The Best Productivity Apps – A Complete List

These are the apps we recommend for building a complete productivity stack – for iOS, Android, Mac, & Windows

Illustration by Kelsey Wroten

Let’s get one thing out of the way first:  You do not need any of the apps on this list in order to be productive.

Michaelangelo painted the Sistine Chapel without a Pomodoro timer. Marie Curie managed to develop her theory of radioactivity without the help of Evernote. Benjamin Franklin kept track of his to-do lists quite well enough with pen and paper. People have been accomplishing great things for Millenia without any digital assistance.

What’s more important than the apps you use are the habits and systems you put in place to show up consistently and do the work.

That said, the right apps, used intentionally, can make setting up and maintaining those habits and systems much easier and more convenient (in addition to speeding up or automating away the repetitive things you do every day).

We’ve pulled together a list of apps we recommend for building a comprehensive productivity stack in the coming year across whatever devices and platforms you use – Windows, macOS, iOS, or Android. Read the whole app guide from start to finish or use the table of contents below to jump right to the app categories that are most interesting to you.

A few caveats on how we chose the apps we recommend

How we define "productivity". We think most "best productivity apps" lists are too narrow in focus. At Doist, we take a much more expansive view of what productivity means. It’s not just about doing more things in less time (though that’s an important part of it), but about living the life you want to live, whatever that looks like for you. Our list includes the traditional productivity categories like task management, time tracking, and note-taking, but also broadens the lens a bit to include apps for things better sleep, learning, and collaboration.

The apps we actually use every day. We’re a fully remote team of about 60 people who build productivity apps for a living. We spend a lot of time on our devices and a lot of brainpower thinking about how to work more efficiently. The following are all apps that people on our team actually use on a daily basis to stay organized and productive. We’re not getting anything from these companies in return for including them on the list (though in the interest of full disclosure, we are the makers of Todoist, our recommendation for task management, and Twist, our recommendation for team communication.) We recommend them because they’ve made our lives easier in some way, and we think they’ll help you too.

Cross-platform. We prioritized apps that don't lock you into a single ecosystem and can be used cross-platform – on iOS, Android, Mac, Windows, and often browser extensions too. Where we couldn't find a great app that operates across ecosystems, we've included alternatives for each platform. Long story short, you'll get value from this guide no matter what kind of phone or computer you use.

Only the best. Unless fine-tuning your productivity stack is your idea of fun, we think your time is better spent actually getting things done. That’s why, unlike a lot of other “best productivity apps” lists, we’re not going to give you nine different options for time tracking apps or twelve alternatives for calendars. We’ve done all the leg work for you and recommend only the best options based on our own experience. Of course, there are a lot of great apps out there and this guide can’t cover all of them. Inevitably, some of our recommendations may not be the best option for you, but we think that they’re the best for the most people and “good enough” for everyone. If you think we’re missing a vital app on the list, please let us know in the comments below!

The best isn’t always free. If you're looking for a list of free apps, this isn't it. While many of the apps on this list are free (or have free versions that give you most of the functionality you'll need), others have key features locked behind a paywall. Rather than opting for only free software, we tried to balance price with quality and recommended the apps we believe are the best value. We've included the price for each app so you can make the best decision possible.

Time tracking

Time tracking can feel a lot like budgeting or calorie counting, a joyless pain in the butt. But in the end, the way we spend our time day-to-day is how we spend our lives. Knowing where your time is currently going and setting goals for where you want it to go can be both eye-opening and motivating. We recommend adding the following two apps to make time-tracking less of a chore.

RescueTime – For automatic time tracking

For iOS, Android, macOS, Windows, Linux, & Chrome OS; Browser extensions for Firefox, Chrome, & Brave

RescueTime is the time tracking app for people who hate time tracking. It provides a treasure trove of personal insights without you ever having to start or stop a timer.

RescueTime runs in the background on your computer or phone and tracks which apps and websites you use and how much time you spend on them automatically. You can customize which activities you consider "productive" and "unproductive" and get a weekly email summary of your time use as well as real-time alerts if you go over your goals in a particular app or website.

You can even block certain sites altogether to stay focused and have the app tell you if you're doing too much work outside of work hours.

(If you're worried about giving an app that much access to your data, you can read up on their privacy policy. They state upfront that your individual data will never be shared.)

Pricing: The lite version is free to use with 3 months of historical data. Premium ($6/month) comes with unlimited history and features like focus time distraction blocking, offline time tracking, real-time alerts, custom work hours, and more.

Get RescueTime

Toggl – For manual time tracking, especially if you work with clients

For the web, macOS, Windows, Linux, iOS & Android; Browser extensions for Chrome & Firefox

Sometimes automated time tracking can't tell you everything. For example, some time spent on Twitter can be considered productive and some time just isn't. Only you know the difference.

Toggl makes it easy to track your time based on your own categories to provide deeper insights into your productivity. For example, Doist's integrations developer Willian uses the categories "Deep Work" and "Shallow Work" to make sure he's spending enough time on the work that is most impactful. If you work with clients, the app gives you an accurate record of how much time you spent on which projects with detailed reports and dashboards. You can even assign a billable rate to each type of task you do.

While Toggl isn't automatic like RescueTime, it does make it as easy as possible to start a timer and categorize the tasks you work on so you know exactly where each minute goes. They have desktop and mobile and plugins for browsers plus integrations with hundreds of other apps (including Todoist!) so you can start and stop your timer anywhere.

Toggl can be useful for anyone who wants more detailed insights into how they spend their time, but if you do client work it's a must-have for your productivity stack.

Pricing: Toggl’s basic time tracking features are free to use. The starter plan ($10/month) adds features like client reporting and revenue tracking. The premium plan ($20/month) adds even more features for helping a team stay on top of their time tracking.

Get Toggl

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Calendar and scheduling

While you can get by with your system's default calendar, Apple's and Windows’ Calendar apps both leave a lot to be desired. Adding events in both apps can be clunky and time-consuming, especially on your phone. Meanwhile Google Calendar doesn't even have a dedicated desktop app so you have to access it via the web when you're on your computer. All are lacking a lot of handy scheduling functionality that's hard to live without once you've experienced it.

That's why we think a 3rd-party calendar app and/or standalone scheduling apps are essentials in any productivity stack.

Here's what we recommend:

Woven – For a combined calendar and scheduling app

For the web, macOS, Windows, & iOS

The Woven team expects to have their native Android app out in late 2019.

Woven is a new app built by a team of ex-Facebook employees. It's technically still in beta, but its beautiful design and smart scheduling features have already won over Doist's Founder and CEO Amir who recommends the app wholeheartedly.

Woven describes itself as a "smarter calendar". The app tells you if you're free or already busy when you schedule a new event, takes travel time into account when you schedule things, and lets you share your availability with anyone. Event templates make it fast to schedule things you do often like coffee dates or interviews. I especially like how Woven uses little design details that subtly remind you to spend your finite time wisely. Your off-work hours are greyed out which makes your work hours feel much shorter and more bounded. The monthly view gives you a visual summary of how much of your time you've already scheduled each day (and whether you have any scheduling conflicts).

But it's in the integrated scheduling features where Woven really shines. The app lets you create scheduling links to share so others can grab a time slot on your calendar based on your specified availability. You can also create group polls to find a time slot that works for the most people, then simply click to add it to everyone's calendars. (The people you share links and group polls with don't have to be Woven users themselves.) There's no app out there that packs this much scheduling power directly inside a beautifully designed calendar app in it's own right.

Pricing: The app is still in beta and all its features are currently free to use. The company says it will add more advanced scheduling features in a paid version later on.

Get Woven

Fantastical – A beautiful alternative calendar for Apple users

For iPhone, iPad, macOS, & Apple Watch

If you're committed to the Apple ecosystem, don't need additional scheduling features, and don't mind paying a premium for clean UI and fast UX, you'll want to look into Fantastical. The natural language input makes it fast and easy to enter new events and the app takes full advantage of macOS's native features like a handy Today widget. Fantastical also lets you set reminders, syncs with all of your other calendars (Google, Apple, Outlook, etc), and has delightful animations to boot.

Fantastical is a favorite with the Mac users on our team, but it's one of the most expensive options out there and you'll have to pay separately for the Mac, iPhone, and iPad apps.

Pricing: Fantastical recently switched to freemium pricing. You can use a basic version of the app for free, but to access full features (including their Todoist integration) you'll have to subscribe. They offer a monthly subscription for $4.99/mo or a yearly subscription for $3.33/mo.

Get Fantastical

Calendly – For letting others schedule time with you or your team

For the web

Whether you're a hiring manager, sales rep, freelance designer, lawyer, personal trainer, or tarot card reader, if you meet with people for a living, scheduling is one activity you need to automate. No one does automated scheduling quite as seamlessly and robustly as Calendly.

The app lets you set your availability, then create an event link you can share directly or add on your website so others can schedule a meeting with you. You can choose to be notified when new meetings are booked and those meetings will automatically be added to the calendar of your choice via integrations with Google, Outlook, Office 365 and iCloud calendars.

You can even set up automatic reminders for the people you're meeting with so they don't forget to show up. And if you work on a team, Calendly can assign a requested appointment to the person with the most availability.

If you're already happy with your calendar app and your livelihood depends on scheduling times to meet with people, Calendly is an essential addition to your productivity stack.

Pricing: Calendly offers a trial of all of its basic features for 14 days, and has a basic free plan. The premium plan ($8/user/month) includes features like two calendars per user, pooled availability options for teams, and integrations with other apps like Zapier and Salesforce. The pro plan ($12/user/month) includes six calendars per user, SMS notifications, and integrations with even more apps, like Paypal and Google Analytics.

Get Calendly

Doodle – For finding a meeting time that works for everyone

For the web, iOS, & Android

Doodle provides a straightforward and focused experience for finding a time that works for everyone.

Create an event, propose several time slots, then share the link with participants so they can vote on which times work best for them, which times they're definitely unavailable for, and which times they could make work if they have to.

If you're perfectly happy with the calendar app you use and don't want to switch to something with group scheduling built in (like our calendar pick above), Doodle is a great standalone app to have in your back pocket for easy group scheduling.

Pricing: Doodle offers a free 14-day trial for each of its plans, a starter plan ($4/month) for one user, a pro plan ($6/month) for one user with additional features like custom logo and branding, a team plan ($30/month) for five users that includes priority support, and a customized enterprise plan for larger organizations.

Get Doodle

World Clock Meeting Planner – For scheduling across time zones

For the web

If you often meet with people in different time zones, knowing which time slots to suggest can be a struggle. This quick and easy web app lets you compare several cities side-by-side and visualize overlapping work hours.

Just go to the website, select the cities you want to compare times for, and see which times are green (or at least yellow) for everyone.

From our experience on a remote team of 67 people spread across the world from Australia to Barcelona to Seattle, we highly recommend World Clock Meeting Planner for taking the headaches and guesswork out of cross-time zone meetings.

Pricing: Free, but there are ads.

Go to the World Clock Meeting Planner

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Task management

The centerpiece of any productivity stack is a task management app that makes it easy to get tasks out of your head and organized in a way that makes it clear what you should be working on when.

Todoist – For keeping your tasks & projects organized

For the web, iOS, Android, macOS, and Windows; Browser extension for Chrome, Firefox, & Safari

In the interest of transparency, Doist is the company behind Todoist so we may be biased, but The Verge agrees that it’s the best digital task manager out there right now. Here’s how their Silicon Valley Editor Casey Newton describes the app:

Todoist makes it easy to go as simple or as complex as you want. It organizes your tasks into three useful tabs: Inbox, for stuff you haven’t yet processed; Today, for things due today; and Next 7 Days, for the week ahead. Most weeks, that’s all I need to stay on top of my tasks. I’ll tap out something like “finish review for Dan Tuesday,” and Todoist will put a task labeled “finish review for Dan” and remind me about it before my deadline. It takes all of one second, and the reminders are way more effective for me than relying on pen and paper.

But to-do apps can also be places to dream big, too. That’s why I appreciate Todoist’s simple but effective project view, for organizing anything that involves multiple tasks. When I’m planning something more complicated, I’ll pull up Todoist’s app for Mac — there’s one for Windows, too — and think through my project on the larger screen. It’s also a good place to add comments or file attachments to individual tasks, or to set custom reminders for each step.

Todoist is simple to use, but has a lot of advanced organizational features “under the hood” that power users love, like custom filters and labels, project sections and sub-tasks, project sharing and collaboration, and integrations with apps like Google Calendar and smart assistants like Siri. We’re also committed to being truly cross-platform with apps for iOS, Android, Mac, and Windows and plug-ins for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Gmail, and Outlook.

Pricing: Free, but the premium version ($3/month billed annually) will give you access to advanced features like reminders, task comments and file uploads, project templates, calendar feeds, and more. A business version ($5/user/month billed annually) will give you an additional admin panel to manage team members, team billing, a team inbox, and increased project limits.

Get Todoist

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Reading & learning

There's a reason why people like Warren Buffet, Bill Gates, and Oprah Winfrey reserve so much time in their schedules for reading and learning. Expanding your knowledge and exposing yourself to new ideas is one of the best investments you can make for your productivity. Here are the apps we recommend to make the time for learning in your life:

Kindle for iPhone/Android – For reading books instead of browsing social media

For iOS, Android, Mac, and PC

How many times have you found yourself standing in line at the grocery store or waiting for an appointment and you reflexively pull out your phone to browse Instagram or Reddit? It's a habit that's hard to break. But the best way to break a bad habit is to replace it with something you actually want to do.

Whenever you find yourself bored and reflexively reaching for your phone, open the Kindle app instead of Twitter and make reading books a habit that already fits right into your day.

The Kindle app gives you access to a world's worth of books in your pocket and lets you customize the font, text size, background color and more so you can read exactly the way you want to. (Dark mode for night-time reading is a lifesaver!) It syncs across your devices so you can pick up on your Kindle device or computer where you left off on your phone and vice versa. You can even share e-books with your family (up to one adult and four children in your Amazon Household).

Pricing: The app is free, but you'll have to buy each e-book individually. Prices vary by book.

Get the Kindle apps

Audible – For listening to books

For Android, iOS, Mac OS X, Microsoft Windows, Kindle, and Windows Phone

Though listening to audiobooks may feel like "cheating" to some, listening to a book is better than never reading the book at all. People often find that when they switch to (or supplement with) audiobooks, they end up reading far more books than sticking to "true" reading alone. Listen while you commute, cook, do chores, or walk your dog. When I'm listening to a really good book, I actually find myself cleaning the house more often. 😅

Audible from Amazon will give you the biggest selection of audiobooks and lets you download titles to your device to play offline. The audio player is simple and straightforward with a few extra options like speeding the audio up (though reading at a more leisurely pace can actually help you retain more) and a sleep timer that automatically shuts off the app after a set number of minutes.

Pricing: The downside of Audible is the price. The $16/month membership comes with one credit for one "free" audiobook. After that, you can either buy individual audio books at full price (very expensive), or buy extra credits from Audible. It can add up fast.

Get Audible

Libby – For reading & listening to library books (for free!)

For iOS & Android

The on-demand convenience of Kindle and Audible can't be beat, but they can get pricey. There's another way to get every audiobook and e-book Amazon offers for free from a little old place called your local library. Most libraries now use a system called Overdrive to deliver e-books and audiobooks to borrowers. It used to be a terribly painful app to use, but they recently revamped the interface in a new app called Libby and it's a dream.

Libby makes it easy to browse, search for, and borrow e-books and audiobooks in addition to placing holds on physical books for pickup if you want to go old-school. However, depending on the popularity of the book and the number of licenses your library has, you may have to wait 18 weeks to listen to Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets and you'll only have access to it for a limited number of days before you have to "return" it.

If you manage your "on hold" queue right you can get a steady pipeline of books you want to read without much waiting around and you'll be supporting your local library in the process. Win-win.

Pricing: Free with your local library card

Get Libby

Pocket – For saving things to read later

For Android, BlackBerry, iOS, Kindle Fire, Kobo, macOS, web, & Windows

Of course, books aren't the only way to learn. The internet is full of interesting things to read once you filter through a lot of clickbait and noise. The important thing is to make your internet reading intentional. That's where Pocket becomes indispensable.

Simply put, Pocket lets you save articles from the web to read later. Instead of getting sucked into every interesting headline you come across, save it to Pocket and set aside a specific time block in your day or week to read through your Pocket queue. The articles you save are synced across all of your devices and you can access them anywhere, even offline. The app also has some additional social and content recommendation features like following other people’s reading lists.

Pocket is a deceptively simple app that has finally made it possible for me to do work online without going down a link-clicking rabbit hole. I can’t recommend their web browser extensions and mobile apps enough.

Pricing: Free to save, read, and tag items, but the premium version ($4.99/month or $49.99/year) gives you a permanent library of everything you’ve ever saved, full-text search, suggested tags, unlimited text highlighting, and more fonts.

Get Pocket

Feedly – For curating your own newsfeed

For the web, macOS, Windows, Linux, Android, iOS, & more

Better yet, instead of letting Facebook or Twitter algorithms determine the content you see in the first place, complement Pocket with an RSS feed reader to take back control over your newsfeed.

To be perfectly honest, I don't know what RSS stands for and I'm not entirely sure what an RSS feed technically is. What I do know is that most blogs and publications on the internet have one that gets updated every time they publish a new piece of content. An RSS feed reader lets you subscribe to those publication-specific feeds so you can stay up-to-date on all the publications you care about in one place. In short, it's the most efficient way to stay on top of everything you care about on the internet.

When it comes to RSS feed readers, Feedly's experience is top notch. Their apps (on every platform) make it easy to find and subscribe to new feeds, browse what's new in those feeds, and read things inside the app in a minimalist, distraction-free format. You can organize feeds into bigger topic streams like "Tech News" or "Fitness", and save articles to read later inside Feedly itself or use their integration to save it to Pocket to keep your whole reading queue in one place.

Get Feedly and be the person everyone wonders how they manage to stay on top of so much information with only 24 hours in the day.

Pricing: Feedly offers a basic free plan; a pro plan ($5.41/month) that includes unlimited feeds and the ability to perform “power searches” and share to other apps like Pocket; and a teams plan ($18/user/month) that offers shared feeds, boards, and other team features.

Get Feedly

PocketCasts – For staying up-to-date on all your podcasts

For the web, macOS, Windows, Chrome OS, iOS, Android, & more; Browser extensions for Chrome, Firefox, Safari, & Opera

Of course, no discussion of digital learning in 2020 would be complete without podcasts. Whether you're listening to a story-driven NPR production, catching up on the latest news, or listening to a conversation between two of your favorite experts, podcasts open up a whole new world of knowledge with a much lower time commitment than a book.

For a truly cross-platform app that lets you stay on top of all your favorite podcasts and discover new ones, you can't do better than PocketCasts.

PocketCasts is beautifully designed, feature-packed, and delightful to use. The Podcasts tab offers a gorgeous grid layout that shows you all the covers of the podcasts you've subscribed to while the Discover tab serves up currently trending podcasts and lets you browse by topic. A nifty Filters tab lets you build custom episode lists including new releases you haven't listened to yet, all the episodes you have in progress, all your starred episodes, all your downloaded episodes, and more. The app also gives you full control over which episodes get downloaded and let's you turn on auto-download just for specific filters so you won't have a bunch of episodes you don't plan on listening to taking up space in your phone's memory. In addition, you can add individual episodes to an Up Next queue that automatically plays when you finish an episode. As an extra little bonus, PocketCasts comes with a fun stats tab that shows you the number of minutes you've listened to.

If you already use Spotify, you can now listen to podcasts there too, but the free version of PocketCasts is such a delight to use that I still recommend adding it as a standalone podcasts app in your productivity stack.

Pricing: All the essential features are free to use on iOS and Android, but the paid version will get you access to the web player, Mac, and Windows apps plus more color themes beyond just "light" and "dark". You can choose to pay either $0.99/month or $9.99/year.

Get PocketCasts

Coursera – For going back to school

For web, iOS, & Android

Books and podcasts are great sources of knowledge, but if you're looking for a deep-dive into a specific topic or want to learn a new skill you'll want to look into a more structured online course. For breadth of topics, quality of education, and best value for price, we recommend Coursera.

Coursera gives you access to on-demand courses on topics ranging from data science to history to antibiotics stewardship (whatever that means) from the world's best universities and companies – places like Yale, Stanford, Georgia Tech, Google, and IBM. Class content includes pre-recorded videos, quizzes, and projects and can be accessed from the web or your phone with apps for both Android and iOS. The vast majority of courses are free to audit, but if you want graded assignments or a course certificate at the end you'll have to pay.

Here are three of Coursera's most popular courses to get started:

Pricing: Courses are mostly free to audit but if you want course certificates and graded assignments, you’ll have to pay a fee per course (usually $49). You can also subscribe to a specialization (usually 5-10 classes) and pay monthly ($39-$79) for access to all the classes until you complete the specialization. Some specializations let you pay a one-time fee for access. Whole degrees vary in price but can be in the thousands of dollars.

Get Coursera

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Note Taking

Learning is one thing. Remembering the things you learn and finding that information when you need it again later is a whole other story. A good notes app makes it easy to organize (and search for!) your notes, learnings, musings, brainstormings, and media saved from around the web.. Here's what we recommend:

Notion – For creating your own personal wiki

For iOS, Android, macOS, & Windows; extensions for Chrome and Firefox

Notion is the hot new notes app on the marketplace and for good reason. The app is a virtual Swiss Army knife of organizational tools.

Notes are organized into broad categories on the left with nested hierarchies. Alongside minimally formatted text, you can visually add and display 30+ different types of media including images, videos, and link snippets alongside objects like checklists, to-do lists, Kanban-style boards, calendars, spreadsheets, and more. Notes can all be cross-referenced to build a complete, searchable wiki, for personal use or with a team. The app syncs across desktop and mobile with apps for Mac, Windows, Android, and iOS. And of course, no notes app would be complete without a web clipper for both Firefox and Chrome.

Doist’s Growth Marketer, Hugo, relies on Notion to keep his thoughts, ideas, and projects organized:

Notion is my main place for thinking with words, jotting down ideas, consolidating my learnings, and keeping all of that quite organized. I also use it for personal projects like: what I need to think about for my sister's wedding ceremony, tracking my Doist perks, or keeping an overview of revenues/expenses for finances (with tables), books I read (with a gallery), and sometimes bookmarking things I've read for later reference.

The sheer number of features and the infinite flexibility of Notion can make getting started feel daunting.But once you learn the ins and outs, it becomes clear that it's the most powerful notes app out there for organizing and visualizing information exactly the way you want it.

Pricing: Notion is free to use with limits on storage, and various paid plans — individual ($4/month), team ($8/user/month), & enterprise ($20/user/month) — give you unlimited storage and version history along with other features.

Get Notion

Bear – A notes & writing app for Apple users

For macOS & iOS

The Bear app is a crossover between a notes app and a writing app. The beautiful, minimalist writing experience is a joy to compose in and content can be exported into various formats to use elsewhere. Cross-link notes to build a body of work and use hashtags for flexible organization. If you're an Apple user who loves a minimal writing environment and wants to keep journal entries, essays, or longer musings organized alongside their other notes, Bear is a great option.

Pricing: Free, but the pro version ($1.49/month or $14.00/year) lets you sync notes across devices, gives you more themes to choose from, and offers more export options.

Get Bear

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Focus

Time management and task management have been around for decades, but attention management may be an even more important skill to develop if you want to succeed (and stay sane) in the twenty-first century. The next group of recommended apps will help you curb the distractions of the internet and hone your ability to focus on high-value, cognitively demanding tasks that productivity expert Cal Newport calls "deep work".

Simple Interval Timer (iOS) or Interval Timer (Android) – For working in timed sprints

For iOS (Simple) or Android (Interval)

As their names suggest, these two simple mobile apps let you time intervals. Nothing more, nothing less. While they're technically designed for tabata and HIIT workouts, our Social Media Manager, Fadeke, has found that they're perfect for timing focused work sprints too:

Here’s a 10+ year practice that’s been very helpful to me: if you have a seemingly endless task to do, divide it into timed sections and get going using an interval timer. Very useful for studying (i.e. review 5 chapters for 30 minutes each with a 10 minute break between each) or writing (create a 20 part outline and devote 20 minutes to each section with a 5 minute break between each).

Putting a time limit on something will help you concentrate and force you to work quicker. You’ll likely go over the blocks of time or need more breaks that you plan for, but the mental exercise of adding arbitrary constraints is very helpful imo. Also helps you escape Parkinson's law where a first draft of blog post can take however long you want it to: 5 weeks or 5 hours. 👌🏾

Use Simple Interval Timer or Interval Timer to implement the Pomodoro time management technique (25-minute sprints with 5-minute breaks and a longer break after each set of four sprints) or tweak it to find the work:break ratio that works best for you. If you find you can't stay focused for 25-minutes, start with 15 or even 10. The ability to focus is like a muscle that you can build over time by stretching your sprint intervals just beyond what you could do yesterday.

Pricing: Simple Interval Timer for iOS is free, but for $2.99 you can remove ads. Interval Timer for Android is free, but there’s no way to remove ads.

Get Simple Interval Timer (iOS)

Get Interval Timer (Android)

Freedom – For blocking distracting sites/apps on all your devices

For iOS, Android, Mac, Windows, Chrome OS, and Linux; Browser extensions for Chrome, Firefox, and Opera

Today's apps and websites are intentionally designed to be addictive. For months after I deleted my Facebook account I would still find myself mindlessly typing "facebook" into my browser and landing on the page without ever having consciously decided to go there. Sometimes our bad internet habits are so strong that we need a little external enforcement to help us kick them for good (or at least during work hours). Enter Freedom.

The Freedom app blocks distracting apps and websites on your phone and computer so you can take back control over your time and attention. Choose specific sites and apps you want to block or choose websites to whitelist and block all the rest. You can even block the internet itself if you want to enforce offline time. Start a focused session whenever you want or schedule them out in advance. If you really feel you can't trust yourself, you can choose to enter Locked Mode that prevents you from ending a block session early. But the best thing about Freedom is that it syncs your blocked time across all your devices so you can't pick up your phone to browse Twitter if it's already blocked on your computer.

Install Freedom and take productive time back from the websites and apps that distract you most.

Pricing: The free trial will let you start 7 blocking sessions. After that, you’ll have to pay $2.42/month (billed annually) or you can opt for a one-time payment of $129 and have access forever.

Get Freedom

Forest – For a gamified way to break your phone addiction

For iOS & Android; plugin for Firefox

It feels odd in a list of app recommendations to recommend an app that stops you from using all the other apps, but that's the place in which society now finds itself. It turns out that just the presence of your phone literally makes you dumber, and yet we can't stop ourselves from picking it up to check our notifications. Fight that compulsion with the Forest app.

Forest is a sweet little mobile app that gamifies your attempts to curb your phone addiction. Instead of outright blocking distracting apps, Forest lets you plant and nurture little focus trees. When you want to focus on your work (or be more present at dinner with friends), you plant a tree. As you continue to focus on things that aren't your phone, your tree will grow. If you leave the app, your tree will wither and die. As you use the app over time, you'll grow a lush forest of focus trees.
Sometimes our failure to stay focused and be productive can feel really heavy. That's why I love Forest's fun and light-hearted approach to breaking our phone addiction. Plus when users spend virtual coins they earn in the app by staying focused, the Forest team donates money to plant real-life trees somewhere in the world. It just makes you feel all warm and fuzzy on the inside.

Pricing: The Android app is free to use, but the pro version (a one-time payment of $1.99) will let you plant real-life trees and adds some nice time tracking and social features to compete with friends. The iOS app costs a one-time payment of $1.99 to install and then offers additional in-app purchases for upgrades that help you get more virtual coin for each tree you plant. This is the only app I’ve seen that has a price discrepancy in pricing between the two app stores which I don’t love.

Get Forest

Spotify – For promoting focus through music

For iOS, Android, Mac, & Windows

Numerous studies have found a connection between certain kinds of music and productivity. But Doist's Social Media Manager, Fadeke, uses music a little differently to train herself to get into focused work mode:

My preferred way to use music for focused work is some form of Pavlovian conditioning:

Spotify is our go-to music app for a lot of reasons – they have an incredible amount of selection packaged in an intuitive interface on multiple platforms. Build out your own playlists or curate a "play next" queue as you go. Discover new music with tailored recommendations based on your tastes or browse Spotify's extensive playlist library built for everything from productivity to workout to party tracks. (Plus, they recently added podcasts so you can simplify consolidate your productivity stack even more (though I personally still love using our recommended podcast app PocketCasts).

You can find and play most of the music you could ever want for free, but if you want to download music onto your devices to play offline, you'll have to pay for the Premium version.

Find a Spotify productivity playlist or curate your own and use it as an environmental trigger for getting in the zone. (For cognitively demanding work, studies show that simple, down-beat music without lyrics boosts performance while upbeat, lyric-heavy music hinders it.)

Pricing: Free, but the premium version ($9.99/month) lets you download music to listen to offline, gets rid of ads, and gives you unlimited skips. A family version ($14.99/month) lets you add up to six listeners on the same account. As an added bonus, all paid plans come with a free Google Home Mini.

Get Spotify

Noisli – If you prefer background noise over music

For the web

If you're one of those people who works better with the background buzz of a coffee shop, Noisli is the app for you. The simple web app lets you mix your own background noise. Listen to a rainstorm in the forest, hear raindrops pattering in a coffee shop, enjoy a fire crackling in the wind, or combine them all if that's what feels right. Noisli also has recommended mixes depending on whether you want to be productive or relax.

Pricing: Free

Go to the Noisli app

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Lifestyle & habit tracking

This group of apps isn't traditionally thought of as "productivity" apps, but the habits that support a healthy lifestyle are even more important to your productivity than which task manager or notes app you use. Here are the apps we recommend for supporting a healthy lifestyle:

SleepCycle – For an alarm clock that tracks & improves your sleep

For iOS & Android

Sleep is the most productive activity you can do each day. But when things get busy, it’s often the first thing to go. That’s why we added SleepCycle to the list.

SleepCycle is an intelligent alarm clock that helps you understand and improve your sleeping habits. Using either your phone’s microphone or accelerometer (no additional hardware required), the app tracks your sleep stages throughout the night and wakes you up when you’re at the lightest possible sleep stage within the half hour before you’ve set your alarm. Instead of waking up groggy and disoriented from deep sleep disruption, you’ll start the day feeling refreshed and ready to get out of bed (or at least more so).

In addition, the app serves up neat stats on each night of sleep including how many hours you spent in bed, your overall sleep quality rating, and a graph to show how you moved through each sleep stage. You can use this information to set goals and discover correlations between the things that improve your sleep and the things that disrupt it.

As someone who usually hits their snooze ten times before finally dragging myself out of bed, I can attest to how effective SleepCycle’s smart alarm timing is at getting mornings off on the right foot.

Pricing: The free version gives you the smart alarm functionality and most sleep stats. The premium version ($29.99/year) lets you see long-term sleep trends, add sleep notes so you can see how different things (like alcohol or coffee) affect your sleep, wake up mood to see how different things affect how you feel when you wake up, and a new sleep aid that gives you bedtime stories and soundtracks to fall asleep to.

Get SleepCycle

Headspace – For starting a regular meditation practice

For the web, iOS, & Android

Meditation has been shown to relieve stress, control anxiety, improve sleep, and lengthen attention spans. But what does it even mean to meditate? How do you get started and how do you find the time in a busy day to sit and do nothing? Think of Headspace as an on-demand meditation guide to help you build your mindfulness practice.

Headspace gives you access to hundreds of guided meditation tracks right on your phone with themed sessions for everything from stress-relief to focus to sleep and even sports performance. Only have five minutes? Or even just one? The app has bite-sized meditations that fit into even the busiest of schedules. They’re perfect for fitting into breaks between timed work intervals. With integrations for Alexa and Google Assistant, you can start meditation sessions right from your smart home assistant.

Though the paid version can be a bit pricey, Headspace has the widest variety of high-quality guided meditations out there, conveniently organized around whatever goals you’re trying to achieve, and packaged in a beautiful, easy-to-use interface. We recommend it wholeheartedly for anyone starting out with their meditation practice or trying to get back on the bandwagon.

Pricing: You can download the app and get access to Basics meditation course for free, but after that you’ll have to pay for full access to the Headspace guided meditation library ($12.00/month or $69.99/year, which is a little less than $5.99 a month).

Get Headspace

Mealime – For simplified meal planning & grocery shopping

For iOS & Android

How you fuel your body has a huge impact on your overall physical and mental health which in turn determines your ability to focus, problem solve, and be creative. But the sheer amount of time and mental energy it takes to regularly put healthy, home-made food on the table can be overwhelming. That’s why we recommend Mealime.

Mealime takes the stress out of preparing healthy food with tools that streamline meal planning, grocery shopping, and cooking. Get hundreds of recommended recipes that fit your dietary preferences (vegetarian, vegan, paleo, low-carb, keto, whatever). Select the ones you want to make this week and Mealime will automatically create your grocery list for a whole week’s worth of meals conveniently split out into categories to make your trip to the store as efficient as possible. Or you can import the list to your Amazon Fresh or Instacart account and have the groceries delivered. All the recipes are very straightforward to follow (though their ~30 minute cooking estimates are rather optimistic) and all of the ones I’ve tried have been delicious.

For healthy meal prep that doesn’t require you to sacrifice half of every weekend, get Mealime.

Pricing: Free but the paid version ($6/month) will get you access to additional recipes and extra nutritional information if you want to keep track of calories or macros.

Get Mealime

Streaks (for iOS) or Loop (for Android) – For building strong habits

For iOS or Android

Whether it's writing 1,000 words a day or getting to bed at the same time every night, good habits are the building blocks of productivity. A good habit tracker will help you build positive habits.

Streaks, our pick for iOS, harnesses the power of "The Jerry Seinfeld Method", also known as "Don't Break the Chain", by encouraging users to take daily action and not skip a day of working towards their goals and habits.

The app will help you build consistency with built-in statistics that showcase your longest streaks, number of successful days, and your most productive time of day and day of the week. Streaks finds a way to effectively gamify habits. The longer your streak the higher your score. Miss a day and your streak resets to zero. You can also use Streaks to break bad habits, like smoking or drinking soda. It’s clean and simple design earned the app an Apple Design Award in 2016.

Our pick for Android, Loop, offers many of the same features as Streaks – custom habit tracking, beautiful graphs and stats, streak-building, reminders, and more. However, Loop offers a bit more flexibility than Streaks when it comes to not breaking the chain. The app calculates a strength score for each of your habits so it doesn’t feel like the end of the world if you miss a day or two in a long habit streak. The app also allows you to track habits with flexible schedules like going to the gym every Monday, Wednesday, and Friday.

Use Streaks or Loop to track all your habits in one place – walk 10,000 steps, 2 coffees/day maximum, flossing your teeth – and stay motivated as you work towards a healthier and more productive lifestyle.

Pricing: Streaks is $4.99 on the Apple App store and includes features like integrations with other apps and devices, like the Apple Health app, to input extra data about habit completion. Loop is free (no ads either) and open source.

Get Streaks (iOS)

Get Loop (Android)

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Utilities

These are the apps that work largely in the background to make the boring things you repeatedly do on your computer faster and easier. They're not as sexy as a new note-taking app, but they will save you a ton of time and headaches over the long-term. Here are the ones we recommend that everyone use:

Paste – For managing your clipboard

For Mac & iOS

Windows 10 already comes with clipboard history built in. Here's how to enable clipboard history on your computer.

We've all been there. You go to paste something you've copied only to realize you've already overwritten it with something else. The few seconds it takes to go back and re-copy the information you need might not seem like much, but compounded over time it can add up. That's where a clean and simple clipboard manager comes into play.

For Mac and iOS users, Paste is a beautifully designed app that keeps a history of everything you've ever copied to your clipboard – text, links, images, email addresses, etc. When you need to paste something that isn't just the last thing you copied, use the customizable keyboard shortcut command+shift+V to pull up your clipboard history and select the item you want to paste in. You can also organize clipped information you need often into specific "pinboards" (eg "Email replies" or "Code snippets") for easy access. Your clipboard history is saved in iCloud and syncs across all the devices you have Paste installed on – for example between your computer and your iPad or iPhone.

Pricing: The macOS app is a one-time payment of $14.99. The iOS app is free.

Get Paste

Grammarly – For spell check on steroids

Apps for Mac, Windows, & Microsoft Office; a keyboard app for iOS & Android; extensions for Firefox, Chrome, Edge, & Safari

You've seen the little red and green squiggly lines of automatic spell checks built into pretty much any piece of software that allows you to write content in it. But you haven't experienced the full power of spell check until you've used Grammarly.

Not only does Grammarly check for the usual grammar and spelling mistakes, it will also give you suggestions to improve style, tone, word choice, clarity, and readability to make all your writing inside Chrome “bold, clear, and mistake-free”. I write for a living and I still feel like I'm back in English class every time I use Grammarly to double check my writing.

Pricing: Free, but the premium version ($11.66/month billed annually) will give you more advanced corrections for grammar, punctuation, sentence structure, and style. There are also more expensive monthly and quarterly billing options.

Get Grammarly

Bitwarden – For managing your passwords

For Windows, macOS, Linux, Android, & iOS; Browser extensions for Chrome, Edge, Firefox, Opera, & Safari

Nothing kills your productivity like the hassle of dealing with a hacked account. Security experts recommend using a unique, randomly generated (i.e. impossible to guess) password for each of your accounts, but how are you supposed to remember all of them? That's why a password manager is one of, if not the most, important apps to have in your productivity arsenal. There are a lot of strong contenders out there, but we recommend Bitwarden.

Bitwarden is an open-source password manager that generates unique, random passwords for each new account you create and saves all of them in a secure vault accessed via one master password. It comes with apps for every platform and extensions for every browser you can think of so you can auto populate your login info on any website. And, unlike a lot of their competitors, Bitwarden syncs your passwords across all your devices with their free version.

If you're not already using a password manager, stop whatever you’re doing and download Bitwarden right now.

Pricing: Free version gets you all of the essential password management features plus cross-platform sync. You can also share passwords with one other person on the same account. A premium ($10/year) version gets you 1GB of encrypted file storage, 2-step login, password hygiene and health reports among other features.

There are also paid group plans for families (up to 5 users for $1/month), teams ($5/month, includes 5 users with an addition $2/user/month after that), and enterprise ($3/user/month) with more advanced features for managing and sharing passwords across groups. All of these prices are billed annually with more pricing options for monthly billing.

Get Bitwarden

Shift – For consolidating all your everyday web & desktop apps

For macOS & Windows

If you're anything like me, you likely spend a good chunk of your day shuffling through dozens of tabs and windows trying to find the app you need. Shift is the centralized workspace you need.

The Shift app brings all of your apps and accounts into one place and makes it easy to switch between them. That means no more logging in and logging out of accounts or bouncing between tabs in your browser. Here's what Doist's Head of Business Development, Chase, had to say about the app:

I’ve really enjoyed using Shift to consolidate the tools I use on a daily basis into one place. I have all my email accounts and g-suite tools easily accessible (calendar, sheets, docs, forms) and then other tools like Twist, Zendesk, Paper, Todoist, Intercom, etc that I’m in and out of all day, everyday.

Depending on the features you want access to, Shift can get pricey. But when I think about all of the time I waste in a typical workday just looking for the right app, the price becomes easy to justify.

Pricing: The free plan will let you add up to 2 accounts (eg, a personal Gmail and a work Gmail) and desktop notifications. The advanced plan ($99.99/year) adds in Google Services, Chrome extensions, and unified search among other features.

Get Shift

Zapier – For building your own custom workflows between apps

For the web

Your productivity stack and workflows are unique. Even with all of the integrations that modern software comes with, there are bound to be apps you wish worked together that just don't. That's why we recommend Zapier for building your own custom app integrations and automatic workflows – no coding required.

In simple terms, Zapier lets you automate actions between apps. Choose a trigger – for example, whenever you receive an email in Gmail – then select a subsequent action – save any attachments in Google Drive. That "zap", as they call it, will then run automatically in the background without any extra effort required on your part.

One-to-one app connections like that are free, but the paid version gives you the power to daisy chain several actions across multiple apps. To continue with the above example, you could extend the zap to add a task to Todoist to review the new document in Google Drive with a link right to the document so you won't waste any time.

Once you get the hang of setting up zaps, you'll find all sorts of repetitive things you do every day that you can automate away. Here are some of Zapier's most popular zaps to get started with and here are 20+ zaps you can set up with Todoist.

Pricing: Zapier offers a free plan with 100 tasks per month, a starter plan ($19.99/month) with 750 tasks per month, a professional plan ($49/month) with 2,000 tasks/month, a team plan ($299/month), and a company plan ($599/month).

Get Zapier

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Collaboration

Depending on others to get your work done adds a whole other, messy dimension to productivity. These are the apps our fully remote team, Doist, relies on every day to help ease the burden of communication and help keep everyone on the same page:

Twist – For keeping your team in sync asynchronously

For iOS, macOS, Android, Windows, Linux, & the web

Full disclosure, Twist is a team communication app we built ourselves so we may be biased, but there's a reason we decided to build something new in the crowded space of team communication software.

Rather than a chat-based model like most team communication apps on the market, Twist is threads-based. That means each conversation stays focused on a specific topic rather than bouncing around from one thing to the next and back again. Think more public forum than group chat. With topic-focused threads, it's easy to find the conversation you're looking for days, weeks, or even years later. You can search for any topic and reference whole conversations with a single link. And because conversations stay organized by topic, communication can happen more asynchronously (rather than in real-time). People can jump in an hour or even a day later and still catch up on and contribute to the same discussion. This type of async communication makes it possible for people to disconnect to focus on "deep work" and circumvents time zone issues if you collaborate remotely.

Twist's calmer, more organized model of communication isn't for every team, but if chat apps like Slack or Microsoft Teams have felt too chaotic, disorganized, and time-consuming for you, Twist is worth checking out as a true alternative.

Pricing: Twist offers a free plan that gives users access to one month of messages, 5 integrations, and 5 gigabytes of data storage. The unlimited plan ($5/user/month) gives access to the full comments/messages history, unlimited integrations, and unlimited file storage. Organizations with over 200 employees should reach out to the customer team.

Get Twist

Zoom – For (close to) flawless video calls

For the web, iOS, & Android; Add-ons or extensions for Microsoft O365, Outlook PC/Mac, Gmail, Firefox, Chrome, & Safari

While our team communicates asynchronously in Twist 75% of the time, sometimes you need to talk things out in real-time. But video calls come with their own set of technical challenges. Nothing kills team productivity like connection issues on a video call. That's why our team relies on Zoom for any meetings over ~3 people.

The best thing about Zoom is that it just works. We've experienced better video quality and fewer connection issues with Zoom than any other video chat software we've used (Skype, Google Meet, etc), even for meetings with 12+ people. The video and connection quality paired with the Zoom's neat grid layout option is as close to being in a room with your colleagues as you can get when you're thousands of miles apart.

Pricing: Zoom’s plans increase in price based on number of hosts and participants. It offers a free plan, a pro plan ($14.99/month/host) that is recommended for small teams, a business plan ($19.99/month/host) for small and medium businesses, and an enterprise plan ($19.99/month/host) for larger businesses.

Get Zoom

CloudApp – For communicating visually

For Mac, Windows, iOS, and Chrome

If a picture's worth a thousand words then screencasts are worth at least two thousand. When you're trying to communicate efficiently, using visuals is key. That's where CloudApp comes in.

CloudApp makes it easy to create screenshots, screen recordings, webcam recordings, and gifs to share with anyone. At Doist, we use it on a daily basis to report bugs, request design changes, clarify the intended behavior in an app, share updates on new things we're working on, give feedback, and more. You can record audio and add annotations to make whatever you're communicating crystal clear. Unlike a screen share on a video call, everything is recorded and shared with the team (for us, that's usually in Twist) so everyone can find the visuals and go back to reference them when needed later.

CloudApp eliminates back-and-forths and helps ensure everyone is on the same page, something that's particularly important if your team is remote and/or operates asynchronously.

Pricing: Cloud offers a free plan for an individual user, a pro plan ($9/month) for an individual user that offers unlimited video recording and enhanced editing, a team plan ($8/user/month), and an enterprise plan (need a quote).

Get CloudApp

Note

These are just 3 of the collaboration apps we rely on to stay connected and productive with 67 employees across 23 countries. For more, check out our complete remote team collaboration stack.

Becky Kane

Becky is editor and logophile-in-residence at Doist. You can find her trying not to take life too seriously. So far so good.

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