Share this article

Improve this guide

Microsoft Planner vs Trello: Which Kanban Tool is Better?

Both tools are great, but for different needs

8 min. read

Published onOctober 2, 2024

published onOctober 2, 2024

Share this article

Improve this guide

Read our disclosure page to find out how can you help Windows Report sustain the editorial teamRead more

At first glance, it is hard to choose between Microsoft Planner and Trello, because they appear similar. Both are online Kanban tools that will help you enhance task and project management. However, there are key differences between them that should be considered when making a choice.

Ultimately, the best option depends on your specific needs, preferences, and workflow, as there is no universal solution for productivity software. If you’re struggling to decide between Trello and Microsoft Planner, remember that there are manyother excellent planner toolsavailable.

Microsoft Planner vs Trello comparison

Microsoft Planner vs Trello comparison

Let’s start with a first glance comparison to highlight the main differences between Microsoft Planner and Trello.

Read below to find our breakdown with the most important capabilities of the tools and the differences between them.

Trello is better adapted to the modern environments

From the start, you will notice that Trello is simply more fun to use. Dragging and dropping color coding, everything is easy to see in the planning board. You can customize the environment as much as you want and at some point, someone looking at your window might think you’re playing a management game.

If you’ve never seen a project management software, Trello comes with a lot of templates in many categories, so you almost never need to start from scratch. It also has an intuitive way to create boards and add tasks. Pressing Enter will just take you to the next logical step in making your lists quickly.

On the other hand, Planner is the office product you would expect from Microsoft. It doesn’t have too many customization options and you will not get so many templates. However, as we’ve highlighted in the table above, if you’ve ever worked with Microsoft Office products, you will definitely have a high learning curve with Planner as well.

The tool is very efficient and pretty easy to use, but its flexibility is not its strongest part. For instance, with Planner you can only add one checklist and 20 checkboxes for a task. It’s also not possible to tag team members inside comments. And, as we mentioned above, it’s very hard to add people that are not within your organization.

All these Planner drawbacks are not dealbreakers though because the Microsoft tool has othertalentswe’ll emphasize below.

Microsoft Planner is better with task management structuring

The main purpose of both Microsoft Planner and Trello is to manage tasks within a timeframe, assign tasks and monitor all those processes to get certain projects from start to completion in the most efficient way.

Of course, both do that seamlessly, but Microsoft Planner has a more organized and precise approach to the entire process.

Besides a Progress marker (Not started, In progress and Completed), in Planner you may also add priority levels to any task from low to urgent, which can definitely help you with the flow management of your project. Moreover, you can change priority at any time and move things forward if you feel you’re losing some traction with some tasks.

Also, integrating checklists within tasks, you will see exactly what is the status of a process.

Although Trello doesn’t have a priority tab or checklists, you can set up the important levels with color coding the tasks. You can also add Power-Ups to help you with that, but it implies using a third-party integration if you really need to.

Planner works best in Microsoft 365 environments

Larger organizations use Microsoft 365 for office and management and Planner is the more natural choice in this case. That is because Planner works flawlessly with Teams, and Office applications. Planner doesn’t have data management tools, but it can work directly with the data management tools from Microsoft.

You will have Gantt charts and dependencies, goal management and team workload tools right at your fingertips. Also, Planner allows the building of interconnected tasks and all that will help you see the bigger picture of any project.

In contrast, with Trello, you will need third-party integrations to achieve this. It is possible, because Trello supports over 200 app integrations to build your workflow. For instance, we have a guide on how tointegrate Slack with Trello. However, you will have to try some of them and choose wisely which one really helps and which one may actually work against you.

So, although Trello comes with a lot of freedom and flexibility, in may not be your cup of tea in some aspects.

Microsoft Planner vs. Trello pricing

If you have already Microsoft 365, you get Planner for free. However, the free version is pretty limited in terms of features. It is more oriented to users, not to actual project managers. For a medium to large organization, you will actually need to buy a Planner Plan that starts from $10 for user/month. That will unlock project goals, backlogs and sprints, premium plan templates, reports, a Timeline (Gantt) view, task dependencies, customization and integration.

The Microsoft Planner plans go up to $55 if you need enterprise resource management and allocation, and portfolio management. So, Planner doesn’t actually come for free, although you have a one month free testing period.

Trello has a free forever plan which includes a lot of features. You can build unlimited cards and you can include up to 10 boards on a workspace. You also get unlimited Power-Ups per board and unlimited storage as long as you don’t exceed 10 MB/file. However, it limits you to 250 workspace command runs per month.

If you need to go up to 1,000 command runs, you will need at least the Standard plan which is $5 per user/month. The next step is the $10 Premium plan which has unlimited command runs and Atlassian Intelligence (AI) which is an AI bot to help you running the project.

The conclusion here is that Trello is more affordable, and you can even use it for free if you’re managing small projects and teams.

Which one should I choose, Microsoft Planner or Trello?

This really depends on your project and organization needs. However, we can see two major usage demands that will recommend Microsoft Planner or Trello:

Trello is perfect if:

For more information, check ourreview on Trello.

Microsoft Planner is ideal if:

We have a helpful guide on how toget and use Microsoft Planner.

Conclusion

Both Microsoft Planner and Trello are great products with the same outcome: managing a project from start to finish. However, each one has slightly different approaches to the whole process and are fit for different needs.

While we recommend Planner for Windows environments and larger organizations, Trello can really be an excellent choice when you need more flexibility and work with outside collaborators. Both can be tested before buying so if you’re somewhere in the middle, we encourage you to do just that.

If you’re interested in finding thebest collaboration tools, click the highlighted list for some great options.

Let us know in the comments below which one did you choose and why.

More about the topics:project management software

Claudiu Andone

Windows Toubleshooting Expert

Oldtimer in the tech and science press, Claudiu is focused on whatever comes new from Microsoft.

His abrupt interest in computers started when he saw the first Home Computer as a kid. However, his passion for Windows and everything related became obvious when he became a sys admin in a computer science high school.

With 14 years of experience in writing about everything there is to know about science and technology, Claudiu also likes rock music, chilling in the garden, and Star Wars. May the force be with you, always!

User forum

0 messages

Sort by:LatestOldestMost Votes

Comment*

Name*

Email*

Commenting as.Not you?

Save information for future comments

Comment

Δ

Claudiu Andone

Windows Toubleshooting Expert

Oldtimer in the tech and science press, with 14 years of experience in writing on everything there is to know about science, technology, and Microsoft