Wiki / Internal Knowledge Management
Independent ranking of internal wiki and team knowledge platforms, verified pricing, vendor trust scores, and where Notion or Confluence wins (or loses) at scale.
Internal wiki software is the place a team writes down what it knows so the next engineer, recruiter, or account manager does not have to ask. The category is distinct from customer-facing knowledge bases (covered separately in our Top 10 Knowledge Base Software ranking) and from project-management tools (covered in our Top 10 Project Management Software ranking). The 2026 market splits four ways. First, the modern doc-database hybrid layer (Notion, Coda) that absorbed startup and SMB wiki spend through 2020-2025; Notion is the most-loved internal wiki by a clear margin on Reddit and G2 in 2024-2025, though the Notion AI add-on pricing has become a recurring complaint. Second, the enterprise legacy incumbent (Atlassian Confluence) that still owns mid-market and enterprise procurement on the back of the Jira-Confluence-Bitbucket bundle, though Confluence Server reached end-of-life on February 15, 2024 and Atlassian pushed through visible price hikes through 2023-2024 that drew real buyer pushback. Third, focused dedicated wiki tools (Slab, Tettra, Guru, Slite) that solve specific gaps the big platforms leave: Tettra is Slack-native, Guru pushes a verified-knowledge workflow, Slab is the focused product for engineering teams that want a clean wiki without Notion-style sprawl, Slite leans into AI-assist out of France. Fourth, bundled wiki (ClickUp Docs) and emerging long-tail options (Almanac for Git-style versioning, Outline for open-source self-host). For most buyers the honest decision is Notion (modern, flexible, best for startups and product-led teams) versus Confluence (enterprise procurement, deepest Atlassian integration, harder to leave) versus a focused dedicated tool when the workflow gap is concrete.
All 10 products, ranked
- #1
Notion
G2 4.7 (5,800)The most-loved modern internal wiki for startups and product-led teams.
Notion is the modern doc-database hybrid that absorbed startup and SMB wiki spend through 2020-2025, founded 2016 by Ivan Zhao and Simon Last and last reported as profitable with revenue exceeding $500M ARR in 2024 against a 2021 valuation of $10B. The product combines collaborative documents, embedded databases, kanban and gallery views, and a flexible block model that lets teams shape pages, project trackers, and internal directories from a single editor. For internal wikis specifically, Notion is the most-loved option in 2024-2025 across Reddit, G2, and engineering-survey data, with strong praise for editor speed, the doc-database model, and the developer-friendly API. Trade-offs: Notion AI is a separate per-seat add-on that buyers consistently flag as overpriced relative to the base seat, the doc-database model invites real workspace sprawl as the organization grows, search remains weaker than dedicated tools (Slab, Guru) at large-corpus scale, granular admin and audit controls lag Confluence at the top of the enterprise market, and pricing has crept up meaningfully through 2023-2025 for larger teams.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust8.0/10Best fit1 to 5,000Reviews analyzed5,800Interested in Notion? - #2
Atlassian Confluence
G2 4.1 (4,400)The enterprise wiki incumbent, bundled with Jira and Bitbucket.
Atlassian Confluence is the long-standing enterprise wiki, shipped 2004 alongside Jira and now the default knowledge platform for any organization running on the Atlassian stack. Atlassian reached end-of-life for Confluence Server on February 15, 2024, forcing on-prem customers onto Confluence Data Center or to migrate away, and pushed through visible Confluence Cloud price increases through 2023 and 2024 (10 to 20 percent across the Standard, Premium, and Enterprise tiers) plus a separate Data Center repricing in 2024 that drew real buyer pushback. Strengths: deepest enterprise procurement story in the category, strongest compliance footprint (SOC 2 Type 2, ISO 27001, HIPAA, FedRAMP in-process), native Jira and Bitbucket integration that no competitor can match, mature admin and audit controls, and the only wiki most large enterprise buyers will already have on a vendor master agreement. Trade-offs: editor still feels heavier and slower than Notion, Confluence Server EOL on February 15, 2024 created real migration cost for on-prem customers, 2023-2024 price hikes drew real complaints, Atlassian Intelligence (AI assist) is positioned aggressively but ships behind Notion AI and Slite AI in real-world utility, and the bundled-with-Jira procurement story is also a lock-in story that gets harder to unwind every year.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust6.8/10Best fit50 to 100,000+Reviews analyzed4,400Interested in Atlassian Confluence? - #3
Slab
G2 4.6 (350)Focused dedicated wiki with strong unified search across integrated tools.
Slab is the focused dedicated wiki, founded 2016 and positioned squarely between the doc-database hybrid sprawl of Notion and the enterprise weight of Confluence. The product is a clean modern editor, a real wiki page-tree model, and a unified search surface that indexes content from connected tools (Google Drive, GitHub, Slack, Asana, Trello, Linear) so a single search query returns answers across the wiki and the rest of the stack. Strengths: cleanest focused wiki in the category, fastest unified search at small-to-mid scale, transparent flat per-user pricing, a deliberately narrow product roadmap that has resisted scope creep, and strong post-Slack-channel-discussion auto-capture. Trade-offs: smaller vendor footprint than Notion or Confluence (procurement pushback at large enterprises), no doc-database hybrid features (intentional but limits some use cases), AI features ship later and lighter than Notion AI or Slite AI, and the focused product story sometimes loses competitive deals to broader platforms.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust8.4/10Best fit10 to 2,000Reviews analyzed350Interested in Slab? - #4
Tettra
G2 4.6 (280)Slack-native team wiki with knowledge requests and verification workflow.
Tettra is the Slack-native wiki, founded 2015 in Boston and built around the conceit that knowledge requests should start where the team already lives. The product surfaces inside Slack as a bot that captures questions, routes them to subject-matter experts, and converts answers into wiki pages with a lightweight verification workflow. Strengths: tightest Slack integration in the category, lightweight knowledge-request and verified-answer workflow that fits how distributed teams actually ask questions, transparent flat per-user pricing, clean editor, and a focused product that has not chased scope creep. Trade-offs: smaller vendor footprint than Notion or Confluence (procurement pushback at large enterprises), no doc-database hybrid features, AI features lighter than category leaders, integration depth outside Slack is narrower than Slab or Notion, and the brand sits in the long-tail of buyer awareness next to Notion and Confluence.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust8.1/10Best fit20 to 1,000Reviews analyzed280Interested in Tettra? - #5
Guru
G2 4.7 (1,700)Verified-knowledge wiki with browser extension and explicit content ownership.
Guru is the verified-knowledge wiki, founded 2013 in Philadelphia and last raising a $30M Series C in 2021 with reported total funding around $70M. The product is built around the conceit that knowledge in a wiki goes stale unless someone is explicitly responsible for re-verifying it, so every Guru card has an owner, a verification date, and a periodic re-verification prompt. The browser extension surfaces verified answers in-context (alongside Salesforce, Zendesk, Gmail, or any other tab), and the Slack integration pushes verified answers into channel threads. Strengths: strongest verified-knowledge workflow in the category, defensible browser-extension surface for support and customer-facing teams, mature Slack and Salesforce integration, reasonable enterprise admin, and a focused product story that has aged well. Trade-offs: not a doc-database hybrid (intentional but limits some use cases), editor less flexible than Notion, AI Answers feature is decent but pricing is opaque, vendor footprint smaller than Notion or Confluence, and the verified-card model has a real learning curve for teams used to free-form wikis.
Pricing◐ PartialVendor trust7.7/10Best fit50 to 5,000Reviews analyzed1,700Interested in Guru? - #6
Slite
G2 4.6 (230)AI-assist-first wiki for distributed teams, built in France.
Slite is the AI-assist-first wiki, founded 2016 in Paris and last raising an $11M Series A in 2020 with reported total funding around $18M. The product was an early bet on AI as a first-class wiki primitive rather than a paid add-on, and 2023-2025 was when that bet paid off: Slite AI (Ask) is built into the core product, searches across the wiki to answer questions in plain language, and is positioned aggressively against the Notion AI add-on pricing complaint. Strengths: cleanest dedicated AI search and answering surface in the category, fast modern editor, transparent flat per-user pricing without a separate AI fee at higher tiers, French-and-EU data residency option that some EU buyers explicitly want, and a focused product that has resisted scope creep. Trade-offs: smaller vendor footprint than Notion or Confluence (procurement pushback at large US enterprises), no doc-database hybrid features, less integration breadth than Slab or Confluence, the Ask AI quality is decent but not best-in-class on noisy wikis, and brand recognition lags Notion in US buyer awareness.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust8.0/10Best fit10 to 1,000Reviews analyzed230Interested in Slite? - #7
Coda
G2 4.7 (480)Doc-database hybrid with real database depth for ops and analytics teams.
Coda is the doc-database hybrid with real database depth, founded 2014 by ex-YouTube and ex-Microsoft engineers and last reported funded at around $400M total with a 2021 valuation near $1.4B. The product looks like a document but behaves like a relational database: tables have real columns with types, formulas across tables work like a spreadsheet, and Packs extend documents with external data and actions (Salesforce, Jira, GitHub, Slack). Coda is a credible internal wiki for ops, RevOps, and analytics-heavy teams that want a wiki that also runs lightweight internal tools, but it is harder to position as a pure wiki than Notion. Strengths: most powerful doc-database hybrid in the category, real database depth that Notion blocks do not match, Packs ecosystem for embedded actions, strong on ops and analytics workflows, and a focused product that has resisted scope creep into project management or PM-replacement positioning. Trade-offs: learning curve steeper than Notion, less polished as a pure wiki than Slab or Tettra, AI features ship later and lighter than Notion AI, smaller vendor footprint than Notion or Confluence, and the product story sometimes confuses buyers who are not sure whether they want a wiki or a no-code tool.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust7.8/10Best fit20 to 5,000Reviews analyzed480Interested in Coda? - #8
ClickUp Docs
G2 4.7 (9,800)Wiki bundled with the ClickUp project management platform.
ClickUp Docs is the wiki module bundled with the ClickUp project management platform, shipped 2020 and now positioned as one of the four pillars (Tasks, Docs, Chat, Whiteboards) of the unified ClickUp work surface. ClickUp last reported a $400M Series C in 2021 at a $4B valuation. The product is reasonable for teams already paying for ClickUp PM that want a wiki bundled at no extra seat fee, but rarely the right choice as a standalone wiki: editor depth and search lag dedicated wikis (Notion, Slab, Slite), and the bundled-platform critique applies in full. The ClickUp scope-creep pattern is well-documented across the 2024-2025 G2 and Reddit review corpus: the product keeps adding features faster than it polishes existing ones, performance complaints on large workspaces are persistent, and Docs sits in the middle of the bundle rather than at the top. Strengths: bundled at no extra cost with ClickUp PM seats, deep integration with ClickUp tasks and sprints, reasonable editor with collaborative editing, and AI features bundled into the higher tiers. Trade-offs: not the strongest module in the ClickUp bundle, scope-creep critique applies, performance on large workspaces is a persistent complaint, search weaker than dedicated wikis, and the all-in-one positioning means dedicated wiki workflows are not deeply prioritized.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust7.2/10Best fit5 to 5,000Reviews analyzed9,800Interested in ClickUp Docs? - #9
Almanac
G2 4.4 (95)Git-style versioned wiki with branching and pull-request review on documents.
Almanac is the Git-style versioned wiki, founded 2019 and last raising a $34M Series A in 2021 led by Tiger Global with reported total funding around $43M. The product applied the Git mental model (branches, pull requests, merge review) to documents, shipping a structured async-collaboration workflow that some engineering and remote-first teams found compelling through 2021-2023. Strengths: most rigorous document versioning in the category, branch-and-merge workflow for structured async editing, defensible audit trail for regulated buyers, and a focused product story for engineering-style document review. Trade-offs: vendor footprint contracted meaningfully in 2024-2025 with reduced public communication and slower roadmap velocity, branch-and-merge workflow has a real learning curve that many teams reject, no doc-database hybrid features, smaller integration footprint than Notion or Slab, and acquisition or wind-down risk is a real factor buyers should weigh.
Pricing◐ PartialVendor trust6.9/10Best fit10 to 1,000Reviews analyzed95Interested in Almanac? - #10
Outline
G2 4.5 (130)Open-source self-host wiki for privacy-sensitive and regulated buyers.
Outline is the open-source self-hosted wiki, founded 2016 and shipped under the BUSL 1.1 source-available license with a hosted SaaS offering operated by the maintainers. The product is positioned squarely against the Notion-and-Confluence SaaS-only default: buyers can self-host on internal infrastructure for fully sovereign data, or use the hosted SaaS at modest per-seat pricing. Strengths: only credible fully self-hosted modern wiki in the category, source-available license that satisfies many regulated procurement reviews, fast clean editor with collaborative editing, transparent flat per-user pricing on hosted SaaS, and a focused product roadmap that has shipped steadily through 2022-2025. Trade-offs: self-hosting requires real ops investment, vendor footprint is small enough that procurement teams sometimes push back, AI features lighter than Notion AI or Slite AI, no doc-database hybrid features, and the BUSL license is source-available rather than fully OSS which some open-source-purist buyers reject.
Pricing● TransparentVendor trust8.3/10Best fit10 to 5,000Reviews analyzed130Interested in Outline?
How we rank wiki / internal knowledge management
Evaluated 18 internal wiki and team knowledge management platforms across six weighted factors: editor and content model depth (20%), search and retrieval quality (20%), integration with the rest of the work stack including Slack, Jira, GitHub, and SSO (15%), collaboration and review workflow (15%), enterprise compliance, audit, and admin (15%), and value (15%). Pricing data verified March-May 2026 against vendor pricing pages and verified buyer disclosures. Verified pricing crowdsourced from 1,400+ ops, people, and engineering team disclosures and license invoices, anonymized at the employee-band level. Review signal sourced from G2, Capterra, Reddit (r/Notion, r/Confluence, r/productivity, r/sysadmin), Hacker News, and operations and people-team surveys, filtered to a 15%+ prevalence threshold by editorial before publication. AI-assist features (Notion AI, Slite AI, Confluence Atlassian Intelligence, Coda AI, Almanac AI, Guru AI Answers) checked against independent operations and developer surveys rather than vendor demos; the honest baseline is AI summarization useful, AI answer accuracy modest on real wikis with stale or contradictory content. We give explicit weight to total cost of ownership at scale, since per-seat pricing on a 500-person wiki turns into a real annual line item, and add-on AI fees compound that cost meaningfully. We deliberately exclude pure customer-facing knowledge bases (Zendesk Guide, Intercom Articles, HelpScout Docs, Document360 covered in our Top 10 Knowledge Base Software ranking), pure project-management tools without a real durable-doc surface (Asana, Monday covered in our Top 10 Project Management Software ranking), and pure file-storage tools (Google Drive, OneDrive) which are document containers rather than wikis. Editorial trust events surfaced where they affect buyer decisions: Confluence Server end-of-life February 15, 2024; Atlassian Confluence Cloud price hikes 2023 and 2024; Notion AI add-on pricing complaint pattern through 2024-2025; ClickUp scope-creep critique consistent across 2024-2025 review corpus; Almanac wind-down and acquisition risk surfaced for buyer awareness; Outline open-source self-host adoption growing among privacy-sensitive teams. Editorial independence is enforced: no vendor sees the ranking before publication, and we name post-acquisition and post-PE behavior where it has materially changed product velocity or buyer outcomes.
See full deep-dive →- ✓10 products with full intelligence profile
- ✓Verified pricing crowdsourced from real buyers
- ✓Vendor trust scores independent of product quality
- ✓review patterns from G2, Capterra, Reddit, Trustpilot
- ✓Quarterly re-verification of all data