HedgeDoc vs Stirling-PDF

TaglineRealtime collaborative Markdown editor and notes platform for teamsLocally hosted web app for merging, splitting, converting, and OCR-ing PDFs
CategoryNotes & Knowledge BaseNotes & Knowledge Base
ReplacesNotion, Confluence, EvernoteNotion, Confluence
GitHub stars7.3k81k
LanguageDockerDocker
LicenseAGPL-3.0Apache-2.0
Self-host difficulty
3/5
Moderate
2/5
Easy
Deploy options
Docker
Docker Compose
Manual
Docker
Docker Compose
Managed hosting
Last updatedyesterdaytoday
View repoView repo

Where each falls short

The honest trade-offs — what you give up with each, versus the proprietary tools they replace.

HedgeDoc
  • Limited to Markdown; no rich block-based editing (tables, databases) like Notion
  • No built-in task management, kanban boards, or project organization features
  • Lacks a hierarchical page tree or wiki-style organization found in Confluence
  • No native mobile apps; browser-only experience on mobile
Stirling-PDF
  • Not a document-management or collaboration tool — purely a PDF processing utility.
  • Advanced features like user auth and SSO require the paid Stirling-PDF Pro license.
  • No document storage or versioning; files must be uploaded and downloaded manually each session.
  • OCR accuracy depends on Tesseract language packs installed in the container.

Bottom line

Choose Stirling-PDF if you want the lower-effort setup; choose Stirling-PDF for the larger community and ecosystem. Stirling-PDF has seen more recent development. Open each guide below for deploy steps and the full feature gap.

HedgeDoc

Realtime collaborative Markdown editor and notes platform for teams

Stirling-PDF

Locally hosted web app for merging, splitting, converting, and OCR-ing PDFs