0bytes uploaded
$0to use everything
0accounts needed
0locked features

Everything here is free.

No accounts, no subscriptions, no "upgrade to unlock". Every browser tool on Today's Tasks is free to use, in full, today.

How this works

The tools here are supported by display ads — that's the entire business model. Because the ads pay for the site, you don't have to: there's nothing to buy, nothing to sign up for, and no feature held back behind a paywall. What you can do on your first visit is exactly what you can do forever.

Crucially, "free" here doesn't mean "we sell your data instead". Every tool runs entirely in your browser, so there's nothing for us to collect — your passwords, files and text never reach a server. You can confirm that yourself in your browser's developer tools.

What's included — all of it, free

Open the tools
🔒

Free, and still private

The browser tools process everything on your device. There's no upload step, so being free never came at the cost of your data.

— Built and maintained by one independent developer in Hong Kong

How we compare

Feature iLovePDF Smallpdf Today's Tasks
Files uploaded to serverYesYesNo
Account requiredOptionalYesNever
Locked featuresPaywalledPaywalledNone
Price$5/mo$9/moFree
Verifiable in DevToolsYes

Common questions

Is everything really free?

Yes. Every browser tool is free to use with no account and no subscription, and there are no locked or "premium" features. The site is supported by display ads.

How do I know files never leave my device?

Open Chrome DevTools (F12) → Network tab → use any tool → watch: zero outbound requests carry your input. The processing runs entirely in your browser. We have no server to receive your files even if we wanted to.

What's the catch if it's free?

There's no catch. The tools are supported by display ads, which is why you don't pay and don't need an account. Your data still never leaves your browser.

Do the mobile apps also work locally?

Yes. The apps are designed for local-first operation and core features work offline. Where a network request is required (for example a breach database lookup), it is explicitly disclosed.