Pricing
freemium
Best For
Startups and mid-size companies that care about documentation quality
Rating
8.5/10
Last Updated
May 2026
TL;DR
Slab is what you get when someone redesigns the company wiki for 2020s taste: a gorgeous editor, fast unified search that reaches into Slack and Google Drive, and a topic structure that stays tidy. It's internal-only and pricier per user than Confluence, but writing in it is a genuine pleasure.
What is Slab?
Slab launched in 2016 aimed squarely at teams frustrated with Confluence's clutter and the chaos of a free-form Notion wiki. Its pitch is simple: a knowledge base that's a joy to write in and easy to keep organized. For internal documentation at growing companies, Slab hits a sweet spot that's surprisingly hard to find.
What Makes Slab Special
The editor is the first thing you notice. It's clean, fast, and gets out of your way — closer to a polished document editor than a clunky wiki form. The second thing is structure: Slab organizes content into Topics rather than deeply nested page trees, and a post can live under multiple topics. That keeps things findable without the rigid hierarchy of Confluence or the sprawl of Notion. Unified search is the third pillar — Slab searches not just its own content but connected tools like Slack, Google Drive, GitHub, and Asana, so it becomes a front door to all your team's knowledge.
Day-to-Day Experience
Writing in Slab feels good, which sounds minor but matters — people document more when the tool isn't fighting them. Verification flags let you mark posts as current, and analytics show what's read and what's ignored. Integrations are well done: paste a Slack link and it unfurls, embed a Google Doc, reference a GitHub PR. The reading experience is just as clean as the writing one. It's the kind of tool where onboarding a new hire to "go read these topics" actually works.
The Honest Trade-offs
Slab is internal-only — there's no public help center, full stop. It's also not cheap: the Startup plan is around $8 per user per month and Business around $15, which puts it above Confluence per seat. The topic model is elegant but less powerful than database-driven structures if you need filtered views and metadata. It's a focused tool, so no project management or ticketing. And the integrations, while polished, are fewer than the Atlassian Marketplace offers.
Who Should Choose Slab
Slab is for startups and mid-size companies that care about documentation quality and want their team to actually enjoy maintaining the wiki. If Confluence feels heavy and Notion feels messy, Slab is the middle path. It's especially good for engineering and product teams that value a clean editor and unified search. Skip it if you need a customer-facing knowledge base or a tight budget rules out per-user pricing at this level.
Pricing and Value
Slab has a free plan for small teams (up to 10 users with limited posts), a Startup plan around $8 per user per month, a Business plan around $15 per user per month, and custom Enterprise pricing. The free tier is a real way to try it. For a 40-person team on Business, that's roughly $600/month — more than Confluence, but the writing experience and unified search are what you're paying for, and for doc-heavy teams that trade-off is often worth it.
Pros and Cons
Pros
- Beautiful, fast editor that makes documentation a pleasure to write
- Topic-based structure stays tidy without rigid page hierarchies
- Unified search reaches into Slack, Google Drive, GitHub, and more
- Verification flags and analytics help keep content current and relevant
- Free plan for up to 10 users is a real way to evaluate it
Cons
- Internal-only, with no public-facing help center option
- Per-user pricing sits above Confluence at comparable tiers
- Topic model is less powerful than database-driven structures with filtered views
- Focused tool with no project management or ticketing
- Fewer integrations than the Atlassian Marketplace offers
Ready to try Slab?
Free plan available to get started
Slab Pricing
Business
- Advanced analytics
- SAML SSO
- Advanced permissions
- Priority support
Enterprise
- SCIM provisioning
- Audit logs
- Custom contracts and security review
- Dedicated support
Pricing last verified: May 14, 2026
Who is Slab Best For?
- Startups and mid-size companies that care about documentation quality
- Engineering and product teams that value a clean editor and unified search
- Teams stuck between heavy Confluence and messy Notion
- Companies that want their team to actually enjoy maintaining the wiki
Technical Details
The Bottom Line
Slab scores 8.5/10. It stands out for beautiful, fast editor that makes documentation a pleasure to write. Best suited for startups and mid-size companies that care about documentation quality. Keep in mind that internal-only, with no public-facing help center option. There is a free plan to get started.
Popular Comparisons
Ready to try Slab?
Free plan available to get started
Frequently Asked Questions
Based on editorial analysis