Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Confinity is a private archiving SaaS from the UK, designed for preserving family memories. Its core positioning is that it is “not a social feed, and not a productivity tool,” but a place for families to preserve text, voice recordings, photos, files, personal stories, memorial pages, and future letters, with the option to generate a printed Yearbook at the end of the year. The materials also mention pilot use cases for institutions such as museums, libraries, funeral homes, hospices, and care homes.
The product is built around three main pillars: Capture, Remember, and Yearbook. Capture supports text, voice, photos, and files, which are stored on the device by default at first. Remember helps memories resurface through people, places, events, and themes. Modules such as People, Spaces, Remembrance, and Time capsule cover family member indexing, invite-only sharing, memorial pages for the deceased, and letters that open on future dates. The Family plan supports up to 6 members and shared spaces.
Starter is free during the preview period and includes 2 memories per week, 1 memorial page, 2 years of private archiving, and export at any time. Family costs £14.99 per family per month or £149 per year, and includes unlimited entries, up to 6 members, Private Mode, Data Trust, an annual printed Yearbook, and priority human support. There are discrepancies in the lifetime plan information: the product/pricing page lists £999 once forever, while the Founding Circle page lists £2,500 lifetime with a limit of 100 seats. This should be confirmed before purchase.
The main advantage is its very clear positioning: private by default, invite-only sharing, no ads, no use of family content for AI training, and an emphasis on open-format export, continuity planning, and encryption details. It is especially well suited to emotionally meaningful use cases such as bereavement, preserving elders’ voices, and recording children’s growth. The downside is that several capabilities are still on the roadmap or in preview, such as fully localized Private Mode and Trust CIC/Data Trust. It also does not disclose APIs, SSO, audit logs, or third-party integrations, so it does not resemble mature enterprise software.
It is better suited to family memory keepers, privacy-sensitive users, bereaved families, and institutions looking to pilot community memory projects. It is not a good fit for teams that need project management, knowledge-base collaboration, or enterprise-grade permission governance. Access from mainland China is not specified in the text, so its availability is unknown.
⚠ This review is compiled from public sources and does not constitute a purchase recommendation. Verify all facts on the vendor's official site. Verify on confinity.com official site.
confinity.com is an Unknown Print-on-Demand provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 6.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach confinity.com directly.