Tools & Reviews

Top 7 Newsletter Aggregator Apps of 2026: Clean Up Your Inbox

The "Newsletter Renaissance" has a dark side: our inboxes are unusable. With the average professional subscribing to 15+ newsletters, finding an actual email from a human has become a chore.

In 2026, the solution isn't to unsubscribe (because the content is valuable); it's to uncouple reading from emailing. Here is our ranking of the best tools to regain your sanity.

1. Meco (Best for Design Lovers)

Meco has taken the market by storm with its beautiful, Apple-like design. It connects to your Gmail, identifies newsletters, and moves them to a dedicated app. It’s perfect if you want a "magazine" experience.

Pros: Stunning UI, easy setup.
Cons: No AI summarization; you still have to read everything.

2. Feedly (Best for Power Users)

The OG of RSS readers. Feedly is powerful. It allows you to mix newsletters, YouTube channels, and keyword alerts in one dashboard.

Pros: incredibly robust filtering.
Cons: The UI feels dated and utilitarian compared to modern tools.

3. Readwise Reader (Best for "Save for Later")

If you are the type to hoard tabs, Reader is for you. It treats newsletters like specialized documents, allowing you to highlight, annotate, and sync notes to Obsidian or Notion.

Pros: Best-in-class highlighting features.
Cons: Steep learning curve.

4. Mailbrew (Best for Digest Lovers)

Mailbrew takes a different approach. Instead of an app you check, it collects all your sources and sends you one email daily. It’s a "meta-newsletter."

Pros: Reduces volume significantly.
Cons: Configuring the digests can be tedious.

5. NewsletterForMe (Best for Time-Saving)

We are biased, but for a reason. NewsletterForMe isn't just a reader; it's an AI Analyst. Unlike the others, which organize the unread pile, we read it for you.

Our AI reads your 20 newsletters, identifies the 3 stories that match your specific interests (e.g., "SaaS Pricing"), and delivers a bullet-point summary to Slack or Email. You get the knowledge without the reading time.

Pros: 90% time reduction, connects to Slack.
Cons: Focused on information utility, not "leisure reading."

6. Stoop

A classic app that gives you a dedicated `@stoopinbox.com` email address. Simple, effective, and free.

7. Inoreader

Similar to Feedly but with better automation rules. Great for developers who want to script their information diet.

Conclusion

If you want a pretty reading experience, go with Meco. If you want to study and annotate, go with Readwise. But if you want to save time and stop reading fluff, choose NewsletterForMe.

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