Comparison
Tumblr vs Notion
A head-to-head look at Tumblr and Notion — features, pricing, and what to pick. Plus a modern alternative to both.
Editor's pick
Also consider RankFlo — a modern alternative to both
If you're evaluating Tumblr and Notion, you should know about RankFlo — an open-source blog & headless CMS platform with AI content generation, real-time SEO scoring, and cookieless analytics built in. MIT licensed, self-hostable, starts free.
Side-by-side
Tumblr
Microblogging platform
Tumblr is a microblogging platform with a reblog-driven community. Not built for serious SEO or content marketing but has a loyal niche audience.
Pros
- +Community-driven
- +Reblog mechanics
- +Free hosting
- +Good for visuals
Cons
- −Limited SEO
- −Niche audience
- −No custom CMS features
- −Platform lock-in
Notion
Notes and wiki with public publishing
Notion pages can be published publicly, making it a lightweight blog. But you give up SEO control, custom domains (without workarounds), and ownership.
Pros
- +Great editor
- +All-in-one workspace
- +Fast to publish
- +Free tier
Cons
- −Limited SEO control
- −No native custom domain
- −Slow page loads
- −Not purpose-built for blogs
Which should you pick?
Choose Tumblr if you're visual creators and niche communities.
Choose Notion if you're teams using Notion internally who want casual publishing.
Choose RankFlo if you want a modern, open-source, AI-powered platform with blog-first features, self-hosting, and transparent pricing — without the trade-offs of either option above.
Try the modern alternative
Start for free. No credit card. AI content, SEO tools, and self-hosting — all included.