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Canada edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-27

Top 10 Task Management Software in Canada for 2026

Independent Canadian ranking of task management apps with CAD pricing, PIPEDA + Quebec Law 25 notes and Bill 96 French-UI guidance for Quebec workforces.

Canada verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-27

Todoist holds the Canadian personal and SMB task-management default; Microsoft To Do dominates the M365-anchored enterprise install base at Big 5 banks (RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC), federal government and provincial governments. TickTick, Things 3 and Sunsama serve the prosumer cohort at Canadian SaaS scale-up engineering and product teams (Shopify, Hootsuite, Wealthsimple, Lightspeed Commerce). The broader project/work management category (Asana, Monday, ClickUp, Linear) is covered separately; this ranking covers personal and team task management specifically. Quebec Bill 96 requires French UI for Quebec workforces above the threshold; PIPEDA and Quebec Law 25 govern task-content data residency for any platform handling PII inside tasks.

Picks for Canada

  • Canadian individual or SMB needing a credible personal task manager: todoist Todoist is the Canadian personal and SMB default with French UI, mobile parity, natural-language input and Karma motivation mechanics. Strong fit at Toronto, Vancouver and Montreal startup operators and individual contributors.
  • Big 5 bank, federal government or Microsoft 365-anchored enterprise: microsoft-to-do Microsoft To Do bundled inside M365 Canada or M365 Government Community Cloud is the default at RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC, federal departments, provincial governments and Crown corporations. SSC Cloud aligned and PROTECTED B path through M365 GCC.
  • Canadian engineering or product team wanting cross-platform parity at low cost: ticktick TickTick brings cross-platform parity, calendar integration and Pomodoro features at lower CAD price than Todoist Pro. Strong fit at Canadian SaaS engineering teams who want personal task management without enterprise overhead.
  • Apple-only Canadian creative professional or executive: things-3 Things 3 (Cultured Code, Stuttgart) remains the Apple ecosystem default for Canadian creative professionals and executives running iPad-plus-Mac workflows. One-time purchase model in CAD is unusual and welcomed in the category.
  • Canadian Google Workspace-anchored team needing zero-friction task surface: google-tasks Google Tasks bundled inside Workspace is the default at Workspace-anchored Canadian SMBs and U15 university administrative offices, where the zero-additional-cost integration with Calendar and Gmail wins.
  • Canadian knowledge worker wanting daily-planning surface beyond a list: sunsama Sunsama brings calendar-integrated daily planning and intentional task scheduling. Visible adoption at Canadian SaaS founders, executives and senior individual contributors who want more than a list.
Market context

How the task management software market looks in Canada

Canadian task management demand is dominated by the M365 bundle at the enterprise tier and Todoist at the personal and SMB tier. Microsoft To Do, bundled inside M365 Canada residency or M365 Government Community Cloud, is the visible enterprise default at Big 5 banks (RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO, CIBC), Big 3 telcos (Bell, Rogers, Telus), Big 4 insurers (Manulife, Sun Life, Great-West, Intact), federal departments, provincial governments, Crown corporations and large Canadian retailers (Loblaws, Sobeys, Metro, Canadian Tire). The integration with Outlook tasks, Planner and Teams produces enough adjacent value that M365-anchored Canadian enterprises rarely shortlist a competing standalone task manager at scale.

Todoist (Doist, originally founded in Chile, now distributed-remote) is the Canadian personal and SMB default, with French UI, mobile parity and natural-language input in CAD pricing through standard Doist channels. TickTick is the cross-platform cost-effective alternative at Canadian SaaS engineering and product teams (Shopify, Hootsuite, Wealthsimple, Lightspeed Commerce, Vidyard, Top Hat, Clio, Jobber, FreshBooks). Things 3 (Cultured Code, Stuttgart) holds the Apple-only Canadian creative and executive workflow, helped by its one-time-purchase model in CAD. Sunsama and Akiflow appear at Canadian SaaS founders and senior individual contributors who want daily-planning surfaces over the calendar.

The broader project and work management category, Asana, Monday, ClickUp and Linear, is covered separately in our project management ranking; the line we draw here is personal and team task management specifically. Linear in particular has strong adoption at Canadian engineering teams (Shopify-adjacent, Lightspeed-adjacent, 1Password) but is fundamentally a project-management product for engineering workflows rather than a personal task manager. The Canadian regulatory layer is light for personal task managers, since task content is typically the user's own data; PIPEDA and Quebec Law 25 only become a real procurement question when task content includes customer PII (rare for personal lists, common when teams use the same platform for client work). Quebec Bill 96 requires French UI for any task manager used by a Quebec workforce above the threshold; Todoist, Microsoft To Do, TickTick, Google Tasks, Sunsama and Akiflow all ship French UI.

Compliance & local rules

Canadian task management procurement is shaped by three regimes, with the regulatory weight lighter than most categories because task content is typically personal or team-internal rather than customer PII. PIPEDA governs any personal data inside task content (including notes attachments) nationally and requires meaningful consent before collection and mandatory OPC breach reporting where the breach creates real risk of significant harm. Quebec Law 25 adds a designated privacy officer requirement, mandatory privacy impact assessments before cross-border data transfers, granular consent for Quebec residents, and mandatory CAI breach notification. The practical effect: where Canadian teams use a task manager for client work that includes client PII (legal, accounting, healthcare, financial services use cases), the platform becomes a covered data-handling vendor and procurement should treat it as such. Quebec Bill 96 requires French UI for any task manager used by a Quebec workforce above the threshold (typically 25+ employees in Quebec); Todoist, Microsoft To Do, TickTick, Google Tasks, Sunsama and Akiflow all ship French UI. Microsoft To Do bundled inside M365 Government Community Cloud or M365 Canada residency is the only mainstream option that supports CCCS PROTECTED B-aligned federal-government deployments; SSC Cloud guidance compliance is built into the M365 enterprise agreement structure. Todoist, TickTick and Things 3 store task content in US-resident infrastructure primarily, which is acceptable under PIPEDA but requires a documented Privacy Impact Assessment under Quebec Law 25 for Quebec-resident task content. CASL does not directly apply unless the task manager sends commercial electronic messages on behalf of the user, which is uncommon. AODA WCAG 2.0 AA conformance is required for any internal-facing platform used by Ontario employees of regulated organizations.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Canada

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 Todoist
Individuals and small teams
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.4 Global
4 Microsoft To Do
Anyone inside Microsoft 365
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.4 Global
2 TickTick
Individuals and small teams
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.5 Global
3 Things 3
Solo Apple-ecosystem users
$49.99 $49.99 4.7 Global (Apple-only)
5 Google Tasks
Anyone inside Google Workspace or Gmail
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.3 Global
6 Sunsama
Solo knowledge workers and consultants
$20/emp $200 4.7 Global
7 Akiflow
Power-user knowledge workers and small teams
$25/emp $250 4.7 Global
8 Any.do
Individuals, families, small teams
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.2 Global
9 Amazing Marvin
Solo productivity-methodology power users
$12/emp $120 4.6 Global
10 TaskPaper
Solo plain-text loyalists on macOS
$24.99 $24.99 4.5 Global (macOS-only)

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in Canada actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in CAD. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (CAD) Sample Notes
Todoist Canadian individual or SMB (1-50 users) CA$60 32 Todoist Pro per-user CAD pricing
Microsoft To Do Big 5 bank or large Canadian enterprise (10,000+ employees) CA$0 17 Bundled inside existing M365 E3/E5 enterprise agreement
TickTick Canadian SaaS engineering team or SMB (10-200 users) CA$44 21 TickTick Premium per-user CAD pricing
Things 3 Canadian Apple-only creative or executive (1-10 users) CA$140 14 Things 3 one-time purchase per platform (Mac, iPad, iPhone)
Google Tasks Canadian Google Workspace-anchored SMB or university CA$0 19 Bundled inside existing Workspace Business or Enterprise subscription
Sunsama Canadian SaaS founder or senior individual contributor CA$264 11 Sunsama monthly subscription billed in CAD
Akiflow Canadian executive or knowledge worker CA$220 7 Akiflow Pro annual billed in CAD
Local challengers

Canada-built or Canada-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Canada buyers and worth a shortlist.

Hive (Toronto)

Visit ↗

Toronto-built productivity and task management platform with stronger team-collaboration features than personal task managers in this list. Adjacent to Asana and ClickUp; Canadian-built reference for buyers wanting a domestic vendor.

Notion task databases (Canadian adoption)

Visit ↗

Notion's task database surface (covered in our spreadsheet-database ranking) is heavily used at Canadian engineering and product teams as a task manager substitute, often replacing or supplementing Todoist for team-level task tracking.

Excluded for Canada

Global picks that don't fit here

  • TaskPaper
    TaskPaper is a Mac-only plain-text task manager with effectively zero Canadian enterprise install base; relevant only to a small set of individual power users.
  • Amazing Marvin
    Amazing Marvin has minimal Canadian install base outside individual power users; not a credible team or enterprise pick.
The Canada ranking

All 10, ranked for Canada

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Canada market.

#1

Todoist

The cross-platform default for personal task management.

Founded 2007 · Santiago, Chile (remote-first) · private · 1–50 employees
G2 4.4 (2,480)
Capterra 4.6
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Todoist

Todoist is the long-running cross-platform task manager from Doist, a profitable remote-first company that has resisted acquisition and venture pressure. Its strength is consistency: natural-language quick-add ("buy milk tomorrow 5pm #errands p1") works identically on macOS, Windows, web, iOS, Android, Apple Watch, browser extensions, and Outlook/Gmail add-ins. Karma gamification and a well-documented API keep power users invested. Trade-offs: the free tier is narrow (5 active projects, no reminders), Pro pricing has crept up, and the design feels conservative next to TickTick or Things.

Best for

Individuals and 2-10 person teams needing a reliable cross-platform inbox with strong integrations and a long-term-stable vendor.

Worst for

Apple-only loyalists wanting one-time purchase (Things), calendar-first time-blockers (Sunsama), or users who want everything bundled at lower price (TickTick).

Strengths

  • Natural-language quick-add across every client
  • Genuinely identical UX on macOS, Windows, web, iOS, Android, watchOS
  • Public REST + Sync API; mature third-party ecosystem (Zapier, Make, IFTTT, custom)
  • Profitable, bootstrapped vendor; no acquisition or PE-rollup risk
  • Karma gamification and productivity reports drive habit formation

Weaknesses

  • Free tier limited to 5 active projects and no reminders
  • No native time-blocking or calendar grid view
  • Design feels conservative next to TickTick, Things, Sunsama

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    5 active projects, 3 filters, no reminders
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Pro
    Per user; 300 projects, reminders, calendar layout, AI assistant
    $4 /emp/mo
  • Business
    Per user; team workspaces, admin controls, priority support
    $6 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · Annual billing required for published rates
  • · No Family/household plan

Key features

  • +Natural-language quick-add
  • +Cross-platform clients (12+)
  • +Filters and labels
  • +Karma productivity reports
  • +Calendar layout (Pro)
  • +Reminders (Pro)
  • +Templates
  • +REST + Sync API
100+ integrations
Google CalendarOutlookSlackGmailZapierIFTTTAlexa
Geography
Global
#4

Microsoft To Do

Free with Microsoft 365; the bundled-default displacement.

Founded 2017 · Redmond, WA · public · 1–10,000+ employees
G2 4.4 (184)
Capterra 4.5
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Microsoft To Do

Microsoft To Do is the successor to Wunderlist (Microsoft acquired and sunset it in 2020). For anyone already inside Microsoft 365, it is free, syncs flagged Outlook emails as tasks, surfaces Planner team tasks in one personal inbox, and runs on every platform. It will not win design awards and lacks the deeper features of Todoist or TickTick, but for tens of millions of M365 seats it is the "good enough" displacement of standalone task apps. Trade-offs: thin feature set, weak third-party integrations outside the Microsoft stack, and roadmap velocity depends on Microsoft prioritizing a free included product.

Best for

Anyone already paying for Microsoft 365 who needs a personal task inbox with Outlook and Planner sync at no incremental cost.

Worst for

Buyers needing rich integrations, calendar-first time-blocking, or a serious power-user feature set.

Strengths

  • Free with any Microsoft 365 personal or business plan
  • Native Outlook flagged-email sync; Planner team tasks visible in one inbox
  • Cross-platform: iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, web
  • My Day daily-planning view inherited from Wunderlist

Weaknesses

  • Thin feature set compared to Todoist, TickTick, Things
  • Weak third-party integrations outside the Microsoft stack
  • Roadmap velocity slow; not a strategic Microsoft priority

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Standalone; sign in with Microsoft account
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Bundled with Microsoft 365
    Included with M365 Personal, Family, Business plans
    $0 /mo
Watch for
  • · Requires Microsoft account or M365 license for full sync

Key features

  • +Tasks and lists
  • +My Day daily planning view
  • +Outlook flagged-email sync
  • +Planner integration
  • +Cross-platform clients
  • +List sharing
15+ integrations
OutlookMicrosoft PlannerMicrosoft TeamsMicrosoft 365Cortana
Geography
Global
#2

TickTick

Most features per dollar; cross-platform with calendar bundled.

Founded 2013 · Beijing, China · private · 1–25 employees
G2 4.5 (124)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit TickTick

TickTick is the cross-platform task app that bundles what Todoist sells separately: a built-in calendar view, Pomodoro timer, habit tracker, Eisenhower matrix, and natural-language input — all at roughly half Todoist Pro pricing. Appest is Chinese-owned, which becomes a material concern for DSGVO-strict EU buyers and any defense/government adjacent work; data routing has historically passed through infrastructure outside the EU. Trade-offs: support response is slower than Todoist/Doist, the desktop apps lag the mobile apps in polish, and Western enterprise procurement teams sometimes block on the Chinese-origin ownership.

Best for

Individuals wanting calendar + tasks + habits + Pomodoro bundled in one app at a low subscription.

Worst for

DSGVO-strict EU buyers, defense/government adjacent users, or teams needing fast vendor support and Western-jurisdiction data residency.

Strengths

  • Calendar view, Pomodoro, habits, Eisenhower matrix bundled into one app
  • Premium tier at $35.99/year is roughly half Todoist Pro
  • Cross-platform: iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, web, Apple Watch, browser extensions
  • Natural-language input and voice-to-task on mobile
  • Generous free tier compared to Todoist

Weaknesses

  • Chinese-origin vendor (Appest); DSGVO-strict and defense buyers often block on data-routing concerns
  • Support response slower than Doist; primarily email/forum
  • Desktop apps less polished than mobile

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Generous; basic calendar, tasks, lists
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Premium
    Per user; $35.99/year. Unlimited lists, calendar view, custom filters, premium themes
    $3 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · No published team / business tier

Key features

  • +Tasks with subtasks
  • +Built-in calendar view
  • +Pomodoro timer
  • +Habit tracker
  • +Eisenhower matrix
  • +Natural-language input
  • +Voice-to-task
  • +Cross-platform clients
30+ integrations
Google CalendarOutlook CalendarSlackZapierIFTTTAmazon Alexa
Geography
Global
#3

Things 3

Best-in-class Apple-only task app, one-time purchase.

Founded 2007 · Stuttgart, Germany · private · 1 employees
G2 4.7 (86)
Capterra 4.8
From $49.99 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Things 3

Things 3 is the design-led Apple-only task manager from Cultured Code, a small Stuttgart-based studio that has shipped a single major version since 2017 and refused subscription pricing. It wins on craft: typography, animation, the Magic Plus button, the Today/Upcoming/Anytime/Someday flow. Sold once per device family — about $50 on macOS, $20 on iPhone, $30 on iPad, $10 on Apple Watch — total roughly $80-110 if you want everything. Trade-offs: Apple-only with no plans to change, no native collaboration or shared lists, and data export is limited to plain text or a proprietary JSON-like format.

Best for

Solo knowledge workers fully inside the Apple ecosystem who want craft over features and prefer paying once.

Worst for

Anyone using Android or Windows, teams needing collaboration, or buyers worried about platform lock-in and limited data export.

Strengths

  • Best craft in the category: typography, motion, attention to detail
  • One-time purchase; no subscription
  • Privacy-respecting; data syncs via Things Cloud only
  • Stable, debt-free German vendor focused on one product since 2007
  • Things URL scheme and AppleScript support for power users

Weaknesses

  • Apple-only: no Android, no Windows, no web. Hard lock-in to the Apple ecosystem
  • No native collaboration or shared lists. Single-user product by design
  • Data export limited (plain text, basic JSON); no clean migration path off

Pricing tiers

public
  • Things 3 for Mac
    One-time. Listed as USD purchase price, not monthly
    $49.99 /mo
  • Things 3 for iPhone & Watch
    One-time
    $9.99 /mo
  • Things 3 for iPad
    One-time
    $19.99 /mo
  • Things 3 for Vision Pro
    One-time
    $29.99 /mo
Watch for
  • · Pay separately per device family
  • · Things Cloud sync requires all-Apple devices

Key features

  • +Today / Upcoming / Anytime / Someday workflow
  • +Magic Plus quick-add
  • +Tags and filters
  • +Calendar event integration
  • +Things Cloud sync
  • +AppleScript and URL scheme
  • +Quick Find
  • +Native Apple Watch app
10+ integrations
Apple CalendarApple Reminders importAppleScriptShortcutsThings URL scheme
Geography
Global (Apple-only)
#5

Google Tasks

Free with Google Workspace; embedded in Gmail and Calendar.

Founded 2018 · Mountain View, CA · public · 1–10,000+ employees
G2 4.3 (92)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Google Tasks

Google Tasks is the lightweight task list embedded inside Gmail and Google Calendar. For Google Workspace and personal Gmail users, it is free, syncs across web, iOS, and Android, and lets you drag emails directly into tasks. It is deliberately minimal — no labels, no priority levels, no projects, no integrations beyond Google's own surfaces. Trade-offs: feature set lags every other product on this list, and Google has historically deprioritized the product (a separate Google Reminders coexisted for years before consolidation).

Best for

Google Workspace and Gmail users who need a minimal task list embedded in email and calendar at no cost.

Worst for

Anyone needing projects, labels, priorities, integrations, or a power-user feature set.

Strengths

  • Free with Google Workspace and personal Gmail
  • Native Gmail and Google Calendar integration; drag emails to tasks
  • Cross-platform: web, iOS, Android
  • Minimal interface; near-zero learning curve

Weaknesses

  • Feature set thinner than Microsoft To Do, let alone Todoist
  • No labels, priority levels, projects, or filters
  • Google product-roadmap risk; history of deprioritization and consolidation

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Standalone with Google account
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Bundled with Google Workspace
    Included with all Workspace plans
    $0 /mo

Key features

  • +Tasks and subtasks
  • +Lists
  • +Drag-and-drop from Gmail
  • +Calendar-side panel in Google Calendar
  • +Date and time reminders
  • +Cross-platform clients
5+ integrations
GmailGoogle CalendarGoogle WorkspaceGoogle Assistant
Geography
Global
#6

Sunsama

Calendar-first daily planner for intentional knowledge work.

Founded 2017 · New York, NY · private · 1 employees
G2 4.7 (72)
Capterra 4.8
From $20 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Sunsama

Sunsama is the daily-planning app that forces you to time-block every task onto your calendar before you start the day. It pulls tasks from Asana, Trello, Jira, Linear, Notion, Gmail, Slack, ClickUp, and Todoist into one daily plan, then asks you to estimate time and schedule each one. Built for knowledge workers who finish the day with a clear list rather than an open inbox. Trade-offs: $20/month is expensive for a personal app, the calendar-first ritual is not for everyone, and feature depth elsewhere (lists, projects) is intentionally minimal.

Best for

Knowledge workers and consultants who want every task time-blocked on the calendar and willing to invest a daily planning ritual.

Worst for

Users who want a simple list inbox, anyone on a tight budget, or teams needing collaboration features.

Strengths

  • Forces time-blocking each task onto the calendar
  • Pulls tasks from Asana, Trello, Jira, Linear, Notion, Gmail, Slack
  • Daily and weekly planning + shutdown rituals built in
  • Calm, opinionated UX; design-led product

Weaknesses

  • $20/month is expensive for a single-user app
  • Calendar-first ritual is not for everyone; high abandonment for users who skip the daily plan
  • Feature depth in lists/projects intentionally minimal

Pricing tiers

public
  • Monthly
    Per user / month
    $20 /emp/mo
  • Annual
    Per user; $192/year billed annually
    $16 /emp/mo

Key features

  • +Daily and weekly planning view
  • +Time-blocking on the calendar
  • +Task aggregation from 15+ sources
  • +Daily shutdown ritual
  • +Focus mode
  • +Calendar overlay
20+ integrations
Google CalendarOutlook CalendarAsanaTrelloJiraLinearNotionTodoistSlackGmail
Geography
Global
#7

Akiflow

Keyboard-driven daily plan that unifies tasks across many sources.

Founded 2020 · San Francisco, CA · private · 1–25 employees
G2 4.7 (58)
Capterra 4.6
From $25 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Akiflow

Akiflow is the calendar-first daily planner aimed at power users who live in keyboard shortcuts. It pulls tasks from Asana, Trello, ClickUp, Linear, Notion, Gmail, Slack, Jira, Todoist, and others into a single unified inbox, then lets you drag them onto a time-blocked calendar with global hotkeys. Closest direct competitor to Sunsama, leans more on keyboard speed and aggregation breadth. Trade-offs: pricing per user is high, the learning curve is steep for non-keyboard users, and the cross-platform clients are less mature than Todoist or TickTick.

Best for

Power-user knowledge workers who want one keyboard-driven daily plan that unifies tasks from many work tools.

Worst for

Casual list users, anyone on a tight budget, or buyers who prefer touch/mobile-first UX.

Strengths

  • Keyboard-driven UX with global hotkeys for capture and scheduling
  • Aggregates tasks from 15+ sources into a unified inbox
  • Time-blocking on the calendar with drag-and-drop
  • Strong sync with Google and Outlook calendars

Weaknesses

  • $25/month is expensive; positioned for power users only
  • Steep learning curve if you do not live in keyboard shortcuts
  • Cross-platform clients less mature than Todoist

Pricing tiers

public
  • Monthly
    Per user / month
    $25 /emp/mo
  • Annual
    Per user; $228/year billed annually
    $19 /emp/mo
  • Teams
    Shared workspace; published on request
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Mobile apps less mature than desktop

Key features

  • +Unified task inbox from 15+ sources
  • +Global keyboard hotkeys
  • +Time-blocking on calendar
  • +Snooze and reschedule
  • +Command bar
  • +Daily and weekly review
20+ integrations
Google CalendarOutlookAsanaTrelloClickUpLinearNotionJiraTodoistSlackGmail
Geography
Global
#8

Any.do

Mobile-first cross-platform task app with family-shared lists.

Founded 2010 · Tel Aviv, Israel · private · 1–25 employees
G2 4.2 (168)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Any.do

Any.do is one of the older cross-platform task apps, with strength on mobile and a popular family-shared list feature. It bundles tasks, calendar view, voice input, and reminders across iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, web, and Apple Watch. Has pivoted positioning several times over the years (personal, family, then teams) which has fragmented the roadmap. Trade-offs: feature parity with Todoist and TickTick has slipped, recent reviews flag bugs and slow sync, and the pricing structure across personal, family, and teams plans is harder to parse than competitors.

Best for

Mobile-first individuals and families wanting shared lists, voice input, and calendar reminders in one app.

Worst for

Power users needing deep filters and integrations (Todoist/TickTick better), or teams needing reliable sync.

Strengths

  • Mobile-first UX, strong on iOS and Android
  • Family-shared lists popular for household task sharing
  • Voice input and reminders work well
  • Cross-platform: iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, web, Apple Watch

Weaknesses

  • Feature parity with Todoist/TickTick has slipped over recent years
  • Sync bugs flagged in 2024-2025 reviews
  • Pricing structure (Personal / Family / Teams) harder to parse than competitors

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free
    Basic tasks and reminders
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Premium
    Per user; recurring tasks, themes, location reminders
    $5 /emp/mo
  • Family
    Up to 4 members; shared lists
    $8 /mo
  • Teams
    Per user; workspace and admin features
    $8 /emp/mo
Watch for
  • · Annual billing required for best price

Key features

  • +Tasks and lists
  • +Calendar view
  • +Voice input
  • +Reminders (time, location, recurring)
  • +Family-shared lists
  • +Cross-platform clients
  • +WhatsApp reminders
20+ integrations
Google CalendarOutlookSlackWhatsAppAlexaZapier
Geography
Global
#9

Amazing Marvin

Highly configurable task app for GTD / time-blocking devotees.

Founded 2017 · San Diego, CA · private · 1 employees
G2 4.6 (42)
Capterra 4.7
From $12 /employee/mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Amazing Marvin

Amazing Marvin is the deeply configurable task app for productivity-methodology devotees, built around 60+ optional "strategies" that turn features (GTD, time-blocking, kanban, Pomodoro, kindergarten review, frog of the day) on or off individually. The trade-off is the same as the strength: a steep learning curve and a UI density that overwhelms casual users. Small devoted user base. Trade-offs: $12/month is mid-tier, cross-platform clients exist but feel less polished than Todoist, and the configurability is paralysis-inducing for users who want sensible defaults.

Best for

Productivity-methodology devotees who want to customize GTD, time-blocking, or kanban workflows down to fine detail.

Worst for

Casual users who want sensible defaults, or teams needing collaboration features.

Strengths

  • 60+ optional "strategies" let you turn features on or off individually
  • Deep support for GTD, time-blocking, kanban, Pomodoro methodologies
  • Devoted small-vendor support; founder visible on the forum
  • Cross-platform: web, macOS, Windows, iOS, Android

Weaknesses

  • Steep learning curve; UI density overwhelms casual users
  • Configurability is paralysis-inducing without sensible defaults
  • Less polish than Todoist or Things on each individual surface

Pricing tiers

public
  • Monthly
    Per user / month
    $12 /emp/mo
  • Annual
    Per user; $96/year
    $8 /emp/mo
  • Lifetime
    One-time $300 lifetime; published on pricing page
    $300 /mo

Key features

  • +60+ optional productivity strategies
  • +GTD workflow support
  • +Time-blocking and daily planning
  • +Kanban views
  • +Pomodoro and time tracking
  • +Habit tracking
  • +Custom labels and filters
10+ integrations
Google CalendarZapierToggliCal feed
Geography
Global
#10

TaskPaper

Plain-text task list in a flat .taskpaper file. No lock-in.

Founded 2006 · Boulder, CO · private · 1 employees
G2 4.5 (18)
Capterra 4.6
From $24.99 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit TaskPaper

TaskPaper is a macOS-only plain-text task app from independent developer Jesse Grosjean. Tasks live in a flat human-readable .taskpaper file on disk, with simple syntax for projects, tasks, tags, and notes. Devoted niche audience among developers, writers, and plain-text loyalists who want their data to outlive any vendor. Trade-offs: macOS-only with no first-party iOS or sync (Editorial on iOS supports the format), feature set deliberately minimal, and the vendor is a one-person studio with infrequent updates.

Best for

Developers, writers, and plain-text loyalists on macOS who value owning their data in a flat readable file.

Worst for

Cross-platform users, anyone needing sync or mobile, or teams needing collaboration.

Strengths

  • Plain-text .taskpaper file on disk; future-proof and scriptable
  • No vendor lock-in; data survives the vendor
  • One-time purchase ($24.99) on macOS
  • AppleScript and Shortcuts support

Weaknesses

  • macOS-only; no first-party iOS or sync
  • Feature set deliberately minimal
  • One-person studio; updates infrequent

Pricing tiers

public
  • TaskPaper for Mac
    One-time. Listed as USD purchase price, not monthly
    $24.99 /mo

Key features

  • +Plain-text .taskpaper file
  • +Projects, tasks, tags, notes syntax
  • +Focus mode
  • +Saved searches
  • +AppleScript support
  • +Shortcuts support
5+ integrations
Editorial (iOS, third-party)AppleScriptShortcuts
Geography
Global (macOS-only)

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Which task managers ship French UI for Quebec Bill 96 compliance?
Todoist, Microsoft To Do, TickTick, Google Tasks, Sunsama, Akiflow and Any.do all ship French UI. Things 3 ships French. Bill 96 requires French as the language of work for Quebec workforces above the threshold (typically 25+ employees in Quebec). Validate the entire UI (task creation, notifications, settings, mobile apps) supports French before standardizing on a task manager for a Quebec workforce.
Why is Microsoft To Do the default at Big 5 Canadian banks?
Three reasons. First, M365 is already the enterprise agreement of record at RBC, TD, Scotiabank, BMO and CIBC, so Microsoft To Do is zero marginal cost. Second, the integration with Outlook tasks, Planner, Teams and Loop produces enough adjacent productivity value that a standalone task manager rarely justifies the procurement overhead. Third, M365 Canada residency and M365 Government Community Cloud provide PIPEDA, Quebec Law 25 and CCCS PROTECTED B-aligned paths that standalone task managers cannot match without separate enterprise agreements.
Do I need a Privacy Impact Assessment for Todoist or TickTick task content?
Under PIPEDA generally no, since task content is typically personal or team-internal rather than customer PII. Under Quebec Law 25 yes if the task content includes Quebec resident personal data and is stored in US-resident infrastructure (which is the case for Todoist, TickTick and Things 3). Document a Privacy Impact Assessment before standardizing on a US-resident task manager for any Canadian team handling Quebec resident PII in tasks, particularly for legal, accounting, healthcare or financial services teams.
Is there a Canadian-headquartered task management vendor?
Hive (Toronto) is the closest Canadian-headquartered consideration, but Hive is fundamentally a team-collaboration and project-management product rather than a personal task manager in the Todoist or Things 3 sense. Notion (San Francisco but with strong Canadian engineering adoption) is frequently used as a task-database substitute. None of the leading global personal task managers (Todoist, Microsoft To Do, TickTick, Things 3, Sunsama, Akiflow) are Canadian-headquartered.
Task management vs project management, what is the difference?
Task management is bottom-up and personal: what does one individual or a 2-5 person team need to do today, this week, someday. Project management is top-down and team-oriented: Gantt charts, sprints, dependencies, resource planning across cross-functional teams. Todoist, TickTick, and Things 3 are task managers; Asana, Monday, and Jira (covered in our Top 10 Project Management Software) are project managers.
Are the free tiers actually usable?
Microsoft To Do and Google Tasks are fully free and usable indefinitely; TickTick free tier is genuinely generous; Todoist free is narrow (5 active projects, no reminders); Any.do free is workable; Sunsama and Akiflow have no free tier. For most casual users, the bundled M365 / Google options are good enough.
Calendar-first (Sunsama, Akiflow) vs list-first (Todoist, TickTick), which?
List-first apps are inbox-style: capture everything fast and triage later. Calendar-first apps force you to time-block each task on the calendar before working on it. Calendar-first is more intentional but adds a daily planning ritual; users who skip the ritual usually abandon the app within weeks.
Is Microsoft To Do or Google Tasks "good enough"?
For tens of millions of M365 and Google Workspace users, yes. Both are free, sync everywhere, integrate with their respective email and calendar, and cover 80% of personal task needs. The cost-conscious displacement of standalone paid task apps in 2025-2026 is real. Pick a paid app only if you need features the bundled options lack: rich integrations, calendar grid view, GTD methodology support, or design craft.
Why do task apps spread bottom-up inside teams?
Knowledge workers adopt task apps individually based on personal fit, then either keep using them privately alongside the team's project management tool, or evangelize them inside the team. Vendors lean into this: most paid task apps offer affordable team tiers ($5-8/user) that capture bottom-up momentum without going through enterprise procurement.
Which apps support GTD methodology well?
Things 3 implements a clean GTD flow (Inbox / Today / Anytime / Someday) by design. Amazing Marvin has explicit GTD strategies you can enable. Todoist supports GTD via Projects + Filters but requires manual setup. TickTick supports it via custom lists. Microsoft To Do, Google Tasks, and Any.do are weaker fits for GTD purists.
What about per-seat pricing at small team scale (2-10 people)?
Todoist Business is $6/user; TickTick has no published team tier; Any.do Teams is $8/user; Sunsama and Akiflow are $16-25/user. Microsoft To Do and Google Tasks are free with M365 / Workspace seats you already have. For 2-10 person teams, the bundled options often win on total cost before standalone task apps make sense.
How real is data export and lock-in risk?
Todoist offers full JSON and CSV export with tasks, comments, attachments. TickTick offers CSV. Things 3 export is limited (plain text or proprietary JSON). Microsoft To Do and Google Tasks export via Microsoft Graph / Google Takeout. TaskPaper has zero lock-in by design (plain text file). Sunsama and Akiflow export to JSON or CSV. The lock-in risk is highest with Things 3 if you ever leave the Apple ecosystem.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global Task Management Software ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-27. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.