). DoStash supports Apple Podcasts and Vimeo, which Wakelet does not list explicitly. For general-purpose content curation, both cover the major embed types you are likely to use.

Sharing and URLs

Wakelet collections have shareable URLs, and they can be set to public or private. When you share a Wakelet link, the recipient lands on a Wakelet-branded page. If the collection is set to private, the recipient needs a Wakelet account to view it.

DoStash stashes have clean, human-readable URLs at dostash.com/your-slug. Public stashes are accessible to anyone without an account. Password-protected stashes prompt for a password, but no account is required. There is no DoStash branding that obscures the content — recipients see the stash directly.

For most sharing scenarios, the difference is minor. But for public collections where you want maximum accessibility — a resource page, a reading list, a curated set of links for a newsletter audience — DoStash’s no-login requirement is an advantage.

Collaboration

This is where Wakelet pulls ahead for team and classroom use.

Wakelet supports real-time collaboration on collections. Multiple users can contribute content to a shared collection simultaneously. It has role-based permissions (Super Admin, Admin, Contributor), supports workspaces and groups, and allows teachers to create collaborative spaces where students can add content. This is a genuinely useful feature for coordinated group work.

DoStash does not have multi-user collaboration. A stash has one editor, identified by the URL and optional password. If you want multiple people to contribute to a stash, you share the password and trust them. That works for small, informal cases, but it is not a substitute for Wakelet’s structured collaboration model.

If collaboration is important to you, Wakelet is the better tool. DoStash is designed for a single curator sharing content with an audience, not for joint editing by a team.

Education features

Wakelet has deep education integrations. It connects with Google Classroom, Microsoft, ClassLink, and Clever for student rostering. Teachers can set assignments, students can submit work within the platform, and schools can manage accounts centrally. The Education Pro tier adds enhanced privacy controls, advanced permissions, and institutional management tools. This is a purpose-built education toolkit.

DoStash has none of this. There are no assignments, no student accounts, no LMS integrations, no rostering. A teacher could use DoStash to share a list of resources with students — and the no-account access is actually convenient for that specific use case — but DoStash does not try to replace what Wakelet does for schools.

If you are in education, Wakelet is the more appropriate choice. DoStash is not trying to compete here.

Layout and customisation

Wakelet offers multiple layout options for collections: grid, list, mood board, and flexible layouts. You can customise the visual presentation of a collection to match its purpose or aesthetic.

DoStash has a single layout — a clean, ordered list of items. There are no layout options or themes. The simplicity is intentional: the focus is on the content, not the presentation. For most sharing use cases, this is sufficient. For curated portfolios or visual storytelling, Wakelet’s layout flexibility gives it more range.

Pricing

Wakelet has a free tier with some limitations (up to 4 public collections and 3 collaborative collections), and a paid Education Pro tier for institutions that need managed student accounts, rostering, and advanced controls. Individual use is effectively free for most purposes.

DoStash is free, with no tiers. All features are available to all users without payment.

Feature comparison table

Feature DoStash Wakelet
Account required No Yes (Google/Microsoft/Apple/email)
Cookies / tracking None Yes (cookies issued by default)
Price Free Free (limited) / Paid education tier
YouTube embeds Yes Yes
Spotify embeds Yes Yes
TikTok embeds Yes Yes
Twitter/X embeds Yes Yes
Apple Podcasts Yes Not listed
PDFs Yes Yes
Password protection Yes Yes (private collections)
Real-time collaboration No Yes
Google Classroom integration No Yes
Layout options Single layout Multiple layouts
EdTech tool embeds No Yes (Canva, Edpuzzle, Flip, etc.)
Custom slug / URL Yes Partial (Wakelet-branded URL)
Viewer account required No Only for private collections

Who should use which

Use Wakelet if…

  • You are a teacher or school administrator building collaborative learning resources
  • You need Google Classroom, ClassLink, or Clever integration
  • You want multiple contributors editing a shared collection in real-time
  • You need EdTech-specific embeds like Canva, Edpuzzle, or Flip
  • You want layout customisation and visual presentation options
  • You are already in the Google or Microsoft ecosystem

Use DoStash if…

  • You do not want to create an account or hand over an email address
  • You care about privacy and do not want to be tracked
  • You want to share a collection that anyone can view without logging in
  • You are curating content individually rather than collaborating
  • You want a clean, simple link with no third-party branding in the URL
  • You need something set up in under a minute with zero friction

The honest summary

Wakelet is a strong product, particularly for education. Its collaboration features, Google Classroom integration, and support for EdTech-specific embeds make it well-suited for schools and teams. If you are building a managed learning environment, DoStash is not a replacement.

DoStash is a different kind of tool. It does less, but it asks nothing of you in return. No account, no cookies, no tracking. If you want to share a curated set of links with someone — a reading list, a resource page, a quick collection of useful URLs — and you want the recipient to be able to open it without creating an account, DoStash is the simpler path.

The choice comes down to your context. Education and team collaboration: Wakelet. Individual curation, privacy, and zero-friction sharing: DoStash.

Try DoStash — no account needed

If you want to see how DoStash works, you can create a stash right now. No email, no sign-up, no cookies. It takes less than a minute to have a shareable collection ready.

Create a free stash →

Add links, YouTube videos, Spotify tracks, PDFs, or anything else you want to share. Set a password if you want privacy, or leave it public. Share the URL. Done.