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7 best free project management software [2025]

Find the best free project management tools in 2025. Check what each plan includes, limits, and who it suits before you commit.

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Written by
Simo Elalj
Updated on
Nov 20, 2025

Choosing free project management software can be difficult since most "free" plans hide limits on seats, boards, or storage. We tested the free-forever tiers and narrowed the options to seven tools for 2025 that support core views (list, board, calendar, and Gantt, where available), collaboration, and key integrations. This guide explains who each app is for, what you actually get for free, and the common pitfalls to watch out for before you decide.

The best free project management software at a glance

ToolBest forFree plan limitsKey views
NotionComplete productivity suiteUnlimited blocks (individual); 5 MB/fileList, board, calendar, timeline
TrelloVisual project management10 boards/workspace; 10 collaborators; 10 MB/fileBoard
AsanaTeam collaboration10 teammatesList, board, calendar
ClickUpAll-in-one project managementUnlimited tasks and members; 60 MB total storageList, board, calendar, Gantt
JiraSoftware development teams10 users; 2 GB storageBoard (Scrum/Kanban), backlog
Zoho ProjectsGantt and time tracking on a budgetLimited users/projectsList, board, calendar, Gantt
NiftySimple and streamlined team PMUnlimited members; 2 projects; 100 MB storageList, board, calendar

How we chose

We tested each app’s free-forever plan and verified limits on official pricing/help pages. We prioritized core views (list, board, calendar, plus Gantt/timeline where available), collaboration, and practical caps (users/projects/storage). If a feature is paid-only or capped, we call it out so you don’t hit a wall later.

Free plan limits at a glance

ToolUsersProjectsStorageGuests
Notion1 (free personal); paid for teamsUnlimited5 MB/fileUp to 10
TrelloUp to 10 collaborators10 boards/workspace10 MB/fileIncluded in collaborator cap
AsanaUp to 10UnlimitedUnlimited (no file-size cap listed)Not on free
ClickUpUnlimitedUnlimited60 MB totalIncluded
JiraUp to 10Unlimited2 GBNot on free
Zoho ProjectsLimited (upgrade for more)LimitedLimitedLimited
NiftyUnlimited2 active100 MBIncluded

1. Notion

πŸ₯‡ Best for: Complete productivity suite
✨ Highlight: All-in-one workspace for notes, tasks, wikis, and databases

βœ… Pros:

  • Combines docs, tasks, and databases in one place
  • Highly customizable templates
  • Real-time collaboration and comments
  • Embeds and integrations with popular tools

❌ Cons:

  • 5MB/file upload cap on free
  • Advanced admin/permissions and analytics require paid tiers

Notion is an all-in-one workspace that blends documents, databases, and task boards so your project plans, specs, and to-dos live together. On the free tier, individuals get unlimited blocks and flexible building blocks like relations, rollups, and templates. Teams can collaborate in real time with comments and mentions, but the 5MB file cap and advanced admin controls on paid tiers are worth noting for growth.


2. Trello

πŸ₯‡ Best for: Visual project management
✨ Highlight: Kanban boards for intuitive task organization and collaboration

βœ… Pros:

  • User-friendly, visual interface
  • Unlimited cards and Power-Ups per board
  • Built-in automation with Butler
  • Solid integrations

❌ Cons:

  • Limited project views (no native Gantt)
  • Free plan limited to 10 boards per Workspace and up to 10 collaborators
  • 10MB/file upload on free

Trello’s card-and-list model is the fastest way to spin up a lightweight project workflow. Drag cards across columns, add checklists, labels, and due dates, and automate recurring steps with Butler. The free tier supports unlimited cards and Power-Ups per board, but you’re capped at 10 boards per Workspace and up to 10 collaborators. It’s ideal for simple pipelines, content calendars, or personal planning.


3. Asana

πŸ₯‡ Best for: Team collaboration
✨ Highlight: Streamlined workflows, task management, and project timelines

βœ… Pros:

  • List, board, and calendar views
  • Great integrations and app ecosystem
  • Clear owner/deadline model

❌ Cons:

  • Free plan limited to 10 teammates
  • Timeline/Gantt and advanced reporting require paid

Asana brings structure to teamwork with clear owners, due dates, and sections that keep priorities visible. You get list, board, and calendar views plus robust integrations, so tasks flow through your stack. The free plan fits small teams (up to 10), but Timeline (Gantt), advanced reporting, and automation rules live on paid tiers, making upgrades likely as coordination complexity increases.


4. ClickUp

πŸ₯‡ Best for: All-in-one project management
✨ Highlight: Wide range of features for task management, collaboration, and docs

βœ… Pros:

  • Unlimited tasks and members on free
  • Multiple views (list, board, calendar, Gantt)
  • Docs, whiteboards, basic forms

❌ Cons:

  • 60MB total storage on free
  • Feature depth can overwhelm new users

ClickUp aims to be your single place for work, combining tasks, docs, whiteboards, goals, and a wide set of views. The free tier is generous with unlimited tasks and members, but storage is just 60MB and many advanced options have caps. For startups and scrappy teams, it’s a cost-free way to centralize planning before upgrading as needs and complexity grow.


5. Jira

πŸ₯‡ Best for: Software development teams
✨ Highlight: Agile project management with issue tracking and customizable workflows

βœ… Pros:

  • Excellent Scrum/Kanban support with backlogs and sprints
  • Issue tracking and dev-centric workflows
  • Rich marketplace of integrations

❌ Cons:

  • Free plan capped at 10 users with 2GB storage
  • Customization depth can add complexity

Jira is built for software teams that live in backlogs, sprints, and releases. It pairs customizable Scrum and Kanban boards with issue types, workflows, and deep integrations across Atlassian and developer tools. The free plan fits small squads (up to 10 users, 2GB storage). Expect a learning curve, but once configured, Jira excels at traceability from epic to commit.


6. Zoho Projects

πŸ₯‡ Best for: Gantt and time tracking on a budget
✨ Highlight: Solid free tier with Gantt and collaboration tools

βœ… Pros:

  • Task management, subtasks, and dependencies
  • Gantt charts for planning
  • Built-in time tracking and forums/chat

❌ Cons:

  • Free plan limits users/projects (upgrade for more)
  • Interface can feel dense for beginners

Zoho Projects packs task management, milestones, and Gantt into a budget-friendly package. Even on the free tier you can plan with dependencies and keep conversations in context via comments, forums, and basic time tracking. The UI can feel busy at first, but it scales nicely, especially if you later plug into the wider Zoho ecosystem for CRM, help desk, and reporting.


7. Nifty

πŸ₯‡ Best for: Simple and streamlined team project management
✨ Highlight: Streamlines work and team collaboration without the usual software clutter

βœ… Pros:

  • Flexible task views (list, board, calendar)
  • Built-in tools for team communication and collaboration
  • Ready-to-use project templates to save time

❌ Cons:

  • Third-party integrations may need occasional updates
  • Limited template variety
  • Some advanced features have restrictions

Nifty streamlines project work by combining tasks, milestones/roadmaps, docs, and team chat in a clean interface. Multiple views cover day-to-day planning, and templates help new teams move quickly. Integrations and automations are improving, though advanced features can be limited on the free plan. On the free tier, you get unlimited members, 2 active projects, and 100MB storage, solid for getting started. Teams that value simplicity over knobs and dials can boost coordination without tool fatigue.

Which free tool should you pick?

  • Just starting and want docs + tasks in one place? Notion
  • Want the simplest visual board? Trello
  • Need structured teamwork with owners and deadlines? Asana
  • All-in-one with many views (incl. Gantt) on free? ClickUp
  • Building software with sprints/issues? Jira
  • Free Gantt + time tracking on a budget? Zoho Projects
  • Lightweight hub with chat/docs/tasks together? Nifty

Conclusion

The seven tools above deliver the best balance of usability and capability on a free-forever plan. If you work in Notion, it stands out as a flexible hub for docs, tasks, and databases, perfect for building project systems that grow with your team.

To keep everything in sync, consider using 2sync to sync Notion with Google Calendar, Google Tasks, Todoist, and more. This ensures schedules and tasks stay aligned across platforms.

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About the author

Simo Elalj
Simo Elalj

Founder of 2sync. Software engineer with a background in computer science from INSA Lyon. Builds sync tools that connect Notion with calendars, tasks, and contacts. Previously founded RefurbMe, a price comparison platform for refurbished electronics.


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