
So for those of you who are thinking of making the switch from Evernote to Notion, here are some thoughts from a former diehard Evernote fan. As I’m playing with the app, getting to know it, learning what it can do, I’m finding more and more what I love. I mentioned in my first “kicking the tires” post what some of my quick needs were as I started investigating, so in this post I thought I’d show how Notion is turning my head. Paid subscription, told lots of people about it, shared notes, yada yada… but since someone mentioned Notion in a tweet a while back, I’ve been testing it out and getting to know it. Notion is for those who spend most of their time at the desktop and want something that can replace many tools and services at once.I have been a long time, loyal Evernote fan. If you are just looking to take notes on the go, go for Evernote as it has a more robust system and the mobile apps are well built compared to Notion.

Rather than being native, they are essentially web wrappers and take too long to complete simple tasks. Notion's mobile apps are a huge disappointment. Both the iOS and Android apps are well built and feel native with platform-specific features.

Evernote's years of experience shine through here.

Paid plans start at $4 per member per month.Įvernote's free plan is limited in several ways. As for team sharing, you can invite up to 5 users to a team. Notion is completely free for personal use.

Invite as many members to a note/workspace, tag them, assign users and get feedback in real time. Sharing works seamlessly in both programs. Evernote allows you to download Notebooks when you don't have an Internet connection. Yes, it's 2021 and Notion doesn't offer an offline mode yet. The possibilities are endless here with Notion.Īnother major differentiating factor between Notion and Evernote is the offline mode. You can create a perfect travel plan, subscription tracker, finance manager and tracker, and more.
