For whom is Akiflow the best choice?
If you mainly work behind your laptop and your workflow revolves around keyboard shortcuts, then Akiflow is truly built for you. The tool shines on desktop: you can manage almost everything with Command+K without touching your mouse. For people who process 50+ tasks daily and constantly switch between Slack, Gmail and their calendar, Akiflow feels like a breath of fresh air.
Also if you’re a consultant, freelancer or agency owner juggling multiple projects and billing based on time, then the price often justifies itself. The time-tracking is well integrated, and the fact that you can time-block all your appointments and tasks from one place truly saves hours per week. Especially if you’re used to keyboard-first working and you’re not bothered by the lack of a full-featured mobile experience.
Why would you look for an Akiflow alternative?
The price is the biggest obstacle for many. $ 15 to $ 30 per month for a task manager feels steep, especially if you use it privately or are just starting with time-blocking. Then you’re paying more than Spotify and Netflix combined for a tool you might only actively use an hour per day. If your budget is limited or you want to experiment first without a big investment, there are plenty of alternatives that offer 80% of the functionality for a fraction of the price.
The mobile app is another pain point. Akiflow is built as a desktop-first tool, and you notice that. On your phone you can check and add tasks, but actually planning or adjusting your day feels clunky. If you’re on the go a lot or want to prepare your next day on the couch in the evening, you’ll run into limitations. Additionally, some users miss AI automation: with Motion the tool plans your tasks itself based on deadlines and priority, while with Akiflow you have to time-block everything manually. That does give control, but also costs time and discipline.
Finally
Do you mainly want peace and overview? Look at Sunsama or Ellie Planner. Do you have an overly full agenda and want the tool to think for you? Then Motion is the better choice. For budget-conscious users who still want time-blocking: TickTick offers surprisingly much for little money. And do you work a lot mobile or visually? Then try Structured or Amie.
Personally I would go for Morgen if I want to maintain Akiflow’s speed but seek a better cross-platform experience. Or for TickTick if budget is the deciding factor. But it really depends on where you spend most of your time: behind your desk, in meetings, or on the go.












