Notion

A flexible all-in-one workspace that blends documents, wikis, databases, and lightweight project management into a single block-based editor. Popular with startups, solo operators, and knowledge-heavy teams who want one tool instead of five.

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In This Guide

  1. Who Is Notion For?
  2. Blocks & the Editor
  3. Databases & Views
  4. Notion AI
  5. Collaboration & Templates
  6. Pricing & Plans

Who Is Notion For?

Notion is an all-in-one workspace that combines documents, wikis, databases, and lightweight project management in a single block-based interface. Instead of juggling Google Docs, Confluence, Airtable, and a simple task tracker, Notion asks you to put everything in one place and connect it with relations and links.

It's a strong fit for startups and small teams building a knowledge base from scratch. The flexibility to model docs, SOPs, meeting notes, a roadmap, and a lightweight task tracker in the same tool reduces the tool-sprawl that most early teams fall into.

It suits solo operators, writers, and researchers who want a single place for notes, research, reading lists, project tracking, and long-form drafts. The free personal plan is generous enough for individual use indefinitely.

It's a good fit for knowledge-heavy teams — consultancies, product teams, education, content operations — where a living wiki with structured databases is more valuable than a folder of flat documents.

Notion is less compelling for heavy engineering project management. Its task and roadmap views work for lightweight use but lack the depth of Jira, Linear, or ClickUp for sprints, issue tracking, and engineering workflows.

It's also less suited for real-time collaborative writing on very long documents, where Google Docs' comment and suggestion flow is still smoother, or for spreadsheet-heavy workflows where Google Sheets or Excel beat Notion's database views.

Blocks & the Editor

Notion's editor is built around the block, and almost every feature in the app is a composition of blocks you can rearrange, nest, or turn into something else.

The block editor is Notion's signature strength — it's flexible enough to build almost any kind of document, and the slash menu makes insertion fast once you've learned it.

Databases & Views

The feature that separates Notion from most document tools is its database system. A Notion database is a structured collection of pages with typed properties, which can be viewed as a table, board, calendar, timeline, gallery, or list.

Databases are what make Notion feel like a workspace rather than a note-taking app. They're also the steepest part of the learning curve — new users often build flat pages for months before discovering how much more Notion can do with databases.

Notion AI

Notion AI is a paid add-on that embeds generative AI across the editor, databases, and search.

Notion AI is most valuable as a workspace-aware assistant rather than a generic chatbot — the Q&A feature, backed by your own docs, is the feature that users tend to keep after the novelty wears off.

Collaboration & Templates

Notion's collaboration and template ecosystem is a big part of why it's become the default workspace at many startups.

The template ecosystem in particular means most new users never start from a blank page — there's a template for almost any workflow, and the cost of adopting one is just duplicating it.

Pricing & Plans

PlanFreePlusBusinessEnterprise
PriceFree~$10/user/mo~$18/user/moCustom
Collaborative workspaceLimited guestsUnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Page history7 days30 days90 daysUnlimited
File uploads5 MB limitUnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Private team spacesNoNoYesYes
SAML SSONoNoNoYes
Advanced audit logNoNoNoYes
Notion AI add-onAdd-onAdd-onAdd-onAdd-on

The free plan is genuinely usable for individuals and very small teams. Unlimited pages and blocks, a limited number of guest collaborators, and the full editor are included — the main limits are file upload size and page history.

Plus at ~$10/user/month removes upload and history limits and unlocks unlimited guests, which is the tier most small teams start on.

Business at ~$18/user/month adds private team spaces, bulk PDF exports, and advanced page analytics. It's aimed at mid-size teams that need to segment access.

Enterprise adds SAML SSO, SCIM provisioning, advanced audit logs, unlimited page history, and a dedicated customer success manager. Pricing is custom.

Notion AI is a separate add-on at roughly $10/user/month on top of whichever base plan you're on, and it has to be added for the whole workspace rather than per user.

Compared with specialised tools (Confluence for wikis, Airtable for databases, Jira for engineering) Notion is priced in the middle of the market and wins on breadth rather than depth. For teams who'd otherwise pay for three or four separate tools, consolidating onto Notion is often cheaper as well as simpler.

Notion

All-in-one workspace combining docs, databases, wikis, and lightweight project management. Popular with startups and knowledge-heavy teams who want one tool instead of five.

Open Notion →