RSS by subject
Best RSS Feeds by Topic
Start with a reading list someone already checked. Every topic explains why each source belongs, and a single OPML download takes the working set into your reader.
Try Feed Finder with your own topicBrowse the directory
Pick a subject, then pick your sources
Each list stays short on purpose, and every source has a written reason for being there. Open a topic to compare them, or take the complete working set straight into your RSS reader.
01TechnologyA useful technology reading list needs more than product launches. These feeds balance daily industry reporting with engineering, science, and longer-form analysis, so one OPML file can cover both the news cycle and the ideas behind it.6 feeds02FinanceA finance feed earns its place when it helps you make an actual decision. This list mixes practical personal-finance guidance with business and market reporting, so there is enough context to understand your own money and the forces moving it.6 feeds03GardeningGardening advice only becomes useful when it fits the plant, place, and season. These feeds range from vegetable beds and houseplants to garden design and small-space maintenance, with enough different climates and approaches to make the list useful beyond one backyard.6 feeds04CybersecuritySecurity news is only useful ahead of the incident. This list mixes fast vulnerability reporting with the practitioner blogs where attacks get explained properly, from active exploits to the policy behind them.7 feeds05AIAI news arrives in two speeds: what the labs announce, and what actually holds up when someone tests it. This list carries both, with primary-source announcements next to independent analysis and research summaries.8 feeds06ScienceGood science coverage explains what a finding means without flattening it into a headline. These feeds run from daily research news to long-form explanatory writing, across physics, biology, medicine, and the fields between.8 feeds07GamingGames coverage moves fast and repeats itself faster. This list picks outlets with different jobs: platform news, PC depth, criticism with actual voice, and the magazine journalism that still gets studio access.8 feeds08NewsA news reading list falls apart when every source chases the same headline. This mix pairs wire-speed coverage with public-media reporting and international desks, so the same story arrives with more than one perspective attached.8 feeds09SportsSports coverage splits into two jobs: the score right now, and the story behind it. These feeds handle both, from wire-speed headlines to fan-driven writing and long-form features.7 feeds10CryptoCrypto news ranges from market moves to protocol politics, and most outlets pick a side. This list deliberately spans them: the industry's paper of record, the research desks, and the culture coverage.7 feeds11MarketingMarketing content has a spam problem, which makes the good sources easier to spot: they teach instead of tease. This list runs from daily ideas and SEO research to the trade press for content teams.8 feeds12BusinessBusiness news is easy to drown in and hard to curate. This list keeps it to six jobs done well: the markets wire, the global economy explained, operator advice, and the features desks that cover companies as stories rather than tickers.6 feeds13EducationEducation coverage happens at two altitudes: policy and the classroom. This list holds both, pairing the K-12 and higher-ed papers of record with teacher-written craft and investigative reporting on how the system actually treats students.6 feeds14TravelTravel writing splits between inspiration and logistics, and a good feed list needs both. Here that means destination essays and strange places alongside points strategy, industry news, and honest first-person guides.6 feeds15Real EstateReal estate news serves two different readers: people watching the market and people working in it. This list covers both, from mortgage-rate reporting and brokerage data to investor education and one deliberately extreme local market.6 feeds
How the lists work
Selected by people, checked by the tool
Feed search helps us find candidates. It does not decide what gets listed. Each source needs a clear role, a working public feed, and recent publishing evidence. A feed that times out once keeps its last known result, and a source only drops off the download after failing repeatedly.