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Self-Hosted Alternatives to Confluence in 2026 (Tested)

Escaping Confluence? These 4 open-source, self-hostable tools can replace it — with honest tested notes on each.

If you’re looking to move off Confluence, you have options. Real ones. Here are the 4 open-source, self-hostable alternatives I’ve tested, with honest notes on what each does well and where each falls short.

Short answer: if you want the fewest surprises, start with BookStack. If it doesn’t fit, try Outline. Details on all 4 below.

Why leave Confluence?

  • Cloud pricing is per-user and scales expensively.
  • Search is famously bad — the internal joke of every Atlassian shop.
  • Data Center version being sunset — no on-prem future for smaller orgs.

The 4 best self-hosted alternatives to Confluence

1

BookStack

Books/chapters/pages structure. The most Confluence-like. Excellent as a small-team wiki.

Visit BookStack website →
2

Outline

Modern, block-based editor. Cleaner UI than BookStack.

Visit Outline website →
3

DokuWiki

File-based (no database). Simple and bulletproof for personal wikis.

Visit DokuWiki website →
4

XWiki

Enterprise wiki with programmable pages. Heavy but comprehensive.

Visit XWiki website →

Quick comparison

AlternativeDifficultyLicense
BookStackEasyMIT
OutlineMediumBSL-1.1
DokuWikiEasyGPL-2.0
XWikiHardLGPL-2.1

Frequently asked questions

Is there a free alternative to Confluence?

Yes. Every tool listed above is free and open source. Some, like BookStack, also have optional paid hosted tiers if you don’t want to run the server yourself. Everything else is genuinely free to self-host — you pay only for your own hardware and time.

Which one should I pick if I’ve never self-hosted anything before?

Start with BookStack. It’s the lowest-friction option here — realistic to have running in an afternoon on a small server or Raspberry Pi. If it doesn’t fit your workflow, Outline is a good second try.

Can I run these on a Raspberry Pi?

Most of them, yes — the tools marked Easy here will comfortably run on a Pi 4 or Pi 5 with 4GB+ of RAM. The Medium tools may work but appreciate a mini PC or a spare desktop. Hard-tagged tools generally want real server hardware.

What about mobile apps?

It varies. Tools like Vaultwarden and Immich have native iOS/Android apps that connect to your server. Others rely on the web UI through your phone browser — fine for occasional use, not a full app experience.

Looking for more tools like these? Browse the full AI tools directory (51 tools tested and rated), or see my homelab gear list for the hardware I actually run.