How to Send Web Pages to Kindle
You're reading something in your browser and want it on your Kindle. Maybe it's too long to finish at your desk, maybe you'd rather read it on the couch, or maybe you just prefer e-ink over a backlit screen. Whatever the reason — paste the URL into DropKind and we'll deliver a clean version to your Kindle, wirelessly, in under a minute.
Create your DropKind account
Sign up with your email. No password needed — we use a magic code.
Connect your Kindle
A short guided setup: add DropKind as an approved sender in your Amazon account and enter your Kindle email. Takes about a minute.
Paste the URL
Copy the address of any web page and paste it into DropKind. We fetch the page, extract the main content — text, headings, images — and strip everything else: ads, navigation, popups, cookie banners, comment sections.
Read on your Kindle
A clean document appears in your Kindle library in under a minute. Just the content, nothing else.
What gets extracted
DropKind identifies the primary content area of the page and pulls out the text, headings, images, code blocks, lists, and tables. Navigation bars, sidebars, footers, ads, related links widgets, newsletter signup forms — all stripped. The result is a clean, linear document that reads well on an e-ink screen. Works with blog posts, news articles, documentation, Wikipedia, recipes, forum threads, and most other pages.
One-click sending from your browser
If you send web pages to Kindle often, pasting URLs gets tedious. The DropKind Chrome extension adds a one-click button to your browser — click it on any page and it goes to your Kindle. On iPhone, the DropKind iOS app adds a "Send to Kindle" option in Safari's share sheet. Both capture the page as you see it, which also means they work on pages that require login.
Frequently Asked Questions
What kinds of pages work?
Most publicly accessible pages — blog posts, news sites, documentation, Wikipedia, recipes, tutorials, forum threads, and more. If you can read it in your browser, DropKind can usually extract it.
What if a page doesn't load correctly?
It happens occasionally — some sites block server-side fetching or use layouts our extractor can't parse. Try the Chrome extension instead, which captures the page directly from your browser. You can also save the page as a PDF or HTML file and upload that to DropKind.
Does it work with pages behind a login?
Not with a pasted URL — DropKind's server can only access what's publicly visible. But the Chrome extension and iOS share sheet send the page as you see it, so if you're logged in and can read the content, it gets captured and delivered to your Kindle.
Are ads and popups removed?
Yes. DropKind extracts only the main content. Ads, navigation menus, cookie consent banners, newsletter popups, comment sections, and sidebar widgets are all stripped.
Related Guides
How to Send Articles to Kindle
Send any web article to your Kindle for distraction-free reading. Works with most sites — news, blogs, Medium, and more. Free and instant.
Send to Kindle from Chrome
Send any web page to your Kindle with one click using the DropKind Chrome extension. Works on any site, even pages behind logins. Free.
Ready to try it?
Send your first document to Kindle in under a minute.
Free to use. No credit card required.