Export every X bookmark.
Without the 800 cap.
ContextBolt walks your full bookmarks page, captures every tweet, and turns it into a library you can actually search. CSV when you want it. AI search when you don't.
The problem
Why this is harder than it should be
X has no native export. The official archive download skips bookmarks entirely. The API caps you at 800. Most CSV exporters give you a flat file you open once and forget. You wanted your bookmarks back. You got a spreadsheet.
How ContextBolt does it
Three steps. All automatic.
Install for Chrome (one click)
Add the free ContextBolt extension. No account, no credit card, no API token. Works in Chrome, Brave, Arc, and Edge.
Open your X bookmarks page once
ContextBolt scrolls the full list, no 800-cap because it reads the rendered DOM, not the API. Tweets, threads, quote tweets, media. All captured.
Search the library, or export to CSV
Search by meaning inside the dashboard. Or export to CSV, JSON, or Markdown when you need a flat file. Same library, two outputs.
MCP integration
Searchable from inside your AI agent
Pro users get a personal MCP endpoint. One line of config and Claude, Cursor, or Windsurf can search your bookmarks during a conversation.
Plug into the AI tools you already use
Any MCP-compatible client works. See all integrations →
Why ContextBolt
Built for retrieval, not just storage
Bypasses the 800-bookmark cap
API exporters stop at 800. ContextBolt reads what X actually renders, so every bookmark you ever made comes back, including the oldest ones.
Threads exported as one item
Most exporters dump the head tweet only. ContextBolt walks the chain when you bookmark the head and stores the full thread as a single searchable entry.
More useful than a CSV
Export to CSV if you want it. Or skip the file and search by meaning. 'That thread on hiring' surfaces the right tweet, even if you cannot remember the words.
Read more
Want every workaround compared?
The blog post below covers every method, every limit, every workaround. The page you are on now is the install.
FAQ
Common questions
Does X let you export bookmarks officially?
No. There is no official export. X's data archive download (Settings, Your Account, Download an archive) does not include bookmarks. You need a third-party tool, and most of them hit the 800-bookmark API cap. ContextBolt reads the rendered page instead, so the cap does not apply.
Will it export my bookmarks to CSV?
Yes. The dashboard has a one-click export to CSV, JSON, or Markdown. The CSV preserves the tweet text, author, date, URL, and AI-generated topic tags. JSON includes the full thread chain when present.
What is the limit on how many bookmarks I can export?
There is no limit on the ContextBolt side. The free tier indexes up to 150 bookmarks. Pro is GBP 4 per month for unlimited bookmarks plus the personal MCP endpoint.
Do I need to give X my password or an API key?
No. ContextBolt is a browser extension that reads the bookmarks page you are already logged into. No OAuth, no API keys, no third-party servers seeing your X password. The extension does its work in your own session.
Can I export bookmarks with media (images, videos)?
The CSV and JSON exports preserve every media URL X exposes. The dashboard preview shows images and video thumbnails inline. Full media downloads are not in the free tier yet, but every URL is captured so you can pull originals if you need them.
How long does the export take?
First-time capture takes 30-60 seconds for libraries under 1,000 bookmarks. Larger libraries take 2-3 minutes. After the first run, ContextBolt only captures new items, so it is near-instant on later visits.