Designers
Archive competitor landing pages, hero-to-footer, for moodboards and teardowns without manual scrolling.
Free Chrome extension
Capture an entire scrollable page as one image — no manual scrolling, no stitching, no watermark. Snapiq does it in one click and keeps everything on your machine.
Chrome has two built-in ways to capture a long page, and both have problems. Save as PDF reflows the layout, breaks pages in awkward places, and turns interactive states into static print CSS — what you get back rarely looks like what you saw. DevTools' "Capture full size screenshot" command (hidden under Cmd/Ctrl + Shift + P) is closer to the real thing, but it requires opening DevTools every time, often misses lazy-loaded images because it doesn't wait for them, and silently caps the output on very tall pages.
A purpose-built scrolling screenshot tool — sometimes called a screenshot stitcher — works differently. It scrolls the page in viewport-sized chunks, waits for content in each chunk to render, captures each frame, then stitches them into one tall PNG at the page's native resolution. That's how Snapiq handles long landing pages, dashboards, infinite-scroll feeds, and lazy-loaded image galleries without distortion or missing content.
It's also why we kept it one click from the toolbar. Capturing a full page is usually a "right now" task — a bug repro, a design archive, a receipt — not something worth six keystrokes and a DevTools panel.
Archive competitor landing pages, hero-to-footer, for moodboards and teardowns without manual scrolling.
Attach a full-page screenshot to bug reports so reviewers see context above and below the broken element, not just the viewport.
Save campaign pages and email screenshots in their entirety to compare versions over time or share with clients.
Capture articles, social threads, and long-form pages as evidence — pixel-accurate and timestamped on your machine.
Snapshot dashboards and analytics views for weekly reviews, then drop them into Notion or Slack as a single image.
Preserve a page the way it actually looks before it changes — fonts, images, layout — without saving HTML or printing to PDF.
Capturing multiple pages? Pair this with Snapiq Combine to merge them into a single image — handy for design reviews and ChatGPT uploads.
Add the extension from the Chrome Web Store.
Go to the URL you want to capture.
Snapiq auto-scrolls and stitches the entire page top to bottom.
Download as PNG or push straight to your clipboard.
Every full-page capture comes out as a single PNG at the page's native resolution.
Install Snapiq from the Chrome Web Store, open the page you want to capture, click the Snapiq icon in your toolbar, and choose Full page. Snapiq auto-scrolls the entire page and stitches every section into one tall PNG — no manual scrolling, no cropping.
Chrome's DevTools has a hidden 'Capture full size screenshot' command (Cmd/Ctrl+Shift+P → 'full size'), but it requires opening DevTools, often breaks on lazy-loaded images, and produces no library. Snapiq is one click from the toolbar, handles lazy-loaded content, and keeps every capture.
Yes. Snapiq scrolls the page in segments and waits for content to render before capturing each segment, so lazy-loaded images and infinite-scroll feeds come through correctly.
Snapiq handles pages tens of thousands of pixels tall. The output is a single PNG at the page's native resolution — no watermark, no compression.
Yes. Because Snapiq drives the real browser viewport, it captures whatever you can scroll through — including web apps and authenticated pages. Nothing is uploaded; the screenshot stays on your machine.
Yes. Full-page screenshots are free forever, with no account and no watermark. Pro adds power-user features for heavy users.