- Kagi Small Web highlights indie, non-commercial sites run by real people.
- It focuses on personal blogs, essays, and niche projects.
- You can browse it via a minimalist website, RSS feed, browser extension, and inside Kagi Search itself.
- It’s open source and community-curated, and you can submit your own or favorite sites.
What “Small Web” Means
“Small web” here means independent, non-commercial sites made by individuals to share ideas, experiences, or knowledge—not to chase ad money or growth hacking. See the Kagi blog post.
How Kagi Small Web Works
Kagi maintains a curated list of thousands of personal sites and YouTube channels and continuously pulls new posts into a dedicated “Small Web” index. Link: GitHub
You see this content in several ways:
- Inside Kagi Search, as boosted results or via the Small Web lens/toggle.
- On the public Small Web site, which shows a stream of recent posts and lets you “appreciate” them with lightweight feedback.
- Through a free RSS feed or API endpoint you can plug into your own reader or tools. See Kagi API docs.
The site is intentionally minimal—no JavaScript by default, no tracking, and a focus on text and links.
If you run a personal site, you can propose it via their GitHub repo and effectively join this alternative discovery network. GitHub








