Pinterest is great for collecting. Terrible for keeping. PinSuite is the backup tool I wished existed.
Pinterest is where I collect everything. Design references for client projects. Travel boards for trips I'm planning. Architecture inspiration I'll probably never act on but can't stop saving. Over the years, I watched pins disappear, blogs go offline, and entire boards become graveyards of dead links.
The content I spent hours finding was slowly vanishing. And Pinterest had no export button. No way to download a board. No way to back up what you've built on the platform.
So I built one.
Pinterest is a wall you rent. PinSuite is one you own.
You paste a Pinterest board URL. PinSuite downloads every pin at the best resolution Pinterest has. Sections become folders. Descriptions and source links are preserved.
PinSuite is not a social media manager. Not an analytics tool. Not trying to replace Pinterest.
It does one thing: takes your Pinterest content and puts it on your drive, your terms, your format. When Pinterest changes its algorithm, deletes a pin, or shuts down a feature, your downloaded collection stays exactly the same.
Built and maintained by one person, with one priority: making sure your content stays yours.
Downloaded content goes to your device. PinSuite doesn't sell your data, doesn't run ads, doesn't build a profile of your interests. You can delete everything or export it at any time.
Free downloads are actually free. No surprise signup walls. Pricing is straightforward: single pins free forever, boards and bulk need Pro at $6.99/month. No trials that auto-convert.
PinSuite downloads at the best resolution Pinterest has. Not a screenshot. Not a thumbnail. The original file. This matters when you're zooming into a recipe or matching a paint color.
I read every email. Bug reports, feature requests, questions about how something works. If PinSuite isn't doing what you expected, I want to know.