Best Project Management Tools for Solo Founders in 2026 (Honest Picks)
Most project management tools are designed for teams of ten. The five that genuinely work for one-person businesses, with honest pros, cons, and pricing.
The project management tool category was not built for solo founders. Asana, ClickUp, Monday, Trello, Wrike, Basecamp: every one of them assumes you have collaborators to assign work to, status updates to broadcast, and meetings to coordinate around. For a one-person business, most of those features are noise that actively gets in the way.
This guide is the honest list of the five PM tools that actually work for solo founders in 2026, with the trade-offs surfaced. Some of the picks are tools that are not technically project management software but do the job better than the dedicated category. Some are dedicated PM tools that have managed to stay solo-friendly. Either way, the goal is to help you pick the one tool you will actually update, not the one with the slickest demo video.
What "good for solo" actually means
Before the comparison, a quick definition. A project management tool that works for solos has these traits:
- Fast to update, because you have no admin support
- Quiet, because you are the only one looking at it
- Flexible, because every solo business is a slightly different shape
- Cheap, because the value-per-dollar at one user is much higher
- Useful in 30 minutes, because every Saturday spent configuring is a Saturday not shipping
The single most important trait is the first one. The PM tool that wins for solos is the one you update every day without thinking about it. Anything that requires a deliberate weekly maintenance ritual will fall behind reality and become useless within a month.
The shortlist
| Tool | Best for | Free tier? |
|---|---|---|
| Linear | Solo devs and product builders | Up to 250 issues |
| Notion | Generalists with mixed workflows | Free for personal use |
| Airtable | Database-heavy structured work | Up to 1,000 records |
| Things 3 | Pure personal task management | Paid only ($50 one-time) |
| Plain task list (Apple Reminders / Todoist) | Service freelancers with simple needs | Free |
Below is the honest read on each, in the order most solos should consider them.
1. Linear (the right answer for builders)
If you build software, design, or any product where work breaks down into discrete tickets with status, Linear is the cleanest option in 2026. The free tier covers 250 issues, which is enough to run a one-person product for several months before you commit.
What Linear gets right:
- Speed. Every action has a keyboard shortcut. The command bar (Cmd+K) opens instantly. Updates feel like writing, not like operating a system.
- Cycles. Two-week sprint windows that auto-roll uncompleted issues. The closest thing to "weekly planning" that a solo can actually maintain.
- Triage inbox. New issues land here unrouted. Triage them with one keystroke. Beats hunting around for "where does this go."
- Projects. Group issues across cycles for feature-shaped views. Pairs with the roadmap for long-range planning.
- Free tier of 250 issues is generous enough to run a real product on.
The catch is the 250-issue cap. Most active solo products fill it within 6-12 months. The Standard plan at $10/seat/month is reasonable, but it is a recurring cost.
The other catch is that Linear assumes a software-shaped mental model. Issues, statuses, cycles. If your business is consulting, content creation, or anything that does not fit neatly into "issue -> in progress -> done", Linear's model can feel forced. Notion is probably better there.
2. Notion (the universal generalist)
For solos whose work does not fit a clean issue-tracker shape, Notion remains the right answer in 2026. Build a database, define your fields, choose your views, and you have a custom PM tool that maps to how you actually work.
A working Notion setup for a one-person business:
- Projects database with status, priority, due date, and project type
- Tasks database linked to projects, with checkboxes and due dates
- Inbox page for capturing new ideas before triage
- Weekly review template for the actual planning ritual
Why this beats dedicated PM tools for many solos:
- One tool, fewer subscriptions. Notion likely already holds your notes, contracts, and content calendar. Your PM living there is one less app to switch into.
- Genuinely free for personal use. No record limits, no upsell pressure.
- Customisable without engineering. Add a field, hide it from one view, show it in another. Linear cannot match this flexibility.
- The community has shipped a thousand templates. Pick one, modify it, save a Saturday.
The downsides:
- No automation built in. Recurring tasks, reminders, and dependent statuses require either manual work or a Zapier-shaped integration.
- Mobile is mediocre. Editing a Notion database on your phone is functional but not delightful.
- Easy to over-engineer. The flexibility means you can spend more time configuring it than using it. The discipline is to start with three views and add only when you actively want to.
For most solos in their first three years, Notion is genuinely the right answer.
3. Airtable (when you need structured data)
Airtable is the right call when your work has heavy structured data: lots of fields, calculated values, multiple linked tables, view-specific configurations.
A typical Airtable PM setup for a solo:
- Projects table with status, client (linked), value, deadline
- Tasks table linked to projects
- Contacts table linked to projects (clients, contractors)
- Time log linked to tasks for billable tracking
- Views that filter and group by project, client, status, or week
Why Airtable beats Notion for some workflows:
- Real relational data. Linked records, lookups, and rollups work cleanly. Notion's database relations are workable but rougher.
- Forms. Public Airtable forms feed directly into a base, useful for client intake or feedback collection.
- Automations. Native automations (when X happens, do Y) without needing Zapier. Free tier includes basic automations.
The downside is the 2024 pricing change. Airtable's free tier caps at 1,000 records per base, which is fine for a year or two of solo work but starts feeling tight. The Team tier at $24/seat/month is steep for true solo use.
Airtable is the right choice when you need its specific strengths. For most generic solo PM use, Notion is the better default.
4. Things 3 (for pure personal task management)
Things 3 is a Mac/iOS-only paid task manager that has been slowly perfecting the same product for over a decade. It is not technically project management software. It is a personal task manager that handles "projects" as a grouping concept. For some solos, that is exactly the right shape.
Why Things 3 works for some solos:
- Genuinely beautiful. The interaction design is the best in the category. Every animation feels considered.
- Today / Tomorrow / Upcoming / Anytime / Someday model maps to how most people actually plan.
- Quick entry from anywhere. Cmd+Shift+space pops a quick-entry box. Lower friction than any other tool.
- No subscription. $50 once for Mac, $10 for iPhone, $20 for iPad. Pay once, use forever.
Why Things 3 falls short for some:
- Mac/iOS only. No Windows, no Linux, no web. Cross-platform users cannot use it.
- Single user only. No collaboration. Sharing is awkward (you can export but it is not real sharing).
- No databases. If you want custom fields and queryable data, Things 3 is the wrong tool.
Things 3 is the right call for solos who are Mac-and-iPhone-only and whose work fits a "todo list with projects" shape rather than a "structured data" shape. Service freelancers, consultants, and creators often fit this.
5. Apple Reminders or Todoist (the boring answer)
For some solos, the right answer to "what PM tool should I use" is "the simplest thing that works". Apple Reminders is genuinely good in 2026: cross-device sync, location and time-based reminders, list grouping, smart lists, sharing if you need it. Todoist is slightly more capable and works on Windows, with a free tier that covers personal use.
When this is the right answer:
- Your work fits neatly into "things to do today, this week, this month"
- You do not need structured data fields
- You do not need multi-step project tracking
- You want zero overhead
Most pre-revenue solos in their first six months should use this approach. Buying into a heavier tool before the business has shape is a way of postponing actual work by configuring software.
How to choose
A simple decision tree:
- You build software or design products: Linear (free for 250 issues, then $10/mo)
- Your work is structured-data-heavy: Airtable (free up to 1,000 records, then $24/mo)
- You want flexibility and you already use Notion: Notion (free for personal)
- You want the prettiest, paid-once option (Mac/iOS): Things 3 ($50 one-time)
- You are pre-revenue or your needs are simple: Apple Reminders or Todoist (free)
If you are unsure, default to Notion. The flexibility means you cannot make a wrong choice that locks you in.
What about the big-name tools?
A quick honest take on the tools that get marketed heavily to solos:
- Asana: Built for teams. The free tier exists but the product is over-tooled for one-person use. Skip.
- ClickUp: Slogan is "one app to replace them all", which translates to "every feature you do not need". Aggressive upsells. Skip.
- Monday: Visual but expensive ($9/seat/month minimum) and team-shaped. Skip.
- Trello: Was great in 2018. Now owned by Atlassian and showing its age. Linear and Notion both do better.
- Basecamp: Designed for client-facing project work in agencies. Solid product but $99/month flat fee makes it expensive for solo use.
- Jira: No.
The pattern is consistent. PM tools designed for teams of 5+ users rarely simplify down well for solos. The interface assumptions, the pricing, and the feature emphasis all push you toward team-shaped workflows. Stick with the solo-friendly options.
Frequently asked questions
Should I really pay for a PM tool as a solo?
In your first year, probably not. Notion free tier or Apple Reminders is enough. After year one, paying $10-25/month for a tool you use daily is reasonable.
Do I need a separate task manager and project tracker?
Most solos do not. One tool covering both is fine. If you find yourself outgrowing one tool, you have a clear signal that it is time to upgrade.
What about Obsidian or Roam?
Both are excellent for note-taking and personal knowledge management, neither is great as a project management tool. Use them for what they are good at and pair with a PM tool for actual project tracking.
Can I use my email inbox as a project tracker?
Some people do, some swear by it. It works for very simple workflows but breaks down quickly past 10-20 active items. Worth trying as a starting point if your needs are minimal.
Final word
The best PM tool for a solo founder is the one you will actually update. Speed of update beats feature richness almost every time. Pick something simple, use it daily for two weeks, and only switch if there is a specific friction point you can name. Most solos over-tool early and under-use late. Resist the impulse to keep shopping for a better tool when the real problem is consistency.
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Linear
The fastest, most opinionated issue tracker out there. Built by people who clearly use it daily, and it shows in every keyboard shortcut.
Best for Solo devs, indie founders, and freelancers who want one fast tracker for every issue, idea, and project.
Notion
A flexible workspace that doubles as a CRM, content planner, and lightweight project tracker, all from one tool.
Best for Solopreneurs who want one workspace for notes, content, and a lightweight CRM.
Airtable
Spreadsheet that thinks it is a database. Powerful for the right job and surprisingly expensive once you have any volume.
Best for Solopreneurs with a specific structured-data need (CRM, content calendar, inventory) who outgrow Notion databases.
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