Choose Personal. Choose Professional. Choose Teams. Compare plans. Compare Plans. Use Tasks to capture to-do lists inside your notes. Edit, track, and manage tasks from a single view. Add due dates, reminders, and notifications to your tasks. Customize Home with new Tasks widget. Customize Home with filtered notes widget. Connect your primary Google Calendar account to Evernote. Assign tasks to others and track their progress.
Connect your personal and workplace Google Calendar accounts to Evernote. Customize Home by adding multiple pinned note, scratch pad and filtered notes widgets. Use Boolean terms to refine search results. Find content by location with geographic search.
Export notebooks as PDF files. Yes Get instant access to your content with Home dashboard. Yes Use a variety of fonts, highlight colors, and formatting tools. Yes Clip, organize, and share web pages with Web Clipper. Yes Scan handwritten notes, whiteboards, receipts, and more.
Yes Record and play back audio notes. Annotate images and PDFs. Forward emails directly into your Evernote account. Create and save your own custom note templates. Scan and digitize business cards to create a personal database of contacts.
Evernote Premium users can link to Google Drive files within notes and Notebooks and can also connect an Evernote account to a Microsoft Outlook account. Evernote Premium also integrates seamlessly with Slack and Microsoft Teams. When it comes to keeping your stuff organized, all three Evernote plans are fairly similar.
All three plans allow you to search notes; create new Notebooks and tags; organize notes by date, tag, or title; and search for text within images. For most users, this will probably be enough. You can also control who can access which notes by adjusting permissions controls in the freemium version, too. One notable exception is that Evernote Premium gives you the option to turn notes into a presentation with just one click, a feature lacking from the free product.
However, that applies only if we look at Evernote Premium in a vacuum. As we noted in our overview of Evernote competitors , many of the tools vying to replace Evernote can do everything Evernote can do, and at a fraction of the cost or even completely free. Bear, a minimal note-taking app, offers a freemium version that can do almost everything Evernote can do. Similarly, workspace tool Notion can perform a lot of the same tasks as Evernote Premium, without having to pay for a subscription.
Evernote Premium is a capable tool that offers plenty of helpful features. Until , Evernote had two tiers, Basic and Premium.
Last year, the company introduced a middle tier called Plus, which was slightly more affordable than Premium with a cap on its features. Here's what the plans look like today:. For those looking at paid tiers, that's roughly a 33 percent to 40 percent increase, depending on whether you pay monthly or annually. The monthly rates saw the smaller percent increase in price, while the annual pricing became less enticing. And, no new features were introduced -- you'll be paying more for the same set of features.
Evernote is, however, offering a grace period to free users who need sync across more than two devices. This grandfathered plan will only last for a few weeks and the new changes and pricing will roll out for users at different times, the earliest being August Keep an eye on your inbox for an email from Evernote within the next two weeks detailing the exact time frame for the changes to be applied to your account.
Whether you can justify paying for Evernote or not certainly depends on your personal usage, but with zero new features added, the blatant price hike is hard to recommend. With only plain text notes, you're not likely to reach the 60MB limit. Evernote Basic comes with 60MB of uploads per month. Very few plain text notes in my Evernote are over 4KB in size, which means I could upload approximately 15, notes to my account in a month with Basic. That's a lot of notes to take in a month -- approximately per day.
But if your needs exceed what Evernote Basic has to offer and you just want to take notes, services like Google Keep or Simplenote provide everything you need for free. And if you're within Apple's ecosystem, the inbuilt Notes app uses iCloud to sync your notes between your Apple devices. While iCloud may not be free for you, the note taking will likely have very little impact on your total iCloud storage.
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