
Monday.com leans on visual dashboards and fast adoption while ClickUp packs in more features per dollar—this guide breaks down their pricing, head-to-head capabilities, and ideal team fits.
Monday.com and ClickUp are two of the most popular platforms in the project management category, and they solve different problems well. Monday wins on visuals, ease of onboarding, and supervisor-friendly dashboards. It's almost always the better call when adoption speed and cross-team clarity matter more than feature count. ClickUp wins on features per dollar, customization, and built-in tools like docs, whiteboards, time tracking, and mind maps. It's built for power users who want one app to replace several. Neither was designed with Google Workspace at its center, for teams that live in Gmail, Google Calendar, and Drive, however.
Both Monday and ClickUp are category leaders with a lot of overlapping capabilities, but they have different centers of gravity. Monday calls itself a polished "Work OS." ClickUp calls itself "one app to replace them all." The pitch sounds similar but the way that they go about solving problems is different.
Most teams can do their work in either tool. The question you'll want to answer is what trade-offs you're willing to make. There are concessions to be taken in price, features, and the learning curve to get going.
The short version? ClickUp is cheaper regardless of what tier you're looking at. They also have a usable "Free Forever" plan that supports unlimited users. Monday's free plan is capped at two users. For most teams, that means you're going to be paying money from the very first time that you sign in.
But before you make your decision, let's look at seat structure:
ClickUp does charge (substantially) more for some of their additional features. For example, Brain is their AI feature and runs about $9/member/month on top of your base plan costs. Monday's play is to limit automation and integration counts by your plan tier. If your team is building critical workflows within the product you can expect to reach limits faster than you might have thought. All that said, annual billing saves between 20 and 25 percent on both platforms.
If money is the deciding factor then ClickUp is the obvious winner. But if your team needs to justify your purchase to leadership based on looks alone, Monday is the easier sell.
Both ship List, Board, Calendar, and Gantt/Timeline views. ClickUp goes further with 15+ options including Mind Map, Whiteboard, and Workload. Monday's views are more polished out of the box. ClickUp's are more configurable, but getting them to look that clean takes real setup time.
Monday has over 200 pre-built recipes that are reliable and easy to set up for most teams, with action limits that scale by tier. ClickUp's automations support more complex conditional logic and are more flexible overall, but users do report bugs and delays. Non-technical teams that just want things to run without babysitting tend to do better with Monday. If you're building something complicated with multiple branches and conditions, ClickUp has more room to work with.
Monday's dashboards are the gold standard here. Clean, presentation-ready, and easy to share with people who don't live in the tool every day. ClickUp's are more customizable but take more work to get looking that polished. If you're putting something in front of executives on a regular basis, Monday is the easier path.
ClickUp wins this one. Time tracking is included from the free plan up. Monday only offers it as a column type starting at the Pro tier, which is $19/seat/month. If your team bills hourly, that price difference matters a lot.
ClickUp ships native Docs, Whiteboards, Mind Maps, Chat, and Goals. The "replace your stack" pitch is genuine. These are real features, not afterthoughts. Monday integrates with other tools for most of this. monday docs exists, but it's not really the point of the product.
ClickUp connects to 1,000+ tools. Monday is closer to 200+, but those integrations are generally more polished and reliable. More integration bugs get reported on ClickUp's side. Both offer API access on higher tiers.
Monday AI is included in paid plans with limits by tier. ClickUp Brain is a paid add-on at $9/member/month. What you actually get from both is broadly similar — summaries, task generation, writing assistance. You're choosing between paying separately for it or having it bundled in, not between better or worse AI.
Monday is the easier sell to non-technical teams. Most users figure out where things are quickly and don't need much hand-holding to get productive. ClickUp's surface area is just larger. Plan for a week or two of ramp-up before a team is using it well. Power users tend to love it once they're there. Casual users sometimes find it overwhelming and never really get there.
A 5-person creative agency or early-stage startup ClickUp's free plan will give you most of the core features that you'll need. Monday's free plan caps at two users so you're going to shell out money immediately. That said, once you've paid, Monday's polish means that your shared boards will look better. ClickUp gives you more capability per dollar spent if you don't need client-facing presentations. So if you're budget constrained, go ClickUp. If presentation matters more than cost, Monday is your choice.
A 25-person marketing team at a 200-person SaaS company Campaign calendars and launch trackers in Monday are well built and the dashboards make reporting easy. ClickUp is the winner if your team also needs heavy time tracking or custom workflows that don't fit neatly into a box. Monday will be the answer for most marketing teams. ClickUp gets the nod when custom workflows and billable hours are the main drivers.
A 12-person product/engineering team inside a 3,000-person enterprise Sprint points, custom status messages, GitHub and GitLab integrations, and native docs fit the needs of most engineering workflows. Monday is good, but it's built more for business teams than for shipping software.
A 40-person professional services or consulting firm The bigger the team, the more important time tracking and custom dashboards will probably be for you. ClickUp handles those in spades. But Monday is worth your time if you want a more lightweight PM tool that also doubles as basic CRM or pipeline viewer. It's not as deep on time tracking, but it's a cleaner experience for mixed teams.
A cross-functional product launch coordinating marketing, product, sales, and support Monday gives you visual dashboards, owner accountability, and stakeholder-friendly views. It's built for this type of work. ClickUp can do the job, but you'll need to invest more in setup time to get it looking equally as clean to external stakeholders.
There is a specific type of team where GQueues is always a better fit than either Monday or ClickUp:
You're on Google Workspace. You want task management and not an operating system for your entire work life. You don't need 15 views, native whiteboards, or a built-in CRM. You are only interested in paying for what your team actually needs to use.
GQueues has the deepest native Google Workspace integration in the category. Gmail messages turn into tasks with a click. Tasks natively feed into your Google Calendar. Drive files get attached without leaving the queue. There isn't much of a learning curve because it fits into how you're already working. That makes most teams productive from day one.
GQueues isn't trying to be Monday or ClickUp. In fact, that's kind of the point. If you need all of those extra features then ClickUp or Monday will serve you better. GQueues is for teams that want to know who owns what and when it's due. No need to pay for other tools that you won't use anyway.
Yes. ClickUp's paid plans start at $7/seat/month versus Monday's $9/seat/month, and Monday has a three-seat minimum on all paid plans. ClickUp's free plan supports unlimited users. Monday's caps at two.
Monday.com, and it's not particularly close. Most teams are productive within a day. ClickUp typically takes a week or two before a team is using it efficiently. Power users tend to prefer ClickUp once they're past that curve, but getting there takes real time.
Depends on what you mean by better. Monday's automations are more polished and reliable for non-technical users. ClickUp's support more complex conditional logic but users occasionally hit bugs and delays. If you just want things to run, Monday. If you need complicated multi-step logic, ClickUp.
ClickUp. Time tracking is included from the Free plan up. Monday only offers it as a column type starting at the Pro tier ($19/seat/month), which is a meaningful gap for any team billing hourly.
Both can. Teams migrating from Asana for more features often choose ClickUp. Teams migrating for better polish and dashboards often choose Monday.
GQueues. Purpose-built for Google Workspace, with native Gmail, Calendar, and Drive integrations. It's also priced for smaller teams that don't need everything Monday and ClickUp are selling.
Monday.com and ClickUp are both capable work management tools that can help your team coordinate projects — and a whole lot more. But if you're using Google Workspace and are just looking for a central place to manage projects that won't take weeks or thousands of dollars to set up, give GQueues a look.