Workona Alternative: A Lighter, Cheaper Tab Workspace

Antti Savolainen

If you typed "Workona alternative" into Google, the odds are you've already lived inside Workona for a while. You know what it's good at. You also know what makes you want to leave.

Three patterns we hear constantly:

  • "It's too heavy." Every project needs a workspace, every workspace has tabs, notes, links, integrations, and the whole thing started feeling like a second project-management tool.
  • "It's too expensive for what I use." Workona Pro is around $7/mo, and the team plans climb fast. A solo user paying $84/yr for what is essentially "saved tabs by project" eventually questions the math.
  • "I don't actually work in tidy projects." Your work bleeds across contexts. Workspaces stop matching reality and become friction.

This article is for those three patterns. We'll walk through the lighter, cheaper Workona alternatives, including the one we built (Amazing Tabs), and tell you when Workona is still the right tool and switching would be a waste of time.

What you actually use Workona for

Before we hand you a list, let's name the jobs Workona does:

  1. Workspace switching. "Switch to client A → all client A's tabs come back."
  2. Project shaping. Each project has tabs + notes + Drive docs + Asana cards in one place.
  3. Cross-device continuity. You close your laptop, open your desktop, your workspaces are there.
  4. Team sharing. Shared workspaces with shared tabs, shared notes.
  5. Crash protection. A workspace is a saved snapshot.

A "Workona alternative" needs to pick which of those jobs you actually use. Most solo users use 1, 3, and 5. They paid for the team features they don't touch.

1. Amazing Tabs — the search-first replacement

Disclosure first: we built Amazing Tabs. We built it specifically because Workona felt heavy for our own work, and we wanted a tab manager that lived on the keyboard, not in a dashboard.

What it gives you, mapped to the Workona jobs above:

  • Workspace switching: Save sessions or collections per project. Switch by typing a few characters in / search — no UI to navigate.
  • Project shaping: Cards group into collections if you want them to. Most users don't bother and just rely on search.
  • Cross-device continuity: Cards sync across every device you sign in on.
  • Team sharing: Not yet. If shared workspaces are core to your job, this is where Amazing Tabs falls short of Workona today.
  • Crash protection: Sessions are saved snapshots — same idea as Workona's, lighter UI.

Pricing comparison:

  • Workona Pro: ~$84/yr.
  • Amazing Tabs Premium: $42/yr ($4.90/mo if you prefer monthly).
  • Amazing Tabs Lifetime: $49 one-time, capped at 200 founder spots.

For a solo user who wants 4 of the 5 Workona jobs at half the price (or once-and-done at $49), this is the swap. For a team that genuinely uses shared workspaces, this isn't your tool — yet.

2. OneTab — the "I just want to collapse and free RAM" answer

OneTab is the lightest option on this list. It does one thing: collapse open tabs into a saved list.

  • One click → all tabs in the window collapse to a list.
  • Lists are local, no account, no signup, no paid tier.
  • You can name lists, drag-and-drop reorder, share as a public URL.

Where it doesn't replace Workona:

  • No projects/workspaces.
  • No cross-device sync (export/import only).
  • No team features at all.

Pick OneTab if: what you actually used Workona for was collapsing 60 tabs and freeing RAM. You don't need workspaces; you need an off switch. OneTab is free and does this in one click.

3. Toby — the visual board alternative

Toby lives in roughly the same neighbourhood as Workona but with a different philosophy: visual collections instead of full workspaces.

  • New-tab page becomes a board of collection tiles.
  • Drag-and-drop tabs into collections.
  • Cloud sync once you have an account.
  • Pro tier (~$5/mo) lifts the free 3-collection limit.

Where Toby doesn't fully replace Workona:

  • No real workspace concept beyond collections — there's no notes/Drive/Asana integration.
  • Mouse-first; keyboard users will bounce.

Pick Toby if: you liked Workona's structure but didn't actually use the integrations. You'll get a cleaner, lighter, cheaper version of what you actually used.

4. Native Chrome (tab groups + bookmarks + profiles) — the zero-tool alternative

Yes, this is a real answer for some users. Combined right, the built-ins do a lot:

  • Profiles — separate Chrome profiles per project (personal vs work, client A vs client B). Each profile has its own history, bookmarks, extensions, and pinned tabs.
  • Tab groups — collapse and colour-code sub-tasks within a profile.
  • Bookmark bar folders — quick links per project, synced via Chrome Sync.

Where this stops:

  • Switching profiles is heavier than switching workspaces inside a tab manager.
  • No real session save/restore beyond what Chrome's session restore offers.
  • Search across bookmarks is mediocre.

Pick this if: you have hard separations (work vs personal, client A vs client B) and you don't add many ad-hoc projects. Profile-based separation is genuinely strong for that.

5. Notion / Obsidian / a doc — the "stop using a browser tool" answer

Some Workona users discover, after switching, that what they actually wanted wasn't a tab tool at all — it was a project notebook. They were using Workona's tabs+notes panel as a Notion replacement.

If that's you, the answer isn't another tab manager. The answer is a real notes tool, with bookmarks for the tabs:

  • Notion / Obsidian / Google Docs holds the project notes and links.
  • Browser bookmarks (or Amazing Tabs cards) hold the tab quick-access.
  • Two tools, each shaped right.

We see this pattern often. If your Workona screen was 70% notes, 30% tabs, your real upgrade isn't a Workona alternative.

Want the search-first version? Add Amazing Tabs to Chrome — free. Press / to search saved tabs, Cmd+Shift+S to save and close in one keystroke.

Side-by-side: pick by pain

Why Workona stopped fitting Best alternative
Too heavy / too much UI Amazing Tabs, OneTab
Too expensive for what I use OneTab (free), Amazing Tabs ($42/yr or $49 lifetime)
I'm a solo user, no team Amazing Tabs, Toby
I never used the integrations Toby, Amazing Tabs
I want a visual dashboard Toby
I want hard separation by project Chrome profiles + tab groups
I actually wanted a notes tool Notion / Obsidian + bookmarks
I'm on a team and shared workspaces matter Stay on Workona

That last row is real. If shared team workspaces are the thing you actually use Workona for, none of the lighter tools (including ours) replaces it cleanly today.

The migration: how much work is it actually?

People over-estimate this. From users we've moved off Workona:

  1. Export. Workona has a workspace export under settings. Save the JSON.
  2. Triage. Half your workspaces are stale. Don't migrate dead projects — start clean.
  3. Re-save the live ones. In your new tool, save the current tabs from each active project as a session or collection. 5–15 minutes per project.
  4. Don't try to recreate the integrations. If you need Drive/Asana/Notion integration, those tools handle their own discoverability. Stop wedging them into a tab manager.

Realistic time: 1–2 focused hours, of which most is deciding what to leave behind.

When you should stay on Workona

We're not here to make you switch. Stay if:

  • Your team genuinely shares workspaces and the team plan is paying for itself.
  • You actually use the Drive/Asana/Notion integrations daily, not just "they're there."
  • The dashboard view is how your brain models work.

If two of those three are true, you'll regret switching. Workona is a real product; it's just a heavy one.

The honest pick

For the typical "I want a Workona alternative" search:

  • Solo, keyboard-first, want it cheaper: Amazing Tabs.
  • Solo, mouse-first, want a visual board: Toby.
  • All you needed was tabs collapsed and RAM freed: OneTab.
  • You have hard separations by client: Chrome profiles + tab groups.
  • You actually wanted a notebook: Notion + bookmarks.

If "lighter, cheaper, faster, keyboard-first, syncs across devices" was the brief, that's the exact brief we built Amazing Tabs to.

Add Amazing Tabs to Chrome — free → Install from the Chrome Web Store. 20 cards free, $4.90/mo or $42/yr for unlimited and cross-device sync, $49 lifetime capped at 200 founder spots. See pricing for the full breakdown.

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