Best Project Management Software

Hands-on rankings of the best project management tools for 2026, tested across task management, collaboration, reporting, integrations, and pricing value.
Updated May 15, 2026
Reviewed by ClickUp Editorial Team Staff Writers at ClickUp

Top Picks at a Glance

#ToolBest ForPricingRating
1 ClickUp Teams that want everything in one platform Free (unlimited users), then $7/user/month 9.2/10
2 Asana Marketing and operations teams Free (10 users), then $10.99/user/month 8.5/10
3 Monday.com Visual workflow automation for non technical teams Free (2 seats), then $9/seat/month (min 3 seats) 8.3/10

The right project management tool depends on your team size, methodology, budget, and integration needs. We tested 10 of the most widely used platforms with real project workflows to evaluate task management depth, collaboration features, reporting, integrations, and pricing transparency.

Every tool below was evaluated by running a simulated 10 person team through a four week project. We tested scheduling, dependency management, resource allocation, real time collaboration, and reporting at each pricing tier. Scores reflect hands-on performance, not marketing claims.

How We Evaluated

We evaluated each tool across six weighted criteria: core task management depth (25%), collaboration features (20%), reporting and dashboards (15%), integration ecosystem (15%), ease of onboarding for non technical users (15%), and pricing value relative to feature access (10%). Each tool was tested with a 10 person cross functional team running a four week product launch simulation. Free tiers were tested separately from paid plans. Ratings reflect the paid tier most teams would actually use.

1

ClickUp

9.2/10 Free (unlimited users), then $7/user/month
Best for: Teams that want everything in one platform
All in one work management platform that combines tasks, docs, goals, sprints, time tracking, and whiteboards. One of the fastest growing PM tools, built out of frustration with the fragmented workflows other platforms forced teams into.

ClickUp earns the top spot because no other tool matches its feature density at this price point.

Sprint planning, native docs, time tracking, goal management, and whiteboards all live in a single platform without requiring add ons or third party integrations.

For teams tired of stitching together Asana plus Harvest plus Confluence plus separate OKR software, ClickUp consolidates the entire stack.

The honest trade off is onboarding time. ClickUp’s depth means new users need a week or two to find their workflow, and the mobile experience still trails the desktop version.

Teams that only need simple Kanban boards will find it overpowered. But for organizations managing multiple projects with mixed methodologies, the consolidation payoff is real and measurable in both cost and context switching reduction.

Strengths
  • Unlimited users and tasks on the free plan with no artificial feature caps
  • Native time tracking, docs, goals, sprints, and whiteboards eliminate the need for separate tools
  • Lowest per user cost for the feature depth offered at $7 per user per month
Limitations
  • Steep onboarding curve due to feature density; most teams need 1 to 2 weeks to find their workflow
  • Mobile app still trails the desktop experience for complex project views
View all news
ClickUp shipped its biggest platform overhaul in December 2025 and has maintained rapid release velocity into 2026.
Dec 2025 ClickUp 4.0 launched with rebuilt navigation, Teams Hub, AI Planner, and approximately 40% faster load times
Dec 2025 Super Agents released: AI agents that collaborate inside ClickUp like real teammates
Mar 2026 @Codegen AI coding teammate added, enabling code generation and PR creation directly from tasks
Apr 2026 Gmail integration with Brain for AI powered email intelligence and workspace search
Apr 2026 AI Dashboard templates launched with prebuilt Personal Center and Team Center views
Source: ClickUp changelog and release notes
2

Asana

8.5/10 Free (10 users), then $10.99/user/month
Best for: Marketing and operations teams
Clean work management platform built for cross functional teams. Asana launched in 2008 out of Facebook's internal task tracker and has become the default choice for marketing, operations, and product teams that value clarity over complexity.

Asana is the best PM tool for teams that value clean design and fast onboarding over raw feature count. Marketing teams, operations teams, and cross functional product groups consistently rate it highest for day to day usability. The Rules automation engine handles the repetitive workflow patterns (content approvals, request routing, status updates) that eat hours every week.

The gap is in what Asana intentionally leaves out. No time tracking means agencies and consultancies need a separate tool for billable hours. No native docs means knowledge management lives elsewhere. At $10.99 per user per month, you pay more per feature than ClickUp. That premium buys you the cleanest interface in the category, which is worth it if your team’s biggest friction is adoption, not functionality.

Strengths
  • Fastest onboarding of any full featured PM tool; most teams are productive within one day
  • Highest rated mobile app in the category for managing work on the go
  • Rules automation engine handles content approvals, intake requests, and status routing without code
Limitations
  • No native time tracking, built in docs, or goal management; teams need third party tools for those capabilities
  • Higher per feature cost than ClickUp at $10.99 per user per month with fewer bundled features
Asana has focused on AI teammates and native time tracking as its two biggest additions since late 2025.
Nov 2025 AI Teammates launched in beta, allowing teams to assign work directly to AI agents
Nov 2025 Time and Budget add on released for Starter plans with native time tracking and budget management
Jan 2026 Asana app for Claude launched, turning AI conversations into projects and tasks
Mar 2026 Proactive rule suggestions added with AI powered automation recommendations
Mar 2026 New collaborator rule trigger enables automation when team members are added to tasks
Source: Asana release notes and help center
3

Monday.com

8.3/10 Free (2 seats), then $9/seat/month (min 3 seats)
Best for: Visual workflow automation for non technical teams
Visual work operating system with customizable boards, automations, and a no code interface that makes process design accessible to everyone. Monday expanded from project management into CRM, dev, and HR products under the Monday Work OS umbrella.

Monday.com wins on visual workflow design and no code automation. Teams that need to build custom processes without developer support will find Monday’s automation builder the most capable in this category. The Work OS expansion into CRM and dev tools means organizations can standardize on one vendor across departments, which simplifies procurement and admin.

The pricing structure requires close reading. The $9 per seat starting price gets you boards and basic views, but time tracking, integrations, and calendar view are locked behind the $19 per seat Pro tier. A 10 person team on Pro pays $190 per month, which puts Monday in premium territory. The 3 seat minimum also means solo users and two person teams cannot buy a paid plan at all.

Strengths
  • Best automation builder tested; teams create multi step workflows with conditional logic and no code
  • Work OS expansion into CRM, dev, and service means organizations can standardize on one vendor across departments
  • Most visually intuitive board interface for non technical users designing custom workflows
Limitations
  • 3 seat minimum on all paid plans; solo users and two person teams cannot purchase a paid plan
  • Time tracking, integrations, and calendar view locked behind the $19 per seat Pro tier, making the effective cost much higher than the $9 starting price
Monday.com expanded its AI capabilities significantly in early 2026 with Sidekick, Vibe, and external agent support.
Jan 2026 Monday Sidekick enhanced to create work docs directly from AI generated content
Jan 2026 Board roles for Enterprise added with granular editor, contributor, and viewer permissions
Mar 2026 Monday Vibe AI app builder launched for creating custom apps from plain language prompts
Mar 2026 External AI agent support introduced, allowing third party agents to operate inside the platform
Apr 2026 List View unmapped columns added for complete visibility across connected boards
Source: monday.com product updates page
4

Jira

7.8/10 Free (10 users), then $7.91/user/month
Best for: Software teams running Agile
Atlassian's issue tracking and sprint management platform, purpose built for software development teams running Scrum or Kanban. The industry default for engineering organizations with over 10 million active users and deep developer toolchain integrations.

Jira is the only tool on this list purpose built for software development workflows. If your team runs Scrum sprints or Kanban boards in an engineering context, Jira’s depth in backlog management, sprint velocity tracking, and developer tool integrations is unmatched. The Atlassian ecosystem (Confluence for docs, Bitbucket for code, Statuspage for incidents) creates a cohesive stack that engineering orgs rely on.

For everyone else, Jira is the wrong tool. Marketing teams, operations teams, and non technical project managers consistently report frustration with the interface, terminology, and configuration complexity. If your team includes people who have never run a sprint, Jira will create more friction than it solves. The free tier for 10 users is excellent, but scaling past that requires admin investment.

Strengths
  • Deepest native Agile tooling: sprint planning, backlog grooming, burndown charts, and velocity tracking are all mature and battle tested
  • Tightest developer ecosystem integration with GitHub, Bitbucket, CI/CD pipelines, Confluence, and Statuspage
  • Free tier for up to 10 users includes full sprint and Kanban functionality with no feature gating
Limitations
  • Interface and terminology assume Agile fluency; non engineering teams consistently report frustration with configuration complexity
  • Deployments over 25 users typically require a dedicated Jira admin to manage workflows, permissions, and custom fields
Atlassian moved Jira to a seasonal release model in 2026, with the Spring Release focused on agentic AI and workflow improvements.
Sep 2025 Projects renamed to Spaces across all Jira Cloud products for consistency with non technical teams
Dec 2025 Jira 11.3 LTS released with cloud connectors and OAuth 2.0 application links
Feb 2026 Seasonal release model announced with three predictable feature drops per year
Apr 2026 Rovo AI unified search launched with natural language queries across Jira and Confluence
May 2026 Jira 2026 Spring Release rolling out with AI agent collaboration and redesigned workflow editor
Source: Atlassian Cloud changelog and Community
5

Wrike

7.6/10 Free (limited), then $9.80/user/month
Best for: Enterprise cross department projects
Enterprise grade project management with advanced resource planning, real time analytics, and portfolio views built for organizations managing dozens of simultaneous projects across multiple departments. Owned by Citrix, now Wrike Inc.

Wrike exists for organizations managing 10 or more concurrent projects across multiple departments. The portfolio views, resource workload balancing, and cross project reporting are built for PMOs and program managers who need visibility across the entire organization, not just a single team’s board. Enterprise compliance certifications make it one of the few PM tools that can clear procurement in regulated industries.

The cost of that enterprise capability is onboarding time. Wrike was the slowest tool to reach first value in our testing, and the interface reflects design decisions made years before the current generation of PM tools. Teams under 25 people or those managing fewer than 5 concurrent projects will find the overhead unjustified. For large organizations, the depth eventually pays off.

Strengths
  • Best workload balancing tested; managers see resource allocation across all projects in real time and rebalance before bottlenecks form
  • Most powerful reporting engine in the category with customizable dashboards pulling data across projects, teams, and time periods
  • SOC 2 Type II and ISO 27001 certifications make it one of the few PM tools that clears procurement in regulated industries
Limitations
  • Slowest time to first value of any tool tested; most teams need 2 to 3 weeks of configuration before reaching full productivity
  • Interface feels visually dated compared to newer competitors like ClickUp, Asana, and Monday
Wrike has focused on AI powered work intelligence and enterprise compliance in its recent updates.
Oct 2025 Work Intelligence 2.0 released with AI powered project risk prediction and resource recommendations
Jan 2026 Dynamic Gantt charts updated with improved dependency visualization and critical path highlighting
Mar 2026 Built in proofing tools enhanced with version control and multi stage approval workflows
Source: Wrike product updates
6

Smartsheet

7.4/10 Free trial, then $9/member/month
Best for: Teams comfortable with spreadsheets
Spreadsheet style project management with Gantt charts, automations, dashboards, and formulas familiar to Excel users. The natural upgrade path for teams managing projects in spreadsheets who want scheduling and collaboration without abandoning the grid interface.

Smartsheet makes the list because it is the only tool that meets spreadsheet dependent teams where they already are. Construction firms, engineering teams, and PMOs that have lived in Excel for years can move to Smartsheet without retraining anyone. The Gantt chart implementation handles complex dependency chains better than any other tool tested, which matters for industries where schedule accuracy is contractual.

The trade off is modernity. Smartsheet’s interface feels a generation behind ClickUp, Asana, and Monday. Real time collaboration is functional but not fluid. And the lack of a free plan means teams must commit to paid seats after a 30 day trial with no ongoing free tier to fall back to. If your team does not already think in rows and columns, a more visual tool will serve you better.

Strengths
  • Zero retraining for Excel and Google Sheets users; the grid interface translates directly to project management
  • Strongest Gantt chart implementation tested for complex dependency chains in construction, engineering, and milestone driven industries
Limitations
  • No free plan; teams must commit to paid seats after the 30 day trial with no ongoing free tier to fall back to
  • Interface feels a generation behind newer tools; real time collaboration is functional but not fluid
Smartsheet has expanded its automation and portfolio management capabilities through late 2025 and into 2026.
Nov 2025 Portfolio dashboards updated with cross project KPI tracking and real time resource views
Jan 2026 Advanced formula engine expanded with new date, text, and conditional functions
Mar 2026 AI powered automation suggestions added for streamlining repetitive workflow steps
Source: Smartsheet product updates
7

Teamwork

7.2/10 Free (5 users), then $10.99/user/month
Best for: Agencies and client services teams
Client work management built for agencies and professional services. Teamwork combines project management with time tracking, resource scheduling, and invoicing in a single platform designed around billable work and client deliverables.

Teamwork is the best PM tool for agencies and professional services firms that bill clients for time. The direct pipeline from time tracking to profitability reporting to invoicing eliminates the manual reconciliation that agencies using Asana plus Harvest or Monday plus Toggl deal with every billing cycle. The client portal is a genuine differentiator: clients see progress without needing full seats.

The limitation is narrow focus. Teamwork was built for client work and it shows. Internal teams, product organizations, and software companies will find the platform less flexible than general purpose tools. If less than half your projects involve external clients, a broader tool will serve your full workflow better. But for agencies where every hour is billable, the integrated financial pipeline is worth the specificity.

Strengths
  • Built in time tracking feeds directly into profitability reporting and invoicing, eliminating manual reconciliation for agencies
  • Client portal gives external stakeholders project visibility without requiring paid licenses
Limitations
  • Purpose built for client work; internal teams and product organizations find it less flexible than general purpose tools
  • Integration ecosystem is smaller than top tier competitors like ClickUp, Asana, and Monday
Teamwork has strengthened its agency focused feature set with AI and improved financial reporting.
Nov 2025 AI project assistant launched for automated task creation and status summarization
Jan 2026 Profitability reporting redesigned with real time margin tracking across all active client projects
Mar 2026 Client portal upgraded with custom branding, file sharing, and approval workflows
Source: Teamwork product updates
8

Notion

7.0/10 Free, then $10/member/month
Best for: Documentation heavy teams and startups
Flexible workspace combining docs, databases, and lightweight project management in a single tool. Notion started as a note taking app and evolved into a knowledge management platform used by over 30 million users, with project management as a secondary capability.

Notion makes the list because it is the best tool for teams where documentation and knowledge management are as important as task tracking. Engineering teams maintaining wikis, product teams writing specs, and startups building company handbooks will find Notion’s integrated docs and database system more natural than any PM tool with docs bolted on as an afterthought.

The honest assessment is that Notion is not a project management tool. It is a workspace that can be configured to manage projects. That distinction matters. Teams needing Gantt charts, sprint velocity, time tracking, or structured reporting will spend weeks building what ClickUp or Jira provide out of the box. Notion rewards teams willing to invest in setup and comfortable designing their own systems.

Strengths
  • Best integrated docs and database system for teams where documentation is as important as task tracking
  • Extreme flexibility to build custom workflows using linked databases, relations, and rollups
Limitations
  • Not a purpose built PM tool; no native Gantt charts, sprint velocity, time tracking, or structured reporting out of the box
  • Significant upfront setup investment; teams spend weeks building what ClickUp or Jira provide immediately
Notion has invested heavily in AI and project management capabilities, pushing beyond its documentation roots.
Oct 2025 Notion AI upgraded with custom AI models trained on workspace content for more accurate answers
Dec 2025 Notion Projects enhanced with native sprint planning, assignee workloads, and timeline views
Feb 2026 Notion Sites launched for publishing workspace content as public facing websites
Apr 2026 External database connections added for syncing data from Postgres, MySQL, and third party APIs
Source: Notion product updates and changelog
9

Basecamp

6.9/10 $15/user/month or $349/month flat (unlimited users)
Best for: Small teams wanting simplicity and flat rate pricing
The deliberately simple project management tool: to do lists, message boards, file storage, and group chat. No Gantt charts, no resource management, no feature bloat. Basecamp pioneered the category in 2004 and has stayed opinionated about keeping things minimal.

Basecamp makes the list because simplicity is a legitimate product strategy, not a limitation. Teams that have tried Asana, Monday, or Jira and found them overcomplicated for their actual workflows will find Basecamp refreshingly focused. The zero learning curve means new hires are productive on day one, and the flat rate pricing eliminates the per seat math that makes every new team member a budget conversation.

The ceiling is real, though. There is no way to track dependencies, manage resources, generate reports, or customize fields. Teams managing more than basic to do lists and message threads will outgrow Basecamp within a year. It works best for small teams (under 15) running straightforward projects where communication matters more than process rigor.

Strengths
  • Fastest onboarding of any tool tested; most teams are fully functional within 10 minutes with zero training
  • Flat rate pricing at $349 per month for unlimited users makes it the cheapest per seat option for teams over 25 people
  • Built in messaging replaces Slack for project communication, saving cost and reducing context switching
Limitations
  • No dependency tracking, workload management, custom fields, or reporting beyond basic to do completion
  • Teams running Scrum, Waterfall, or any formal methodology will hit the feature ceiling quickly
Basecamp has maintained its simplicity focused approach with incremental improvements to communication and pricing.
Oct 2025 Per user pricing option added at $15 per user per month alongside the $349 flat rate plan
Jan 2026 Card tables upgraded with sorting, filtering, and column customization for lightweight task tracking
Mar 2026 Mission Control and lineup views improved for higher level project portfolio visibility
Source: Basecamp changelog
10

Trello

6.8/10 Free, then $5/user/month
Best for: Simple Kanban for small teams
Simple Kanban boards for small teams and personal task management. Trello was one of the first drag and drop task tools when it launched in 2011, acquired by Atlassian in 2017. Still the fastest tool to set up and start using for basic task tracking.

Trello makes the list because Kanban done well still solves real problems. Personal task management, small team to do tracking, and simple workflow boards do not require sprint planning, resource management, or portfolio dashboards. Trello handles those use cases with zero friction and the lowest price in the category at $5 per user per month on the paid tier.

The limitation is growth. Trello handles one board with a few columns perfectly, but teams adding complexity (dependencies, time tracking, reporting, multiple projects) quickly hit walls. Power Ups extend capabilities but fragment the experience and increase cost. Most teams that start on Trello eventually migrate to a more capable tool as their projects scale. For simple, stable workflows that are unlikely to grow in complexity, Trello remains the right fit.

Strengths
  • Fastest setup of any tool; the Kanban interface requires zero training and works immediately
  • Lowest paid tier price in the category at $5 per user per month
Limitations
  • No Gantt charts, native time tracking, meaningful reporting, or resource management; does one thing well and very little else
  • Teams adding complexity (dependencies, multiple projects, reporting) typically outgrow Trello within a year
Trello has layered AI and organizational tools on top of its Kanban foundation without adding complexity.
Oct 2025 Trello Inbox launched for capturing tasks from Slack messages, Gmail forwards, and voice notes
Dec 2025 Planner feature added with Google Calendar sync for drag and drop time blocking
Feb 2026 Atlassian Intelligence integrated for AI powered card descriptions, summaries, and action items
Apr 2026 Dashboard view enhanced with workload visualization and board aggregation across Workspaces
Source: Trello and Atlassian product updates

The ClickUp Learn Hub is maintained by ClickUp. Some tools reviewed may compete with ClickUp products. We strive for accuracy and fairness in all evaluations. Our methodology and scoring criteria are disclosed on each page.

How to Choose the Right Project Management Tool

Most teams start their search by comparing feature lists, but the tools that rank highest on paper often fail in practice. The real question is whether the tool matches how your team actually works.

Start with methodology fit. If your team runs Scrum sprints, you need native sprint planning and backlog management. If you run Waterfall or hybrid approaches, you need Gantt charts with dependency tracking. A tool that forces you into a workflow you do not use becomes shelfware within a month.

Next, evaluate team size economics. Per user pricing adds up fast. A 25 person team paying $20 per user per month spends $6,000 per year. Some tools offer flat rate pricing that becomes significantly cheaper at scale, while others charge premium rates for features your team may never touch.

Integration depth matters more than integration count. Every tool on this list connects to Slack and Google Drive. What separates them is whether those integrations are shallow (notifications only) or deep (two way sync with custom field mapping). Ask specifically about the three tools your team uses most before committing.

Finally, test with a real project, not a demo workspace. Every tool feels intuitive during a guided tour. Run your actual weekly planning meeting in the new tool. Assign real tasks with real deadlines. If your team cannot complete a full sprint cycle without calling support, the tool is not ready for your workflow.

Common Questions About Best Project Management Software

What is the best free project management tool?

ClickUp offers the most generous free tier with unlimited tasks, unlimited members, and most core features including time tracking, docs, and goals. Asana’s free plan is solid but caps at 10 users. Jira offers a strong free tier for up to 10 users. Monday.com’s free plan is limited to 2 seats.

How much does project management software cost?

Most tools offer a free tier for small teams and charge $7 to $25 per user per month for paid plans. Enterprise tiers typically run $20 to $30 per user per month. Annual billing saves 15 to 20% across most platforms. For a 10 person team, expect $70 to $250 per month on a mid tier plan.

Is it worth switching project management tools?

If your current tool costs more than $15 per user per month and your team uses less than 40% of its features, switching can save budget and reduce complexity. Most tools offer import features for straightforward migration. Budget 2 to 4 weeks for a full team transition including training.

What features should I prioritize in project management software?

Start with task management (assignments, due dates, dependencies), then evaluate collaboration (comments, file sharing, real time editing), reporting (dashboards, status tracking), and integrations with your existing stack. Time tracking, resource management, and portfolio views matter most for teams of 15 or more.

Can I use multiple project management tools together?

Yes, but it creates data fragmentation and context switching. The most common combination is Jira for engineering alongside Asana or Monday for cross functional work. Consolidating into one platform reduces integration overhead and keeps all project data in a single source of truth. Evaluate whether one tool covers both needs before committing to a multi tool stack.