I created this video to show how to bookmark a web page in Firefox, so you can save important links and organize them for easy access later.
Firefox has one of the most flexible bookmark systems — and once you get familiar with it, it’s perfect for creators, researchers, and productivity nerds alike.
Here’s how I walk through the process in the video:
Step 1: Visit the page you want to save
Simple enough. When you’re on any website or article you want to revisit, it’s just a click away.
Step 2: Bookmark it
Click the star icon in the address bar. That instantly saves the page to your bookmarks.
Click the star again and you’ll be able to edit the bookmark — choose a name, assign it to a folder, and add tags if needed.
Step 3: Organize your bookmarks
This is where Firefox shines. You can use the Library panel to:
- Create folders (e.g. “SEO Resources,” “Blog Inspiration,” “Clients”)
- Edit or delete bookmarks
- Add descriptions and tags
- Sort and filter everything for fast retrieval
Step 4: Access bookmarks
You can access saved pages via the bookmarks menu, the bookmarks toolbar (if enabled), or by opening the side panel (Ctrl + B or Command + B on Mac).
I show how to toggle the bookmarks toolbar on and off — which is useful if you like to keep things minimal or prefer having one-click access to your top links.
Bonus tip: You can sync Firefox bookmarks across devices with a Mozilla account. This is great if you switch between desktop and mobile during your day.
I use bookmarks to keep track of tools I regularly reference, swipe files, and articles I want to read later — way more effective than having 30 tabs open all the time.
Do you currently organize your bookmarks in folders, or just save everything in a long, messy list?