Dimension scores are derived from public data and fields; weighted into the composite. Reference only.
Tiddlyhost is an online Wiki hosting service built around the idea of “having your own Wiki in seconds.” It lets users create a personal Wiki without installing anything. It is based on the open-source TiddlyWiki and also supports Feather Wiki and TiddlyWiki Classic. The product is positioned more toward personal knowledge management, lightweight documentation publishing, and online hosting for TiddlyWiki users, rather than as a full enterprise knowledge base suite.
Its core capabilities include creating public or private TiddlyWiki / Feather Wiki sites, which can also be showcased and shared via the Explore page. The Standard Plan further adds access to saved revision history with viewing and restoration, custom domains, and redirects from claimed Tiddlyspot sites to any URL. In terms of permissions, the available information only clearly mentions public/private visibility. It does not disclose enterprise collaboration features such as team member management, role-based permissions, approval workflows, audit logs, or SSO.
Pricing is very straightforward: the Free Plan costs $0/month, supports both public and private sites, and requires no credit card. The Standard Plan costs $8/month and unlocks revision history recovery, custom domains, Tiddlyspot redirects, and related features. Deployment is cloud-hosted, with an emphasis on requiring no installation. Although the Tiddlyhost source code is open source under the 3-Clause BSD license, the collected information does not clearly state whether there is an official self-hosted deployment option or operational support.
The terms state that users retain rights to their content, while the service provider receives only the limited license necessary to provide the service. It also reserves the right to remove content that violates the rules. It is worth noting that the service is provided “as is” and “as available,” with no guarantee of continuous availability, security, or error-free operation. No compliance certifications such as SOC 2, ISO 27001, or GDPR are disclosed. Support is mainly maintained by the creator, Simon Baird, with feedback available via GitHub issues or email, making it better suited to open-source community-style support expectations.
The main advantages are that it is quick to get started, the free plan is practical, it fits well with the TiddlyWiki ecosystem, and the paid tier is reasonably priced. The downsides are limited disclosure around enterprise-grade capabilities, and the terms mention that commercial use requires prior written consent. Teams or companies should confirm licensing and service assurances before using it. It is suitable for personal knowledge bases, public Wikis, small documentation sites, and users migrating from Tiddlyspot. If you need team permissions, auditing, compliance, or a stronger local ecosystem, you may want to compare it with Notion, Confluence, GitBook, 语雀, or 飞书知识库.
The available information does not provide details about access from mainland China, payment methods, or localization. Actual connectivity and subscription payment support should be tested independently.
⚠ 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 tiddlyhost.com official site.
tiddlyhost.com is an United Kingdom SaaS provider. TG4G tracks its product information, an overall rating of 8.0/10, and a China-accessibility score of China direct-connect friendly. Click "Visit Official Site" to reach tiddlyhost.com directly.