ClickUp vs Linear
Pick any two tools to get a head-to-head breakdown.
- Most generous free tier — unlimited tasks and members
- Covers tasks, docs, goals, time tracking, chat in one platform
- Highly customisable — almost every element is configurable
- Strong automation builder on paid plans
- Time tracking built in — no add-on needed
- Multiple views: list, board, calendar, Gantt, timeline
- Active development — ships features rapidly
- Keyboard-first interface — fastest navigation in the category
- GitHub integration updates issue status from commits automatically
- Cycle management with velocity tracking built in
- Triage view for managing incoming bug reports
- Sub-issues and parent-child relationships work well
- Fastest-loading project management app — noticeably snappy
- Free plan covers unlimited issues and members
- Steep learning curve — complex to set up correctly
- Can feel overwhelming — too many options
- Performance can lag with large workspaces
- Mobile app less capable than desktop
- Notifications can become noisy without careful configuration
- Built for software teams — poor fit for non-technical workflows
- No built-in time tracking
- Limited reporting compared to Jira
- Docs feature is basic — not a Notion replacement
- Less flexible for non-engineering use cases
- Smaller integrations library than Asana or ClickUp
ClickUp is the most feature-complete project management platform available and one of the most complex. It covers tasks, docs, goals, time tracking, whiteboards, and chat in a single platform — genuinely replacing multiple tools for teams willing to invest in setup. The free tier includes unlimited tasks and unlimited members, making it the most generous free plan in project management. The trade-off is a steep learning curve and an interface that can feel overwhelming. Teams that commit to ClickUp typically stick with it; those who rush the setup usually abandon it.
Linear is the best project management tool for software development teams in 2026. Its keyboard-first design philosophy — almost everything accessible via command palette without touching the mouse — and its tight GitHub, GitLab, and Figma integrations make it feel like a tool built by engineers for engineers. Cycle management, triage views, and automated progress tracking from Git commits are features no other consumer project tool offers. The free plan is generous; at $8/user/month the Standard plan covers everything most teams need.