The free-tool stack every solo founder reaches for in 2026
May 12, 2026 · 7 min read
Solo founders waste a surprising amount of time looking for the right tool to do a 30-second job. Here's the actual stack — 14 free, browser-based utilities a one-person company reaches for every week — plus the keyboard shortcut that puts them all behind one search box.
The shortcut that makes all of this work
None of this matters if you can't find the tool when you need it. Anywhere on Toolenza, press ⌘K (Mac) or Ctrl-K (Windows/Linux), type three letters of what you need, hit enter. Recently used tools float to the top. The 30-second jobs stay 30-second jobs.
The full solo-founder persona page has the curated 28-tool stack. The list below is the short version — the ones I actually open every week.
1. Money, invoices, and the things that pay your bills
Invoice generator
Open, type client name, type items, download PDF. No account, no SaaS subscription. For one or two recurring clients, an actual accounting tool is overkill — but you still want the invoice to look professional. This is that.
Currency converter
Live FX rates. You'll need this every time a client in another country wires you money, or you're pricing a service for a non-USD market. The result URL is shareable, so you can drop it into Slack with the exchange rate baked in.
Loan / mortgage calculator
Sounds boring, isn't. The first time you want to lease a piece of equipment vs buy it outright, or refinance the office, you'll thank yourself for not opening a spreadsheet at 11 pm. Pairs with the lease-vs-buy tool.
2. Talking to the internet
UTM builder
If you do any paid acquisition — even a $50 boosted post — you need this. Track where actual conversions come from, not just clicks. The output URL is what you paste into your ad-platform's destination field.
OG image generator
Pick a layout, type a headline, pick a background, download a 1200×630 PNG. The OG card is the first thing a potential customer sees when your post lands in their feed — it's worth getting right. Meta-tag preview shows you exactly how it'll render.
QR code generator
Free, customisable, downloads as PNG or SVG. Useful for connecting offline (a flyer, a business card, a printed handout) to online (a sign-up page, a Calendly link).
3. The developer-y bits a non-developer still has to do
JSON formatter
You'll need this every time you're debugging a webhook, copy-pasting an API response into a doc, or looking at why your Stripe integration isn't sending the right metadata.
Regex tester
Validating email addresses, checking phone-number formats, finding-and-replacing across a CSV. Regex feels intimidating until you've used a live tester twice; after that it's the fastest text-manipulation tool you know.
JWT decoder
When your auth flow breaks, the JWT is where you look. Paste the token, see the payload. Runs entirely in your browser — your tokens never hit our servers.
4. Image and PDF housekeeping
Image resizer / compressor
Solo founders generate a steady stream of "the image is too big" problems — too big for the email, for the form, for the upload limit. Resize, compress, convert formats, all in the browser.
PDF merge
Bank statement + utility bill + ID, into one PDF, no upload. Use it for KYC submissions, tax filings, applications. Pairs with PDF compress when the resulting file is bigger than the form will accept.
EXIF stripper
Before you send a photo to a client, strip the EXIF data. It contains the GPS coordinates of where the photo was taken; you almost never want that travelling with the file.
5. The "this morning I need to think clearly" tools
Sticky notes
Browser-based whiteboard for the 5-minute "what do I actually need to do today" exercise. Drag, group, colour-code. No account, no shareable-with-the-CEO Figma file, no procurement.
Picker wheel
Sounds frivolous, isn't. Use it when you and a co-founder genuinely can't agree which of two equally-good options to take. The wheel removes the meta-conversation about who's deciding and lets you get back to working.
Pomodoro timer
Twenty-five minutes of focused work, five-minute break. The simplest possible focus tool that consistently outperforms more complex apps because it asks nothing of you except "press start."
The point of the stack
The shape of solo founding isn't "do one big thing very well." It's "do 200 small things tolerably well in a week, sometimes two of them at the same time." A stack of free, browser-only tools — none of them requiring an account, all of them findable from one keyboard shortcut — is genuinely worth more than the next $30/month SaaS subscription, because it puts every small thing back in 30-second range.
If we're missing a tool from your stack, the feedback widget (bottom-right of every page) is the fastest way to tell us. Most additions go from request → live in under a week.