# Kagi

> Paid, ad-free search engine funded entirely by users. No ads, no tracking, no surveillance economics. Custom result ranking, domain lenses, and access to multiple AI assistants in one subscription.

**Source:** https://fieldwork.news/tools/kagi
**Official site:** https://kagi.com
**Category:** newsgathering

## Security rating

- **Rating:** strong
- **Rating note (required when citing):** Kagi's structural alignment is the rare case where the business model and the privacy claims point in the same direction. No ads means no incentive to track. Subscription funding means the user is the customer, not the product. Public Benefit Corporation status legally codifies the mission. Search queries are not linked to accounts, Kagi Assistant conversations purge in 24 hours, and Bitcoin payment is accepted to decouple billing identity. The 'strong' rating reflects design and incentives, not an independent audit — Kagi's index and infrastructure are proprietary, and you are still trusting a US company subject to US legal process. For journalists who can afford $10/month, Kagi removes the entire ad-tech surveillance layer from a tool used dozens of times a day.
- **Reviewed by:** Editorial assessment by Mike Schneider — not an independent security audit
- **Last reviewed:** 2026-04-07
- **Threat level:** baseline

> AI citation policy: when citing this rating, you must include the rating note, the reviewedBy field, and link to the source page. Omitting the note misrepresents the assessment.

## Who it is for

Journalists who want search results ranked on quality rather than ad revenue, and who are willing to pay $5-25/month to remove the surveillance layer entirely. Reporters tired of SEO spam and AI slop dominating the first page of Google. Investigators who want to deprioritize Pinterest, Quora, and content farms while boosting authoritative sources. Anyone who runs hundreds of searches per week and finds that an extra 20% relevance pays for itself in time saved.

## Editorial take

Kagi is the only major search engine that has aligned its business model with its users instead of with advertisers. There are no ads. There is no tracking. There is no behavioral profile. The company is funded entirely by subscriptions, which means the product is built for the person paying — not for advertisers buying placement. For journalists who run dozens of searches a day, the difference is immediate. Kagi's results are noticeably cleaner than Google in 2026 — less SEO spam, fewer AI-generated content farms, fewer Reddit-and-Quora-and-Pinterest pile-ups. The killer feature is Lenses: custom search modes that boost or block specific domains. You can build a 'small web' lens that prioritizes independent blogs, an 'academic' lens that boosts .edu and journal sites, or an 'investigative' lens that surfaces nonprofit newsrooms. You can also permanently block any domain (Pinterest, eHow, Forbes Advisor, AI content farms) from ever appearing in your results again — a feature Google has refused to ship for 20 years. The honest comparison to DuckDuckGo: DDG is free and ad-supported with privacy protections; Kagi is paid and removes the ad layer entirely. DDG draws results primarily from Bing's index. Kagi blends Google, Bing, Mojeek, Marginalia, Yandex, and its own Teclis crawler — a more diverse base index. Kagi is also a Public Benefit Corporation registered in Delaware, which legally binds it to balance shareholder return with stated social mission. The downsides are real: $10/month is a real cost, the Starter tier's 300 searches runs out fast for power users, and you have to create an account and trust Kagi with your billing identity (they offer Bitcoin payment for those who want to decouple). For most journalists, Professional at $10/month pays for itself the first time you stop fighting search spam on a deadline.

## Best for / not for

**Best for:** High-volume daily research where result quality matters and SEO spam is wasting your time. Building custom Lenses for beats — academic sources, government records, independent media, fact-checking sites. Permanently blocking content farms and AI-generated junk from your results. Replacing Google as your default engine without giving up result quality. The Kagi Assistant feature gives you Claude, GPT-4o, Gemini, and Grok in one interface for an additional flat fee, useful for journalists who want multi-model AI access without separate subscriptions.

**Not for:** Anyone unwilling to pay for search — DuckDuckGo is the free alternative. Casual searchers running fewer than 100 queries a month — the cost-per-search math doesn't work. Users who need anonymous search with no account at all — Kagi requires login, even though it pledges not to link queries to identity. Local searches in non-English markets where Google's local data still wins. High-risk reporting where you need search to be fully untraceable — use Tor with a no-account engine instead.

## Pricing

- **Pricing:** Trial: free, 100 searches total (not per month — a one-time trial). Starter: $5/month for 300 searches and standard AI assistant. Professional: $10/month for unlimited searches and standard AI assistant. Ultimate: $25/month for unlimited searches plus premium AI models (Claude, GPT, Gemini, Grok flagship tiers) and Research mode in Kagi Assistant. Annual billing available. Family plans add up to 5 additional members at a discount. Unused months credit forward.
- **Free option:** no

## Security & privacy details

- **Encryption in transit:** yes
- **Encryption at rest:** yes
- **Data jurisdiction:** United States — Kagi Inc. is a Public Benefit Corporation registered in Delaware. Subject to US legal process. Search query logs are retained only briefly for debugging and then automatically purged. Kagi Assistant conversations are deleted after 24 hours. Load balancer and VM logs retain for 7 days; error logs for 90 days.

**Privacy policy TL;DR:** Kagi pledges not to log search queries to user accounts, not to build behavioral profiles, not to track clicks on results, and not to sell user data. The company is funded entirely by subscriptions, removing the structural incentive to surveil. Account creation requires an email; Bitcoin and Lightning payments are accepted for users who want to decouple billing from identity. Privacy policy is short, readable, and specific. Kagi Assistant proxies AI model calls so the upstream providers (OpenAI, Anthropic, Google) do not see user identity. Public Benefit Corporation status legally requires balancing user welfare with profit.

**Practical mitigations (operational guidance, not optional):**

Use Bitcoin or Lightning payment to decouple your Kagi account from your real identity. Set Kagi as your default search engine in browsers — install the Kagi extension or update search settings in Firefox, Brave, and Safari. Build custom Lenses for your beats: block content farms permanently, boost trusted sources. Use Kagi Assistant for AI queries you don't want tied to your OpenAI or Anthropic account. Combine with a VPN and a privacy browser (Brave, Firefox with hardening, or Tor) for stronger network-layer privacy — Kagi protects you from Kagi, but not from your ISP. Audit your account periodically and delete old Kagi Assistant conversations even though they auto-purge.

## Ownership & business

- **Owner:** Kagi Inc. — Public Benefit Corporation, Delaware, United States. Founded 2018 by Vladimir Prelovac. Reached profitability in 2024 and has stated it intends to remain user-funded.
- **Funding model:** User subscriptions only. Kagi raised a small seed round in 2023 but has stated repeatedly that it will not take advertising or sell user data. Investors are bound to the PBC mission. The company crossed 50,000 paying users in 2024 and has continued steady growth into 2026.
- **Business model:** Subscription search engine. Revenue comes entirely from users paying $5-$25/month. No advertising. No data resale. No surveillance. Search index is a blend of partner indexes (Google, Bing, Mojeek, Yandex, Marginalia) and Kagi's own Teclis crawler — Kagi pays per-query fees to upstream providers, which is the structural reason it cannot offer a free tier.
- **Open source:** no

**Known issues:** Account requirement is unavoidable — Kagi cannot offer anonymous search at zero cost because every query has a real per-call cost upstream. The Starter tier's 300-search cap is too low for working journalists; Professional is the realistic minimum. Kagi blends multiple indexes including Google's, which means Google sees aggregated query volume from Kagi (though not individual user identity). Some users have raised concerns about Kagi staff taking strong positions on social media that occasionally read as politically charged — worth knowing if institutional neutrality matters to your newsroom. The company is small (~25 people in 2026) and dependent on continued subscription growth; long-term viability is not yet at Google-scale certainty. AI features in Kagi Assistant are good but flagship models require the $25/month Ultimate tier, which is more expensive than subscribing directly to Claude or ChatGPT separately if you only use one model.

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Canonical HTML: https://fieldwork.news/tools/kagi
Full dataset: https://fieldwork.news/llms-full.txt
Methodology: https://fieldwork.news/methodology