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Tolaria
Pricing
- Model
- Free
Summary
Most knowledge tools eventually betray you — a proprietary format here, a vendor lock-in there, and suddenly nine thousand notes live in a database you cannot grep, diff, or open without someone's permission.
Tolaria answers that betrayal with a simple contract: every note is a Markdown file with YAML frontmatter, sitting on your disk, readable by any editor, version-controlled by Git. The block editor writes richly but saves durably — nothing proprietary touches your vault. Integrated Git means commit, push, and history browsing happen inside the app, not as a bolted-on afterthought. CLI coding agents like Claude Code and Codex can write to your vault when you want tool-backed editing; local or API model providers handle chat over note context without vault-write access. The ceiling appears when your workflow demands a hosted, collaborative, real-time editing surface — that architecture is not what Tolaria is.
Bottom line: Pick Tolaria when your knowledge base needs to live in Git, survive vendor shutdowns, and talk to local AI agents — plan a different tool when your team expects Google Docs-style simultaneous editing or a no-install web interface.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Every note is a plain Markdown file on disk, so your vault is readable by any editor, scriptable from the terminal, and survives the tool itself — no export step needed when you want to leave or switch editors.
- Full Git client built into the app, which means version history, commit messages, and cross-device sync happen without a separate sync service or a proprietary account that can disappear.
- Relationships between notes through wikilinks are a first-class feature, so building a linked knowledge graph does not require a plugin or a workaround that breaks on the next update.
- CLI coding agents like Claude Code and Codex can be connected with vault-write access, so AI-assisted note editing uses agents you already trust for code rather than a locked-in vendor model.
- No account required and self-hostable, which means the tool works fully offline and your notes never transit a third-party server unless you choose a remote Git host yourself.
Cons
Sign in to edit- Real-time collaborative editing is not part of the architecture — the Git model means two people editing the same note simultaneously produce a merge conflict, not a live cursor. Teams that need Google Docs-style collaboration on shared notes will hit this wall immediately and reach for Notion or Confluence instead.
- The AI agent integration requires connecting and configuring CLI tools like Claude Code or Codex separately; there is no bundled AI model or one-click setup. Teams expecting a built-in assistant out of the box spend setup time wiring agents before getting any AI value.
- With a GitHub star count in the low five figures and a single founder origin, the community and plugin ecosystem are thin compared to Obsidian. Power users who rely on a broad plugin library to extend their workflow will find precious little third-party tooling and will need to build or wait.
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About
- Platforms
- macOS, Windows, Linux (desktop)
- API Available
- No
- Self-Hosted
- Yes
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-20T13:38:26.939Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Users who prefer plain Markdown files and Git
- Developers and writers needing AI agent integration
- Teams requiring local, offline-first knowledge bases
- Power users migrating from Notion or similar tools
What it does well
- Personal knowledge management as a second brain
- Organizing company documentation for AI context
- Maintaining procedures and memory for AI assistants
- Version-controlled note-taking with Git workflows
Integrations
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Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Tolaria free?
- Yes — Tolaria is fully free to use. There is no paid tier.
- Is Tolaria open source?
- Yes. Tolaria is open source.
- Can I self-host Tolaria?
- Yes. Tolaria supports self-hosting on your own infrastructure.
- What platforms does Tolaria support?
- Tolaria is available on: macOS, Windows, Linux (desktop).
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Curated lists that include this category
Proprietary databases extract a hidden tax: the day you want to leave, or the day the service goes down, your knowledge is hostage. Tolaria is built around the opposite bet — every note is a plain Markdown file with a YAML frontmatter header, stored in a folder on your disk called a vault. A block-based editor with slash commands, wikilinks with autocomplete, whiteboards, and media previews writes richly to that format, but the output is always durable, portable Markdown. Relationships between notes are first-class, tracked through wikilinks rather than a hidden relational layer.
The Git integration is the feature that separates Tolaria from tools that treat version control as an export option. Commit, push, browse per-note history, and track changes all happen from within the app, using the same Git repository you would trust for production code. Syncing across devices means pushing and pulling from a remote — no proprietary sync server, no account, no subscription. For developers already living in Git, this is not a new habit; it is the same one applied to notes.
AI integration in Tolaria is explicit about what it does and does not do. CLI coding agents — the vendor names Claude Code, Codex, OpenCode, Pi, and Gemini specifically — can be connected when you want an agent to read and write vault files directly. Local or API-backed model providers can chat over note context without vault-write access, keeping read-only and write-capable AI distinct. The tool is not itself an autonomous agent system; it is a structured environment agents can operate inside. That distinction matters when scoping what to expect.
Tolaria is open source under AGPL-3.0-or-later, requires no account, and the vendor states it is free forever. The docs live inside the app’s own repository, so documentation and product behavior evolve together. Teams migrating from Notion or Obsidian with large note libraries will find the plain-Markdown foundation means import is a folder copy rather than an export dance — provided notes are already in or convertible to Markdown.
