Feature Matrix
A side-by-side comparison of documentation capabilities, AI features, collaboration tools, enterprise readiness, and integrations between Slab and Slite.
| Feature |
Slab
|
Slite
|
|---|---|---|
| Free Plan | Up to 10 users | Up to 50 docs |
| Starting Paid Price | $6.67/user/month | $8/user/month |
| AI Content Generation | ||
| AI-Powered Q&A (Ask AI) | ||
| Video to Documentation | ||
| Screen Recording | ||
| Real-Time Collaboration | ||
| Comments & Mentions | ||
| Version Control | 90 days (Free), unlimited (Startup+) | Page history |
| Doc Verification / Content Freshness | ||
| Full-Text Search | Fast full-text search | AI-enhanced search |
| Multi-Language Support | ||
| Auto-Translation | ||
| Multi-Tenant Portals | ||
| Custom Domain | ||
| Custom Branding | ||
| Embeddable Widget | ||
| External / Customer-Facing Publishing | ||
| API Access | Premium+ plan | |
| SSO | Business plan | Premium+ plan (SAML) |
| SOC 2 Compliance | ||
| GDPR Compliance | ||
| Analytics | Startup+ plan | Premium+ plan |
| Helpdesk Integration | ||
| Built-in LMS / Training | ||
| Autonomous Agents |
Data as of February 2026. Features are based on publicly available information and vendor documentation.
Strengths & Weaknesses
Deep Dive
Both Slab and Slite offer clean, distraction-free editors optimized for internal knowledge writing. Slab keeps things minimal with Markdown support, slash commands, and real-time co-editing—its greatest strength is the absence of complexity. Slite matches this with a polished editor and adds AI writing assistance and doc verification to prompt writers to keep content current. For teams that prioritize fast, clean writing without feature overload, Slab wins on simplicity; Slite wins when teams need AI to accelerate writing or flag outdated content.
This is the starkest difference between the two tools. Slab has zero AI features—no AI writing, no AI search, no Q&A—a notable gap for a 2026 knowledge tool. Slite's "Ask AI" feature lets team members query the knowledge base in natural language and get instant, contextual answers rather than a list of links. Slite also includes AI writing assistance for drafting and editing. For any team that values AI-powered knowledge retrieval—increasingly the standard expectation—Slite has a decisive advantage over Slab's entirely manual approach.
Slite holds a clear edge on enterprise security. It is SOC 2 certified, offers SAML SSO on Premium+ plans, provides API access at the same tier, and includes advanced permissions and audit logs at the Enterprise level. Slab offers GDPR compliance and SSO on its Business (custom pricing) plan, but lacks SOC 2 certification and API access entirely. Neither tool offers data residency, HIPAA compliance, or air-gap deployment. Teams in regulated industries or with formal security procurement requirements will find Slite better equipped, though both tools remain firmly in the SMB and startup tier for enterprise features.
Both Slab and Slite are strictly internal wikis with no external publishing capability. Neither supports custom domains, branded portals, embeddable widgets, multi-tenant delivery to clients, or customer-facing knowledge bases. Both lack helpdesk integrations, external chatbots, and content delivery APIs. This shared limitation is significant for any organization that needs to publish documentation to customers, partners, or multiple client organizations. Teams that start with either tool frequently hit this wall as they grow and end up needing a separate platform for external knowledge delivery.
Our Recommendation
Slab and Slite are both well-designed internal wikis that serve small-to-mid-size teams effectively, but they make different trade-offs. Slab optimizes for radical simplicity and affordability with the most generous free tier in the category, while Slite adds meaningful AI capabilities—particularly its Ask AI Q&A feature—at a modest price premium. Neither tool can publish externally, support multi-tenant client delivery, handle video-to-documentation workflows, or scale to enterprise knowledge management.
Choose Slab if you need...
Choose Slite if you need...
Choose Docsie if you need...
Winner: Docsie
Both Slab and Slite are limited to internal-only wikis with no external publishing, no video conversion, no multi-tenant delivery, and no training or certification capabilities. Docsie addresses every gap both tools share—converting any video into structured docs, delivering through unlimited branded client portals, supporting 100+ languages, providing a built-in LMS with quizzes and certifications, and running autonomous documentation agents on private infrastructure. For teams that have outgrown a simple internal wiki and need a full knowledge orchestration platform, Docsie is the natural next step.
Common Questions
Q: Does Slab have any AI features?
A: No. As of 2026, Slab has zero AI features—no AI writing assistance, no AI-powered search, and no Q&A capabilities. This is a notable gap compared to modern knowledge tools. Slite, by contrast, includes an "Ask AI" feature for natural language Q&A over your docs and AI writing assistance. If AI-powered knowledge retrieval is a requirement, Slite is the clear choice between these two.
Q: Can either Slab or Slite publish documentation for external customers?
A: Neither Slab nor Slite supports external or customer-facing documentation publishing. Both are strictly internal wikis. There are no custom domains, branded portals, embeddable widgets, or customer-facing knowledge base delivery options in either tool. Teams that need to publish help documentation, product guides, or knowledge bases to customers will need a separate platform entirely.
Q: Which tool is more affordable for a small team?
A: Slab is cheaper on every tier. Its free plan supports up to 10 users with real-time collaboration and unlimited posts—the most generous free tier in the category. Its paid Startup plan is $6.67/user/month (billed annually), which is the lowest price in the internal wiki market. Slite's free plan is limited to 50 documents and its paid Standard plan starts at $8/user/month. For budget-conscious small teams, Slab wins clearly on price.
Q: Does Slite's Loom acquisition change its video capabilities?
A: As of early 2026, Slite has been acquired by Loom but has not yet released significant video-to-documentation capabilities as a result. The acquisition creates potential for future video integration, but currently neither Slite nor Slab can convert video content into structured documentation. Docsie already offers full video-to-docs conversion across all video types, including training recordings, screen captures, and real-world footage.
Q: Is there a better alternative to both Slab and Slite?
A: Yes—Docsie addresses the core limitations shared by both tools. While Slab and Slite are solid internal wikis, neither can convert video into documentation, publish to external customers, support multi-tenant client portals, provide auto-translation in 100+ languages, or include a built-in LMS. Docsie delivers all of these in a single platform with SOC 2 Type II compliance, autonomous documentation agents, and real-time compliance monitoring. Teams that have outgrown a basic internal wiki consistently find Docsie the more complete solution.
Q: Which tool is better for a growing startup that might need enterprise features later?
A: Slite has a slightly stronger enterprise foundation with SOC 2 certification, SAML SSO, and API access on paid plans—making it easier to satisfy enterprise security reviews as the company grows. However, both tools hit a hard ceiling when it comes to external publishing, multi-tenant delivery, and advanced compliance. Teams that anticipate scaling to enterprise documentation needs, client portals, or multilingual content should evaluate Docsie early to avoid a costly migration later.
Docsie goes beyond internal wikis—convert training videos into structured docs, deliver branded knowledge bases to every client through multi-tenant portals, translate into 100+ languages automatically, and train teams with a built-in LMS. All in one platform, with SOC 2 Type II compliance and enterprise-grade security.
No credit card required. Free AI credits to convert a 10-minute training video included.
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