4 alternatives comparedLast verified 2026-03-19 Live pricing
Looking for an alternative to Trello?
Whether you need better pricing, different features, or a tool that fits your workflow,
we've compared 4 verified project management alternatives below.
Every price is checked daily against vendor pages — no stale data, no guesswork.
Prices in USD, verified from the United States. Regional pricing may vary.
Notion isn't really a project management tool. It's a build-your-own-everything tool that people keep bending into project management because the underlying engine — databases, linked views, templates — is that flexible. If your team lives in documents and wikis as much as task boards, nothing else comes close.
The free plan has no block limits for individuals — you can build an entire personal knowledge base and project system without paying a cent
Databases with linked views let you see the same tasks as a Kanban board, a timeline, a calendar, or a table without duplicating anything
Replaces 2-3 separate tools (wiki, docs, task tracker), which at $10/user/mo is actually cheaper than running Confluence + Trello separately
Monday.com is the PM tool your marketing team will actually use. It's the most visually polished option here, the color-coded boards make sense immediately, and non-technical people stop complaining about "another tool to learn." You pay for that polish — the 3-seat minimum on paid plans and per-seat pricing adds up fast.
The visual board design is the best in this category — color coding, drag-and-drop, and status columns that non-technical team members actually understand without training
200+ ready-made templates that solve real workflows, not just empty board layouts — the CRM and marketing campaign templates alone save hours of setup
Automations on Standard ($12/seat/mo) are easier to configure than ClickUp's, with a visual builder that doesn't require reading documentation
Asana is the boring-in-a-good-way pick. It won't wow you with a flashy interface or an endless feature list, but when your team hits 15+ people and projects start overlapping, Asana's structured approach to workflows, portfolios, and cross-project dependencies is where the other tools start sweating.
Portfolios give managers a single-screen view of every active project's health — Monday.com has dashboards but they require more manual configuration to get the same overview
The 30-day free trial is the most generous in the PM space, giving you enough time to actually load real projects and see if the workflow fits
Cross-project dependencies actually work — when a task in Project A blocks Project B, both project timelines update automatically
ClickUp is the overachiever of this group. Time tracking, docs, whiteboards, goals, Gantt charts — all included on plans that cost 30-50% less than the competition. The trade-off is real, though: the interface can feel overwhelming, and "having every feature" doesn't mean every feature is polished.
Time tracking built into every plan including free — Monday.com charges $19/seat/mo for this, and Asana doesn't have it at all
Unlimited users on the free plan is unmatched — Asana and Monday.com cap at 2, Trello caps at 10 collaborators
Unlimited plan at $7/user/mo includes features that competitors lock behind $19-25/user tiers (Gantt charts, goals, custom fields, automations)