The average professional manages 150 tasks per week across 6 different tools. I know because I counted mine. After a month of testing six AI task managers head-to-head, I ended up deleting three of them and keeping one. Here’s why.
What I tested and how
I ran all six tools simultaneously for 30 days. Same tasks, same calendar, same workload. I’m a freelancer juggling client work, personal projects, and the usual life admin. My bar was simple: does the AI in this app save me time, or does it just create more decisions to make?
The six: Todoist, TickTick, Motion, ClickUp Brain, Settl, and Sunsama. I used each one as my primary task manager for a full week, then kept the ones that earned a permanent spot.
Todoist: The one I kept
Todoist is the only task manager I’ve used consistently for more than a month without wanting to throw my phone across the room. The reason is boring but important: natural language input that actually works. Type “Finish the client proposal by Thursday at 3pm p1” and Todoist parses every element correctly. Date, time, priority, project. No other app does this with this accuracy, especially for complex patterns like “every second Thursday.”
In 2026, Todoist added two meaningful AI features. Todoist Assist breaks large tasks into subtasks and suggests scheduling based on your workload. Ramble, launched January 2026, converts voice notes into organized tasks using Google Gemini 2.5 Flash Live. It works in 38 languages and actually understands context, not just individual words. I used Ramble while walking my dog and came back with a fully organized task list for the week. That felt like magic.
Pricing: free tier with 5 projects, Pro at $5/month (billed annually) or $6/month monthly. The free tier is genuinely usable, which is rare. Check it out at todoist.com.
Motion: The scheduler that does the thinking for you
Motion does one thing that nobody else does well: it builds your schedule for you. You dump tasks into a list, set priorities and deadlines, and Motion’s AI fills your calendar automatically. When a meeting gets added or a task takes longer than expected, Motion reschedules everything dynamically. No manual dragging, no guilt about missed time blocks.
The auto-scheduling is genuinely impressive. I gave it 23 tasks for a week and Motion arranged them into realistic time blocks with breaks built in. When a client call ran 30 minutes over, Motion shifted three tasks to the next morning without me touching anything. That’s the kind of frictionless experience I want from AI.
So why isn’t Motion my primary tool? Price. At $19/user/month for the AI scheduling features, it’s steep for a solo worker. And the interface feels cramped on mobile. If you bill hourly and value every minute, Motion pays for itself. If you’re managing personal tasks alongside client work, it’s harder to justify.
TickTick: Habit tracker disguised as a task manager
TickTick does tasks fine. The natural language parsing is good, not Todoist-level but close. But where TickTick genuinely excels is habits. The habit tracking module lets you set recurring goals, track streaks, and see weekly completion rates. I used it to build a morning routine (journal, exercise, review tasks) and TickTick’s reminders and streaks kept me consistent for all 30 days. That’s more than any other app managed.
The built-in Pomodoro timer is another plus. Most people bounce between a task app and a timer app. TickTick eliminates that context switch. Start a Pomodoro on a task, and when it finishes, TickTick logs your focus time right there.
Pricing: free tier is decent, Premium at $35.99/year (roughly $3/month). That’s excellent value for what you get. The main downside: TickTick’s AI features are thin compared to Todoist and Motion. It has smart lists and natural language input, but no task breakdown, no voice-to-task, no auto-scheduling. If AI is your priority, TickTick is the wrong pick.
ClickUp Brain: Powerful, overwhelming, and expensive
ClickUp Brain is technically impressive. It can search across all your docs, tasks, and projects from one query. It generates task summaries, writes content, and integrates meeting notes directly into your workflow. If your entire team lives inside ClickUp, Brain makes sense.
But for a solo worker or small team, ClickUp is overkill in every dimension. The interface is dense. Settings live in five different places. And ClickUp Brain isn’t included in the base plan. You pay $7/user/month for ClickUp Unlimited, then another $9-28/user/month on top for AI features. At $28/user/month for “Everything AI,” you’re spending more than Todoist Pro and Motion combined, per person.
I lasted five days with ClickUp before the complexity fatigue set in. If you run a 20-person team with complex project dependencies, it might be worth it. For task management? There are better, cheaper options.
Settl: The underdog that surprised me
Settl is built by a solo developer who was tired of task managers that store tasks but never tell you what to work on. That premise resonated with me because that’s exactly my complaint about most tools. You open the app, see 47 tasks, and spend 10 minutes deciding what to do instead of actually doing anything.
Settl’s approach: you dump in your tasks, click “Plan My Day,” and the AI (powered by Claude) tells you what to focus on. It considers deadlines, priorities, and your available time. Six AI agents handle planning, scheduling, triage, and coaching. The interface is clean and minimal, which I appreciated after the ClickUp experience.
The catch: Settl is young. The Android app was buggy during my test. Calendar integration only works on the Plus plan. And at ₹299/month (roughly $3.50), it’s cheap but unproven. If you want a simple “tell me what to do” experience and don’t need advanced features, Settl is worth trying. If you need reliability and polish, wait.
Sunsama: The one I wanted to love but couldn’t
Sunsama has the best daily planning workflow I’ve seen. You pull tasks from multiple sources (Todoist, Gmail, Slack, Notion), drag them into a daily calendar, set time estimates, and Sunsama tracks your actual time vs planned time. The daily shutdown ritual, where you review what you accomplished and push unfinished work forward, is genuinely useful.
But $20/month for a daily planner felt steep for what amounts to a calendar wrapper around task lists. And the AI features are minimal compared to Todoist or Motion. Sunsama helps you plan better, but it doesn’t do much thinking for you. After a week, I realized I was doing the same manual planning I do in Google Calendar, just in a prettier interface.
Which AI task manager should you pick
After 30 days, here’s the honest breakdown:
| Tool | Best for | Price | AI strength | Verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Todoist | Individuals, freelancers, small teams | $5/mo Pro | Strong (Assist + Ramble) | Keep it |
| Motion | Busy professionals who bill hourly | $19/mo | Strong (auto-scheduling) | Worth it if you can afford it |
| TickTick | Habit builders, Pomodoro users | $36/yr | Weak (basic NLP only) | Great value, weak AI |
| ClickUp Brain | Large teams already in ClickUp | $7+$28/mo | Strong but bloated | Only if your team is all-in |
| Settl | People who want AI to decide for them | $3.50/mo | Moderate (Claude-powered) | Promising, early stage |
| Sunsama | Meticulous daily planners | $20/mo | Weak (mostly manual) | Beautiful but overpriced |
If you’re building AI-powered workflows and want a deeper look at how AI fits into productivity, check out our guide to AI time blocking apps. And if you’re using AI to build products, not just manage tasks, our vibe coding career guide covers the broader picture.
The reality: most “AI task managers” are regular task managers with a chatbot stapled on. Todoist and Motion are the exceptions. Todoist earned a permanent spot on my phone. Everything else got uninstalled.