BugFlare is a Chrome extension that captures your current tab, lets you annotate it (arrows, boxes, text, blur), and sends it straight to Trello with one click — no switching tabs, no manual uploads, no $40+/month enterprise tool required.
Built for freelance QA testers and small (1-5 person) dev and product teams who need to report visual bugs clearly but don't need — or can't justify paying for — a full enterprise feedback platform.
Capture any visible tab in one click — no extra app to open.
Mark up the screenshot directly: arrows, boxes, text notes, and blur for sensitive info.
The card shows up with your screenshot, note, and the page URL attached — ready for a dev to act on.
No onboarding call, no admin console. Sign in, connect Trello, pick a board — done.
Captures whatever's on screen right now — no need to line up a separate screenshot tool.
Circle it, box it, add a note explaining what's wrong. Blur anything sensitive before it leaves your browser.
One click. The card lands in your chosen list with the image, your note, and the source page URL already attached.
One plan, one price. No seats to configure, no project limits to think about.
Ybug's solid if you just need screenshots in a queue. Where it runs out of road for a solo QA tester or a 2-person team is the handoff — no automatic sync to your tracker, so you're still manually copying context over. BugFlare sends a one-click capture straight into a Trello card — arrow, box, note, and the page URL all attached automatically — not another inbox to manage. Jira and Notion are coming next; Trello's live today.
Marker.io and BugHerd are built to onboard a whole team — seats, project limits, a sales conversation before you even get value. If you're one person who needs to send one clean bug report in the next two minutes, that setup is overhead you don't need. BugFlare is $12/mo, one person, one price — no seats to configure, no project limits to think about, and 40 free captures a month to try it with no card on file.
Yes — and that's the point. Manually, screenshotting, opening your tracker, describing the bug, and maybe grabbing a screen recording too adds up fast across a week of bug reports. BugFlare gets you from "I see a bug" to "it's a ticket, attached, described, ready for a dev" in one click, instead of several manual steps every time.
No. Screenshots are sent directly to Trello as a card attachment and are not saved on BugFlare's servers. See the privacy policy for the full detail on what is and isn't collected.
Trello is fully supported today, on both the free and paid plan — there's no feature gating between tiers. Jira and Notion export are in active development and will ship as fast-follow updates.