There's a new AI tool every week. You try the one everyone's posting about, it's genuinely useful, and you mean to come back to it — then a month later you're trying to remember what it was even called. The image one. The one that summarized PDFs. That transcription site a friend swore by. They pile up faster than you can keep them straight, and the ones you don't put somewhere are just gone.

If you keep more than a handful of AI tools — a few for writing, a couple for images, something for code, a research one, whatever's new this week — the problem isn't finding them. It's that they're scattered across bookmarks, open tabs, a note somewhere, and your memory, and none of those is a place you can actually open and use them from.

This is an honest guide to keeping all your AI tools in one place in 2026 — where to actually put them, and how to pick by how many you really keep.

First, what you're not trying to do

There's a different tool that comes up when you search this, so it's worth clearing up. An AI aggregator lets you run several models (ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini) from one interface and one login. That's a real thing, and if what you want is to run the models from a single chat window, that's the category to look at.

That's not this. This is about the tools themselves — the growing pile of AI sites and apps you discover, use, and lose track of. You don't want one chat box that replaces them; you want a place where all of them are one click away when you need them. Different problem, different fix.

The folder everyone recommends

The standard advice is to make a bookmarks folder. Right-click the bookmarks bar, add a folder called "AI," and drag everything in. It's free, it's built into your browser, and it does hold everything.

Being fair to it: for saving things, that's exactly right. If you just want a spot to stash a tool so it's technically not lost, a folder does the job.

The catch is what a folder actually is: a menu you have to remember to open. It's out of sight by default, nested behind a click or two, with no view of what's inside until you go looking. And a pile of AI tools is the kind of thing you forget you have precisely because it's tucked away. A folder is where tools go to be technically-saved and functionally-forgotten. It solves "I didn't lose it." It doesn't solve "it's right there when I want it."

What actually keeps them in reach

The thing a folder is missing is visibility — a page you glance at and launch from, not a menu you dig through. So instead of filing your AI tools away, put them on the page your browser opens to, where you'll actually see them.

That's the lane Abunch is built for: your sites organized into categories, on the page you open every day.

  • The Free plan holds 100 links across 10 categories — plenty of room for an AI section and everything else you keep — with collection browsing, one-click copy, cross-device sync, and no ads. It's free, and for most people it's all they need. You use Abunch as your browser homepage.
  • The Standard plan ($3.99/mo or $39.90/yr) opens up 50 categories × 20 links (1,000 total) and adds the part that matters once your list gets long: a Daily + Occasional split. The AI tools you reach for every day sit on your daily view. The ones you used hard for one project and haven't opened since — you don't have to delete those to keep things clean. They move to Occasional, one click away, waiting for the day you need them again. Nothing gets thrown out; your daily screen just stays calm.

That last part is the quiet fix for the AI-tool pile specifically. Half of what you collect is stuff you tried once and might want later. A folder makes you choose between clutter and deleting; the split lets you keep everything without the daily view filling up.

Two honest notes. Starting from a blank page is where these tools usually lose people, so Abunch's Explore lets you browse dozens of curated collections — hand-picked for quality, including ones for AI tools — and copy one to your homepage in a click, so you go from empty to a working AI section in about thirty seconds. And it's a starting point, not a directory we keep current for you: those go stale the moment nobody's tending them, which is exactly how so many "big list of every AI tool" sites end up half-dead. You copy a pack as a fast start, then it's yours to shape — add the ones you actually use, drop the ones you don't.

To be straight about the trade-offs: your links live in an account on Abunch's servers, not only on your computer — a service you're trusting, though not an extension reaching into your browser. And what Abunch deliberately isn't: it doesn't run the models for you, and there are no feeds, widgets, or notes. It's a homepage for getting to your tools fast, not a workspace to live inside.

Abunch is new and currently in early access — worth checking abunch.io for current availability before you rely on it for everything.

Which fix fits

The honest test is how many AI tools you actually keep:

  • Two or three? You don't need any of this. Bookmark them and move on — a system for three tools is more work than the three tools.
  • Enough that you lose track, and you just want them saved? A bookmarks folder is the free, no-setup answer. Accept that you'll have to remember to open it.
  • A real and growing pile, half daily and half maybe-later? That's where a homepage earns its place — everything visible and one click away, with a way to keep the tools you tried once from crowding out the ones you use every day.

The number of AI tools isn't going to stop growing. The fix isn't another folder to forget about — it's giving the ones you actually use a place you'll actually see.


Want your AI tools — and everything else — organized and a click away? Try Abunch →