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Alternatives · July 16, 2026 · 8 min read

The 7 best ClickUp alternatives in 2026

ClickUp’s pitch is “one app to replace them all,” and it means it: tasks, docs, whiteboards, goals, chat, dashboards — everything, everywhere. For some teams that’s the dream. For many others it’s the reason they’re reading this page: the feature buffet became the work. Here are seven alternatives, sorted by what you’re actually escaping.

Full disclosure: Decisive is our product and it opens the list. The entry is held to the same standard as the rest — trade-offs included — and every other pick here is a tool we’d recommend to the right team without hesitation.

Why teams leave ClickUp

  • Overwhelm by design. Spaces, folders, lists, statuses, custom fields, ClickApps — the flexibility is real, but so is the settings maze. Someone has to be the ClickUp admin, and it’s a real job.
  • Breadth over depth. When one product does fifteen things, a few of them will always feel two versions behind the dedicated tool your team actually wanted.
  • Heaviness. The more you configure, the more clicking, loading and syncing stands between you and the task you came to check.

The best ClickUp alternatives at a glance

ToolBest forAI
DecisiveLean teams who want AI to do real workNative — an AI teammate, not a sidebar
LinearProduct teams tracking issues, fastFocused assists around issues
AsanaStructured projects across functionsAdd-on assistant
BasecampCalm, simple, flat-priced teamworkNone — by deliberate choice
TrelloSimple visual boardsLight Atlassian AI touches
NotionDocs-first flexible workspacesWriting and Q&A assistant
monday.comVisual work management at org scaleAssistant features across boards

1. Decisive — for lean teams who want less tool and more work done

Decisive agrees with ClickUp about one thing: your work belongs in one place. It disagrees about how to get there. Instead of every feature imaginable, it ships one focused surface — chat, tasks, docs, decisions, voice and a coding agent — with the setup decisions already made. No Spaces-versus-Folders theology, no custom-field sprawl, no admin job. It works the day you sign up.

What replaces the missing configuration is an AI teammate with the full picture. Mention @AI anywhere and it triages, opens and closes tasks, distills long threads, drafts decisions, joins your huddle by voice — and its coding agent edits your GitHub repo on a live cloud server and opens the pull request. ClickUp gives you more levers; Decisive pulls them for you.

  • Best for: teams of five or fewer who felt like ClickUp was a second job and want the work itself to move.
  • Watch out: opinionated means opinionated — few knobs, no DMs or channels, no enterprise admin layers. Bigger orgs and heavy customizers should look elsewhere. Free to start — see pricing.

2. Linear — for product teams who want speed above all

Linear is what happens when a tool does one thing — issue tracking — with total conviction. It’s fast in a way that’s hard to describe until you feel it, keyboard-driven, and beautiful. Cycles, projects and roadmaps cover most of what a product team needs, and nothing more.

  • Best for: software teams whose pain is ClickUp’s weight and who mostly need world-class issue tracking.
  • Watch out: it’s deliberately narrow. Docs, chat and everything-else still live somewhere else, so you’re choosing best-of-breed over all-in-one.

3. Asana — for structured project management without the maze

Asana covers much of ClickUp’s core — projects, timelines, dependencies, portfolios, rules — with far more restraint. It’s mature, predictable and genuinely good at cross-functional work, where marketing, ops and product share one system without anyone becoming an admin.

  • Best for: teams that want serious project structure with a gentler learning curve than ClickUp.
  • Watch out: per-seat pricing adds up, and the AI is an assistant on top of a classic PM tool, not a change in kind.

4. Basecamp — for calm, and a price that never surprises you

Basecamp is the philosophical opposite of ClickUp: fewer features on purpose, defended loudly for twenty years. To-dos, message boards, group chat, docs and schedules — that’s it, and that’s the point. Flat pricing means the bill doesn’t grow with your headcount.

  • Best for: teams whose diagnosis is “our tool is too complicated” and want calm more than capability.
  • Watch out: there’s no AI at all — a deliberate stance. If you want an intelligent workspace, this isn’t one, by design.

5. Trello — for boards so simple nobody needs training

Trello remains the friendliest kanban board ever made. Cards, lists, drag, drop — your whole team understands it in five minutes, and its automations (Butler) quietly handle the repetitive moves. As a ClickUp refugee you’ll feel the simplicity as relief.

  • Best for: small teams and simple pipelines where a shared board genuinely is enough.
  • Watch out: the ceiling is real — cross-project views, reporting and docs aren’t what Trello is for. Many teams outgrow it the way they outgrew a spreadsheet.

6. Notion — for docs-first teams who want flexibility, not features

If ClickUp’s problem was too many rigid features, Notion offers the opposite: a beautiful canvas of blocks and databases you shape however you like. Wikis, light task tracking, notes and roadmaps can all live in one place — as long as someone on the team enjoys building it.

  • Best for: teams whose center of gravity is documents and knowledge rather than task workflows.
  • Watch out: you’re trading a settings maze for a maintenance tax — see our guide to the best Notion alternatives for that story’s other half.

7. monday.com — for visual work management with org-level buy-in

monday.com plays in ClickUp’s league — a configurable Work OS with boards, dashboards and automations — but with a more approachable, visual personality. Ops and marketing teams in particular tend to find it friendlier to live in day-to-day.

  • Best for: mid-sized teams that genuinely need a configurable platform and have someone happy to own it.
  • Watch out: it shares ClickUp’s fundamental trade: power through configuration. If that’s what you’re escaping, this is a sideways move.

Which one should you pick?

  • You want one calm surface and AI that does real work: pick Decisive.
  • You’re a product team and speed is everything: pick Linear.
  • You need structured cross-functional PM: pick Asana.
  • You want calm and flat pricing, no AI: pick Basecamp.
  • You just need a board: pick Trello.
  • Your work is mostly documents: pick Notion.
  • You still want a Work OS, just a different one: pick monday.com.

Want the direct head-to-head instead? Read Decisive vs ClickUp.

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