Give your agents muscle memory for automating the web
browse.sh — an open catalog of browser automation skills for any website. Find reusable SKILL.md recipes that teach AI agents to complete tasks online, and install them with the browse CLI.
Over the last year, we've watched AI agents get remarkably good at using browsers. But we've also noticed something strange: every time an agent visits a website, it starts from zero.
It re-explores the interface, re-discovers buttons, re-learns navigation paths, and re-finds the same workflows it already completed yesterday.
Humans don't work that way.
Once you learn how to search Zillow listings, review a GitHub PR, or book a campsite on Recreation.gov, you don't relearn the entire website every time you come back.
Agents shouldn't have to either.
That's why we built Browse.sh, an open catalog of browser skills that agents can install and reuse across the web. Instead of exploring a website from scratch, agents load the relevant skill and execute against a known workflow.
The result is faster execution, lower token costs, more reliable outcomes, and better multi-site workflows. Today, the catalog includes 250+ skills across real websites and applications, including partner skills like submitting reimbursements on Ramp, creating projects on Lovable, extracting document data on Reducto, and many more.
And when a skill doesn't exist yet, Browse.sh can create one.
Behind the scenes, Browse.sh is powered by Autobrowse, our system that runs tasks in real browsers, analyzes traces, DOM changes, network activity, screenshots, and failures, then continuously improves the workflow until it converges on a durable strategy.
Over time, one successful browser run becomes a reusable skill that anyone can install.
Browse.sh is open source, free to use, and available today.
We'd love your feedback:
- Which websites do your agents struggle with most today? - What skills should we add next? - What workflows are you automating with AI agents?
We'll be around all day answering questions. Thanks for checking us out 🤞
About Browse.sh on Product Hunt
“Give your agents muscle memory for automating the web”
Browse.sh launched on Product Hunt on June 8th, 2026 and earned 289 upvotes and 28 comments, earning #2 Product of the Day. browse.sh — an open catalog of browser automation skills for any website. Find reusable SKILL.md recipes that teach AI agents to complete tasks online, and install them with the browse CLI.
On the analytics side, Browse.sh competes within API, Developer Tools and Artificial Intelligence — topics that collectively have 1.1M followers on Product Hunt. The dashboard above tracks how Browse.sh performed against the three products that launched closest to it on the same day.
Who hunted Browse.sh?
Browse.sh was hunted by fmerian. A “hunter” on Product Hunt is the community member who submits a product to the platform — uploading the images, the link, and tagging the makers behind it. Hunters typically write the first comment explaining why a product is worth attention, and their followers are notified the moment they post. Around 79% of featured launches on Product Hunt are self-hunted by their makers, but a well-known hunter still acts as a signal of quality to the rest of the community. See the full all-time top hunters leaderboard to discover who is shaping the Product Hunt ecosystem.
Hey Product Hunt 👋
I'm Shrey,
Over the last year, we've watched AI agents get remarkably good at using browsers. But we've also noticed something strange: every time an agent visits a website, it starts from zero.
It re-explores the interface, re-discovers buttons, re-learns navigation paths, and re-finds the same workflows it already completed yesterday.
Humans don't work that way.
Once you learn how to search Zillow listings, review a GitHub PR, or book a campsite on Recreation.gov, you don't relearn the entire website every time you come back.
Agents shouldn't have to either.
That's why we built Browse.sh, an open catalog of browser skills that agents can install and reuse across the web. Instead of exploring a website from scratch, agents load the relevant skill and execute against a known workflow.
The result is faster execution, lower token costs, more reliable outcomes, and better multi-site workflows. Today, the catalog includes 250+ skills across real websites and applications, including partner skills like submitting reimbursements on Ramp, creating projects on Lovable, extracting document data on Reducto, and many more.
And when a skill doesn't exist yet, Browse.sh can create one.
Behind the scenes, Browse.sh is powered by Autobrowse, our system that runs tasks in real browsers, analyzes traces, DOM changes, network activity, screenshots, and failures, then continuously improves the workflow until it converges on a durable strategy.
Over time, one successful browser run becomes a reusable skill that anyone can install.
Browse.sh is open source, free to use, and available today.
We'd love your feedback:
- Which websites do your agents struggle with most today?
- What skills should we add next?
- What workflows are you automating with AI agents?
We'll be around all day answering questions. Thanks for checking us out 🤞