Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Notaku is a no-code website publishing tool that uses Notion as a CMS. It can turn Notion pages or databases into product documentation, knowledge bases, Help Desks, blogs, Changelogs, and Roadmaps. The product emphasizes that no design or coding skills are required: content is still maintained in Notion, while Notaku publishes it to a custom domain or a notaku.site subdomain.
Its core modules cover the external content sites commonly needed by SaaS companies. Documentation sites support sidebars, tables of contents, quick search, full-text search, multiple versions, and multiple languages. Help centers support articles, search, feedback collection, and embedded Widgets. Blogs support RSS, sitemaps, and SEO. Changelog can display product updates and be embedded into a website. Roadmap supports user voting and feedback. Sites are hosted on a CDN and include speed optimization, social media sharing images, SEO, password protection, custom domains, custom JS/CSS, and code injection. For third-party integrations, the text explicitly mentions examples related to Notion, Cloudflare/Next.js reverse proxy, custom analytics, Crisp, MailChimp, Tally, SendGrid, Buttondown, Discord, and more.
Pricing is straightforward: Free includes 20 pages; Basic is $17/month with 50 pages and 1 Seat; Business is $37/month with 150 pages and 5 Seats, adding advanced customization, password protection, feedback, and full-text search; Business Plus is $97/month with 2000 pages and unlimited seats, plus support for versions, automatic sync, and hosting under /docs and /help subdirectories. Basic capabilities can be tried without a subscription, while Pro features require a subscription. Refunds are available within 30 days. Team collaboration mainly relies on Notion’s editing capabilities, with Notaku controlling access through Seats.
The main advantage is how quickly teams can get started. It is well suited to startups, product teams, and customer support teams that already use Notion heavily and want to build public-facing documentation and knowledge bases at a relatively low cost. Its feature set is more professional than simply making Notion pages public, especially with custom domains, SEO, search, feedback, and Widgets. The downsides are its strong dependency on Notion; the Free and Basic plans have clear limitations; once the page limit is exceeded, only some pages are synced; and the scraped text does not disclose key enterprise procurement details such as SOC 2, ISO, SLA, private deployment, or payment methods.
Access from China cannot be determined from the main text alone. Because the product depends on Notion, Google login, and overseas CDN infrastructure, teams in China should test access stability, editor-side usability, and the payment process in practice. If access or compliance requirements are high, alternatives to compare include GitBook, Readme, Helpkit, Feather, and Super, or domestic knowledge base/documentation products.
⚠ 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 notaku.so official site.
notaku.so is an Italy Site Builders provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of Workable. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach notaku.so directly.