
Memos hits a sweet spot. Self-hosted, single binary, Twitter-style timeline for thoughts, MIT licensed, runs anywhere Docker runs. The moment you want hierarchy, backlinks, kanban views, or proper export, you outgrow it. These are the seven Memos alternatives for desktop in 2026 we tested for the next tier up.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Sync model | Mobile | Standout |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Joplin | Closest like-for-like | Joplin Server | Yes | Markdown notes, E2EE |
| Trilium Next | Hierarchy and code notes | Single-instance | No | Tree structure, scripting |
| AppFlowy | Notion-style replacement | Self-hosted cloud | Yes | Databases and views |
| Logseq | Daily journal + linking | Local files + git/iCloud | Yes | Block-based outliner |
| SiYuan | Block notes + AI | Single instance | Yes | Block reference, AI ready |
| Outline | Team wiki | Self-hosted cloud | Yes | Markdown wiki, permissions |
| Obsidian | Plugin extensibility | Self-Hosted LiveSync | Yes | Plugin ecosystem |
Why Memos users look elsewhere
The recurring themes from the Memos GitHub discussions and r/selfhosted:
- Single stream of notes. The flat timeline is a feature, but it becomes a wall at scale.
- No backlinks. Notes can reference each other but the graph isn’t first-class.
- Export options are limited. The data is portable but the formats are narrow.
- No mobile-first sync model. The mobile experience depends on PWAs and the timing isn’t always reliable.
- No databases, kanban views, or rich page templates.
The picks below address those gaps from different angles: closer-to-Memos for some, full-on Notion replacements for others.
The 7 best Memos alternatives on desktop
Joplin, closest like-for-like Memos replacement
Joplin is the most popular FOSS notes app with proper self-hosted sync via Joplin Server. Markdown-first, end-to-end encryption optional, plugins, real desktop and mobile clients, and the import-from-everything story is the best in the category. The notebook/note structure adds the hierarchy Memos lacks without going as deep as Trilium.
Where it falls short: No block-based editing. The mobile editor has caught up but the experience still favours desktop. Joplin Server is heavier to deploy than Memos’s single binary.
Pricing:
- Free: yes, fully featured client and server
- Paid: Joplin Cloud as an alternative if you don’t want to self-host
- vs Memos: more features, more weight, same FOSS license
Switching from Memos: Export Memos as Markdown, import into a Joplin notebook. Tags transfer.
Download: Joplin for desktop
Bottom line: Pick Joplin if you want everything Memos does plus notebooks, E2EE sync, and a real mobile client.
Trilium Next, best for hierarchy and code notes
Trilium Next is the community-maintained successor to Trilium Notes. Tree-structured notes that can clone across branches, scripting via JavaScript, code notes with full editor support, and a single-instance server you self-host. Power users love the relations and the templating system.
Where it falls short: No mobile app yet. The learning curve is steep. Single-instance design means it isn’t built for teams.
Pricing:
- Free: yes, AGPL
- Paid: none
- vs Memos: vastly more structured, longer ramp-up
Switching from Memos: Export to Markdown and bulk-import. Build your tree as you go.
Download: Trilium Next releases
Bottom line: Pick Trilium Next when your notes are growing into a personal wiki with code snippets and references.
AppFlowy, best Notion-style replacement
AppFlowy is the closest open-source equivalent to Notion. Pages, databases, kanban, grid views, calendar, and a desktop app that doesn’t feel like an MVP. Self-hosting is via AppFlowy Cloud, which is fully open source and runs in Docker.
Where it falls short: AppFlowy Cloud’s setup is more involved than Memos. Some Notion features like synced blocks and formula 2.0 are catching up. AI features are paywalled in the hosted plan.
Pricing:
- Free: self-hosted is free
- Paid: AppFlowy Cloud paid tiers if you don’t self-host
- vs Memos: bigger leap in capability, bigger leap in complexity
Switching from Memos: Import as Markdown into AppFlowy pages. Rebuild any timeline logic as a database view.
Download: AppFlowy for desktop
Bottom line: Pick AppFlowy if you want Notion’s structure without Notion’s pricing or data residency.
Logseq, best for daily journals and linking
Logseq is a block-based outliner with a daily journal as the centre of gravity. Files are Markdown stored locally, sync is via git, iCloud, or Logseq Sync. The bidirectional linking and graph view are the closest open-source answer to Roam.
Where it falls short: The block model takes adjustment. Tables and databases are weaker than AppFlowy. Sync via git requires comfort with the command line.
Pricing:
- Free: yes
- Paid: Logseq Sync subscription is optional
- vs Memos: similar single-stream feel for the daily page, plus the link graph on top
Switching from Memos: Each Memos entry becomes a block on the daily journal page. Tags carry over directly.
Download: Logseq for desktop
Bottom line: Pick Logseq when you wrote Memos entries as a daily log and want the link graph to make the connections visible.
SiYuan, best for block notes with AI hooks
SiYuan is a block-based, self-hosted notes app from China with strong support for both English and Chinese. Block references, kanban, mind map, and the AI integration points are first-class (BYO OpenAI-compatible endpoint). Self-host the kernel, sync to S3, run on every platform.
Where it falls short: Documentation is uneven for non-Chinese speakers. Some advanced features need the Pro tier. Mobile app polish lags Joplin.
Pricing:
- Free: yes, with feature caps for sync and AI
- Paid: $98/year subscription for full sync and AI
- vs Memos: heavier feature set, similar single-binary deployment
Switching from Memos: Import Markdown directly. Each entry becomes a document or a block on a daily page.
Download: SiYuan for desktop
Bottom line: Pick SiYuan when you want block-based notes with AI hooks and you can read past the documentation gaps.
Outline, best self-hosted team wiki
Outline is a Notion-style team wiki you can self-host. Markdown editor, document tree, collections, permissions, comments, and integrations with Slack and Figma. The hosted plan funds the open-source codebase you self-host.
Where it falls short: Built for teams, so the solo use case feels heavier than necessary. Self-host setup needs Postgres and Redis. No offline editor.
Pricing:
- Free: yes, self-hosted (BSL license)
- Paid: hosted plans from $10/user/mo
- vs Memos: completely different category, but the right answer if Memos has become your team’s note dump
Switching from Memos: Import Markdown documents into collections. Set up Google or Slack SSO for the team.
Download: Outline self-hosting guide
Bottom line: Pick Outline when Memos turned into your team’s shared knowledge base and you need permissions and search.
Obsidian, best for the plugin ecosystem
Obsidian isn’t FOSS but it’s a fixture of self-hosted notes because it’s local-first and Self-Hosted LiveSync turns your own server into the sync backend. The plugin ecosystem is the deepest in the category and a community plugin called Memos-style replicates the timeline view inside Obsidian.
Where it falls short: Closed source. Sync is plugin-based or paid. New users can be overwhelmed by plugin choice.
Pricing:
- Free: yes for personal use
- Paid: Sync $4/mo, Publish $8/mo, Catalyst donation
- vs Memos: very different model, but plugins make it shape-shift
Switching from Memos: Import Markdown into a vault. Install the Memos-clone plugin and recreate the timeline view from your daily notes.
Download: Obsidian for desktop
Bottom line: Pick Obsidian when you want Memos as one view inside a much bigger personal knowledge base.
How to choose
If you want the easiest move, pick Joplin. The structure is closer to Memos than anything else and the sync story is solved.
If your notes have grown into a personal wiki with code snippets, pick Trilium Next. It scales further than anything else here.
If you want Notion without paying Notion, pick AppFlowy first and Outline if you’re a team.
If you wrote Memos as a daily log and want the link graph, Logseq is the answer almost every Memos user lands on eventually.
If you want plugin extensibility, Obsidian’s ecosystem is unmatched and the Memos-style plugins reproduce the original UX inside the vault.
Stay on Memos if your inbox of thoughts is genuinely a single stream and you don’t need anything else. That simplicity is the whole point.