Comparison

Monday.com vs Trello

Monday.com

Monday.com

4.5/5

View Monday.com →
VS
Trello

Trello

4.4/5

View Trello →
Quick verdict

For most teams, Trello is the better choice: cheaper, faster to learn, and the free plan is actually usable. Monday.com is for organizations that need complex workflows, extensive reporting, and cross-project dashboards.

AuthorBy Ruud Caris10 January 2026

Comparison at a glance

Feature
Monday.com
Trello
Free plan
Yes - max 2 users, 3 boards
Yes - max 10 users, 10 boards
Starting price
€9/month (min. 3 seats)
€5/month
Platforms
MacOS, Windows, Android, iOS, Web
MacOS, Windows, Android, iOS, Web
Views
Kanban, Gantt, Timeline, Table, Dashboard
Kanban, Timeline, Table, Calendar, Dashboard
Automation
Advanced, cross-board workflows
Butler - simpler, 250 commands free
Reporting
Extensive dashboards, multi-board data
Limited, Power-Ups needed
Time tracking
Yes - only in Pro plan (€19/month)
No - only via Power-Ups
Learning curve
Steeper - many options and configuration
Flat - immediately understandable
Integrations
Slack, Zoom, Gmail - from Standard
Power-Ups - Atlassian ecosystem
Mobile app
More limited than desktop
Better for Kanban, lacks functionality

Monday.com and Trello are both visual project management tools, but the similarity ends there. Monday.com is a Work OS platform with advanced automations and reporting. Trello remains a simple Kanban tool that you understand in five minutes. Which fits your way of working?

Monday.com in brief

Monday.com is a visual Work OS platform that helps teams plan and automate projects, workflows, and tasks. It offers many views: Kanban, Gantt, timelines, dashboards. You can customize columns to fit your own workflow and set up complex automations without code. Monday.com also has specific products for CRM and software development. The power lies in the flexibility and the ability to combine data from multiple boards into one dashboard. That makes it suitable for larger teams with complex projects.

Trello in brief

Trello organizes projects according to the Kanban method: boards with lists and cards that you drag back and forth. It’s built on simplicity. You create a board, add lists, and start dragging cards. Butler automation helps with repetitive tasks, and Power-Ups add extra functionality. Trello is part of the Atlassian ecosystem, which makes it convenient if you already use Jira or Confluence. The free version is usable for small teams and solo users.

Monday.com vs Trello: the differences

The biggest difference is in complexity. Trello is built on one concept: Kanban boards with cards. You drag tasks from left to right. That’s it. Monday.com offers many more views: Kanban, Gantt charts, timelines, tables, calendars. You can choose per board how you view the data. For teams that need different perspectives on the same project, that’s powerful. For teams that just want to check off tasks, it feels like overkill.

The automations also differ widely. Trello’s Butler lets you create simple rules: “If a card moves to ‘Done,’ send a notification.” Monday.com goes much further with dependencies between boards, status changes that trigger other tasks, and integrations that automatically synchronize data. Users often call Monday.com ‘Excel on steroids’ because of these capabilities. But that power also requires time to learn. Trello’s automation works immediately without a manual.

Reporting is another important difference. Monday.com has extensive dashboards where you combine data from multiple projects. You see progress, bottlenecks, and team capacity at a glance. Trello lacks this native reporting functionality. You need paid Power-Ups for even basic reports. For management that wants overview, that’s a dealbreaker. For teams that just want to get work done, it’s less relevant.

Then there’s the structure. Trello works with loose cards that you move freely. Monday.com works with rows in a database. That sounds technical, but it makes a big difference. In Trello, cards can quickly become chaotic when you have hundreds of tasks. In Monday.com, everything stays structured in columns with fixed data types. The new MondayDB infrastructure has improved speed on large projects. Still, Trello remains visually calmer for people who get easily overwhelmed by too much information.

Mobile work is possible on both platforms, but with limitations. Monday.com’s mobile app is often experienced as more limited compared to the desktop version. Complex dashboards and Gantt charts are difficult to read on a small screen. Trello’s cards fit better on mobile, but there too you miss functionality that is available on desktop.

Pricing compared

Both tools have a free plan, but with different limitations. Trello’s free version supports a maximum of 10 members per workspace, 10 boards, and 250 automation commands per month. For a solo user or small duo, that’s more than enough. Monday.com’s free plan limits you to 2 users and 3 boards, without integrations or automations. That’s mainly intended to test the tool.

With paid plans, the difference becomes larger. Trello starts at € 5 per month for the Standard plan (with annual subscription). Monday.com starts at € 9 per month for the Basic plan. But watch out: Monday.com charges per seat with a minimum of 3 users. That means you pay at least € 27 per month, even if there are only two of you. For freelancers and duos, that’s a major pain point.

Trello’s Premium plan costs € 10 per month and gives you unlimited boards, advanced automation, and more Power-Ups. Monday.com’s Standard plan (€ 12 per month per seat) adds timelines and integrations. For extensive features like time tracking, you need the Pro plan: € 19 per month per seat. Add up the minimum 3 seats, and you quickly reach € 57 per month.

Monday.com has also increased prices and split products into Work Management, CRM, and Dev. Want full functionality across these areas? Then you pay for multiple products. Trello has not implemented price increases in subscriptions, but has set the free collaborator limit. That forces growing teams into a paid plan faster.

Conclusion

Monday.com wins if you manage complex projects, need extensive reports, or work with larger teams. The automations are more powerful and the different views give you more control. But you pay for that functionality, both in money and in learning time.

Trello wins on simplicity and price. The free plan is usable for real projects, not just for a trial period. The Kanban interface works immediately without training. For solo users, small teams, and simple projects, it’s the logical choice. Also when budget is an important factor.

Most teams are better off with Trello if they simply want to organize tasks. Choose Monday.com if you value scalability, reports, and advanced workflows more than a low barrier to entry.

Which one fits you?

Choose Monday.com if you...

  • manage complex projects with dependencies
  • need extensive reporting and dashboards
  • work with larger teams (5+ people)
  • want to automate workflows across multiple projects
  • want CRM or development tools in the same platform

Choose Trello if you...

  • organize simple Kanban projects
  • find a low barrier to entry important
  • work solo or with a small team (up to 10 people)
  • are budget conscious and want a usable free plan
  • already use Atlassian tools like Jira or Confluence

Frequently asked questions

Can I switch from Monday.com to Trello for free?

Both tools have export functions, but there is no direct migration tool. You must manually rebuild boards in Trello. For small projects this takes a few hours, for large databases it can be days of work.

Does Trello work offline?

Trello has limited offline functionality in the mobile apps. You can view cards you previously loaded, but changes only sync when you're back online. Monday.com has similar limitations.

Can I use Monday.com with 2 people?

Technically yes, but you pay for at least 3 seats. The free plan supports 2 users but lacks integrations and automations. For serious work you therefore pay at least €27 per month.

Are Trello's automations sufficient?

For basic workflows like notifications, deadlines and card movements, yes. For complex scenarios with dependencies between projects or conditional logic, you'll fall short. Then Monday.com or a dedicated automation tool is needed.

Which tool is better for remote teams?

Both work well for remote collaboration with real-time updates and comment features. Monday.com has better reporting for management oversight. Trello is simpler for teams that aren't in the same tool daily.

Can I create Gantt charts in Trello?

Only via paid Power-Ups like Placker or TeamGantt. Monday.com has Gantt views built in natively from the Standard plan, although users experience them as somewhat limited compared to dedicated Gantt tools.

VS

Monday.com vs Trello