Turn chats and posts into clean JSON, CSV, or Markdown with full thread depth, preserved reply chains, and output that is actually usable for research, archiving, and AI workflows.
Substack conversations live inside reply chains, not just top-level posts. Most tools stop at the surface, skip nested replies, or export incomplete data that is hard to search, analyze, or feed into AI tools.
Stackscraper is not just a scraper. It is an export utility built for people who need the whole thread and a clean file at the end.
Export top-level posts, reply chains, nested replies, and full history without flattening the conversation into useless fragments.
Choose JSON for programmatic work, CSV for spreadsheets, or Markdown for reading, archiving, and pasting into AI tools.
Runs with your existing browser session and processes exports locally, so you do not need to create another account to get started.
Stackscraper saves your last export point. Next time, skip everything you have already captured and export only what is new.
Install the extension, open the page you want, and export the thread in the format you need.
Add Stackscraper to Chrome and open the publication page you already have access to.
Navigate to the Substack page you want to export. Stackscraper uses your current browser session.
Select JSON, CSV, or Markdown and download a structured export with preserved reply depth.
The value is highest when the export itself matters.
Archive entire conversations and preserve the context that lives inside reply chains.
Turn chats and posts into structured files that can be searched, sorted, and compared.
Feed Markdown or JSON exports into notebooks, RAG pipelines, or other downstream tools.
Back up paid or private discussions you already have access to in a readable format.
Low-friction entry, with a paid tier for people who need ongoing exports.
License key delivered by email Β· Activate in the extension Β· Cancel anytime
It uses your existing browser session, so it can export pages you can already access in your browser.
Clean mode is designed to make exports easier to read and easier to use in AI tools, archives, and spreadsheets.
The page is positioned around local processing in your browser, which is one of the main trust advantages of the product.
Yes. Markdown and JSON are especially useful when you want to search, summarize, or analyze thread data with downstream tools.
Simple scripts do not remember where you left off, survive site changes, or produce clean output. Stackscraper does all three and stays maintained.
Yes, on Pro. Stackscraper saves your last export point and lets you resume from there on the next run, so you never re-export content you already have.
Try Stackscraper free in under 30 seconds.