Saved interests
Bookmarks are the sites someone cares about enough to keep. Seeing the saved list tells you about lasting interests, not just a single afternoon's clicks.
Browsing history shows what was visited; bookmarks show what mattered enough to save. When someone takes the deliberate step of bookmarking a page, they are signalling a recurring interest — a hobby, a community, a shop, a tool, or sometimes something you would want to know about. FreePhoneSpy lets you view the saved bookmarks on a device you own or manage, giving you a quieter but often more meaningful signal than raw history.
The bookmark monitor lists each saved page with its title and address, the folder it lives in, and when it was added. Because people tend to organise bookmarks into folders, you also get a sense of how someone mentally sorts their world — "School", "Games", "Shopping", and so on. New additions are flagged so you can see at a glance what has been saved recently without re-reading the whole list.
Children bookmark the things they return to. A folder full of coding tutorials is reassuring; a set of saved pages on a topic that worries you is an early, low-drama prompt to start a conversation. Because bookmarking is intentional, the list tends to be small and signal-rich — you are not wading through hundreds of incidental visits. Used together with the Internet History Tracker, you get both the long-term interests and the day-to-day activity.
A bookmark is a small vote of confidence. The list of what someone saves is often a more honest map of their interests than what they happened to click yesterday.
On a work device, the bookmark bar often reveals which tools and services staff actually rely on — useful for IT planning — and occasionally surfaces unsanctioned services that should be reviewed for data-handling reasons. As always, this applies to company-owned hardware with the user informed.
Resist reading too much into a single saved page; people bookmark things to read later, to share, or out of momentary curiosity. The value is in the overall picture and in how it changes. If something in the list concerns you, treat it as the opening line of a conversation, not a conclusion.
Setup takes about 5 minutes on a device you own or manage.
Common questions about the Monitor Browser Bookmarks feature.
It shows the saved bookmarks on the device — each page's title and address, the folder it sits in, and when it was added — synced to your private dashboard.
Yes. New bookmarks are flagged, and changes such as removals are reflected so you can track how the list evolves over time.
It captures bookmarks from the device's main supported browsers. The exact coverage depends on the platform; the install guide lists specifics.
Yes, and they complement each other. History shows what was visited; bookmarks show what was deliberately saved, which usually reflects more lasting interests.
That depends on your configuration and local law. For children and company devices we recommend transparency. Secretly monitoring another adult's personal device is often illegal.
Bookmark monitoring is supported on Android and on iOS devices you own or manage, with platform-specific setup steps.
If the device syncs bookmarks across the user's account, those saved pages can appear on the monitored device and therefore in your dashboard.
It is encrypted in transit and stored in your password-protected account. Only you can see it. Read our Privacy Policy for more.
Yes — any site you see can be added to your block list and enforced through the Site Blocker.
No. It is a lightweight background process with no noticeable impact on speed or battery.
The list syncs regularly so your dashboard stays current, typically within minutes of a change on the device.
It is lawful for your own minor children and for company-owned devices with the user informed. Monitoring another adult's private device without consent is generally unlawful — check your local rules.