Comparison

7 Best Life Planning Apps in 2026 (An Honest Comparison)

By the Orbra team · Updated June 2026

There are hundreds of planning apps, and most comparisons of them are written by people who haven't used any. We make one of the apps on this list — so instead of pretending to be neutral, we'll be honest: about the others, and about ourselves. Each app below is genuinely the best choice for someone. The question is whether that someone is you.

How we judged them

A life planning app — as opposed to a to-do app — should help you do three things: decide what matters, structure your days and weeks around it, and review and adjust over time. We also weighed how each app makes you feel after a bad week, because that's when most people quit their systems.

1. Notion

Best for: builders who want total control

Notion isn't a planning app — it's a box of parts you can build a planning app from. If you enjoy building systems, it's unmatched: dashboards, databases, life-OS templates, all of it. The honest downside is that the building never quite ends. Many people spend more time perfecting their Notion setup than living the plan inside it. If tinkering energizes you, choose Notion. If tinkering is how you procrastinate, be careful.

2. Sunsama

Best for: professionals planning calm workdays

Sunsama is a beautifully made daily planner for knowledge workers. Its guided daily-planning ritual — pull in tasks, estimate time, end the day with a shutdown — is genuinely excellent. It's focused on the workday rather than the whole of life, and at around $16–20/month it's priced for people whose employer might pay. For work-life specifically, it's hard to beat.

3. Fabulous

Best for: people who want to be coached

Fabulous approaches life change through guided routines and behavioral-science journeys — wake-up rituals, hydration, exercise — with rich, colorful design. It tells you what to do, step by step, which some people find supportive and others find patronizing. It leans heavily on streaks and celebration animations. If you want a coach in your pocket, it's a strong pick. If you want a quiet system you direct yourself, it isn't.

4. Structured

Best for: visual day-timeline lovers

Structured turns your day into a single clean visual timeline — tasks and calendar events in one flow. It's elegant, fast, and genuinely pleasant to use. Its scope is deliberately narrow: it plans days, not lives. There's no real layer for deciding what your weeks or seasons are for. As a daily companion to a bigger system, it shines.

5. Todoist

Best for: pure task management

The most refined to-do list ever made. Natural-language entry, dependable sync, twenty years of polish. But a to-do list answers "what do I need to do?" — it has no opinion about "what is my life building toward?" Many Todoist power users keep an immaculate list of tasks serving priorities they never consciously chose. Superb tool, wrong category for life design.

6. ClickUp

Best for: people who want one tool for work and life

ClickUp is a heavyweight work-management platform that some people stretch into a life OS — docs, goals, tasks, dashboards. It can do almost anything, and it feels like it. The density that makes it powerful for teams makes it noisy for a personal life system. If you already live in ClickUp for work, extending it is pragmatic. If not, it's a lot of machine for the job.

The honest summary

Whatever you choose, remember the uncomfortable truth that applies to all seven: the app is the easy part. The framework — seeing clearly, choosing deliberately, building structure, reviewing honestly — is the work. Pick the tool that makes the work feel lightest to you.

Stop drifting. Start living by design.

Orbra is a calm Life Operating System — one place to design your life, plan your weeks, and see your money clearly.

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