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The Best Project Management Software for 2022

We tested more than 25 project management apps to find the best ones to help teams of all sizes to keep projects on track and deliver results.

Our 10 Top Picks

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What Is Project Management Software?

Let's say you're building a house. It's a complex process, and some tasks must be done in a particular order. You cannot install windows if you haven't put up the walls yet. You probably have dozens of people working on the house, and you have to know which days they are available to pour the foundation, lay the tile, and so forth. Then you have to schedule them based not only on their availability, but also on each task happening in the right order. The way to manage a complex project like this one, including all the jobs that need to be done by whom and when, is to use project management software.

Project management software is a type of online collaborative app. All the people who are working on a project log in and see what they're supposed to do and when. These workers also record their progress on those tasks and add relevant details, such as notes about any changes. With the appropriate permission level, people can also see what everyone else is doing, what requirements must be met for them to get it done, and when.

For the person or people managing the project, the project management app provides a clear overview of the project and its health. Are all the tasks on track to be completed on time? If one task is late, how does it affect the projected deadlines of other tasks? Is someone available to pick up an urgent task if the person assigned to do it is ill? Plus, if the project management app supports tracking finances, the app will also tell the people in charge whether the project is running on budget.


How We Choose the Best Project Management Apps

For this roundup of the best project management apps, we evaluated and tested more than 25 project management platforms and have included here the products with the highest scores. Inclusion is based on PCMag's independent testing and evaluation. In determining scores, we consider the needs of a variety of business types, including small businesses on a budget and large organizations that need to manage many projects, people, and budgets simultaneously.

For this category, we stick to traditional project management apps only. These apps are specifically created to manage projects, rather than ongoing work. A project is a set of work with a start date, an end date, and a deliverable.

Gantt chart view in Zoho Projects
Zoho Projects' Gantt chart view

To be included in this roundup, the app must offer Gantt charts, which is a type of timeline view that's commonly used in project management. All the apps included here also have other standard tools in addition to Gantt charts for tracking, organizing, and scheduling project-based work.

There are many other excellent collaboration apps that sometimes get called "project management apps," such as Trello, Basecamp, and Airtable. While some collaboration or work-management apps are very capable at managing certain kinds of work, they aren't necessarily designed for juggling the complexities of dozens or hundreds of projects and their schedules simultaneously. Therefore, we don't include them here.


What Can You Do With a Project Management App?

Project management apps let you track and manage nearly any kind of project, such as the creation of a new product, building a house or website, or launching a marketing campaign. Teams that use project management apps typically track more than one project at a time. The software helps them figure out when to schedule work based on when things need to get done and the human resources available to do them.

The very best project management apps detect problems before they happen. By tracking the progress of work and individual tasks (for example, having completed six hours of a task that's estimated to take a total of eight hours), project management apps can sound an alarm when a deadline is in danger of slipping, but before it actually happens. The most powerful project management apps also offer to automatically reflow the project schedule when tasks do fall off course. They generate reports that give managers insight into which team members have too much or too little work assigned to them. Some let you track project budgets, too, and log billable hours so that you can send invoices to clients for time worked.

TeamGantt full view
TeamGantt's Gantt chart and workload view

The Best Free Project Management Software

A few of the best project management software systems have free versions. Usually, these free versions are severely limited in some way. For example, you might be allowed to manage only one or two projects at a time or invite only a handful of people to work alongside you. Plus, you usually don't get all the best features of the app in the free version. Still, if you have a small team and need to only manage one or two projects, it might work.

You can get a free account from Zoho Projects, Teamwork, Wrike, TeamGantt, ProofHub, plus a few others that did not make this list, such as AceProject

Redmine, which did make this list, is a 100-percent free project management app, but you have to install and maintain it yourself. It's not an off-the-shelf product, but rather an open-source alternative.

Teamwork dashboard
Teamwork's project management dashboard

The Best Project Management Apps for Small Businesses

If your team needs to manage and track a couple of projects, but you're less concerned with employee scheduling, collecting time sheets to bill clients, and comparing the progress of dozens of projects in development, a low-cost tool such as Zoho Projects (starting at $5 per person per month for Premium) is the best bet. What we especially like about Zoho Projects is that it scales easily if your team ends up growing and needs more features. Zoho, the company, offers a wide range of other business apps that can connect to Zoho Projects to expand what you can do with it.

We also like GanttPRO as a low-cost option. It's one of the easiest tools to use and is great for people who have limited or no prior experience with project management.

There's no need to spend more than about $15 per person per month if you aren't going to use the tools that are unique to more expensive software, so stick with something low-cost.


The Best Project Management Apps for Large Organizations

Large organizations have starkly different needs than small businesses. Organizations with hundreds or thousands of employees and hundreds of projects use project management apps for scheduling, insights into their resources, budget-tracking, revenue projection, time-tracking for billing purposes, among other reasons.

For a large company, it's important to be able to manage not just individuals, but also teams. If you have 15 hours of work for a junior designer, and it doesn't matter which junior designer does it, you want to be able to see how much work each junior designer has assigned to them and whether you can free up one of them for the task.

For the same reason, all the managers and team leads in your company should be able to see what tasks are high priority and which projects are in danger of slipping so that they can triage accordingly.

If your organization handles complex projects and has many team members collaborating on projects, we recommend Celoxis or LiquidPlanner.

Wrike spaces new
Wrike's Inbox and Spaces view

The Best Project Management App With Special Features

Teams that aren't quite small businesses, but also aren't enormous organizations may have special needs that they want their project management software to address.

Our top pick in this category is Teamwork, which is specialized to handle client work. If your team primarily completes projects as billable work for clients, then Teamwork is the app we recommend using for managing your projects. It includes billing and invoicing, as well as the ability to create intake forms for new projects. Another app called Paymo, which didn't quite score highly enough for this roundup, also has built-in billing and invoicing tools.

There are other areas of specialization for project management software, of course. If you're looking for a tool that can manage both project and non-project work, we recommend Wrike or Celoxis. (LiquidPlanner is a good pick too, but it's best for large groups.) If your team spends a lot of time discussing and iterating visual assets, ProofHub is a great choice. Smartsheet is good for building automations into your project management. 


Choosing What's Best for Your Team

Choosing the right project management software can take time, but it's worth it to get it right before rolling it out to an entire team. Project management apps typically have a significant setup cost. Even when they are simple to learn to use and let you import data, it still takes time to fine-tune the app to do what you need it to do and then get everyone on board using it.

When deciding which app to use, it's important to consider what kind of work your team does, how many people are in the organization, and how you want to run your business. There are a lot of excellent options to fit every budget.

With a reliable project management app in place, people can collaborate with greater ease on project work. Plus, business owners and team managers can get useful insights into how their teams work, whether projects are on track, and how to guide them back to a successful place when they slip.

Our Picks
GanttPro
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Teamwork
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Zoho Projects
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Celoxis
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LiquidPlanner
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ProofHub
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Redmine
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Smartsheet
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TeamGantt
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Wrike
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Rating
Editors' Choice
4.5 Editor Review
Editors' Choice
4.5 Editor Review
Editors' Choice
4.5 Editor Review
Price Per Person Per Month
9.99 $12.50 $5 (Premium) $25 $45 $99 (Unlimited Users) Free $32 ~$11 $24.80
Storage Included at Price Listed
5GB 100GB 100GB 2GB per User 100GB 100GB N/A 100GB Unlimited 50GB
Free Version Available
Storage Space for Free Accounts
N/A 100MB 10MB N/A N/A 25 N/A N/A Unlimited 2GB
Number of Projects in Free Account
N/A 2 2 N/A N/A 1 Unlimited N/A 1 Unlimited
Dependencies
Gantt Charts
In-App Task Timer
Time Estimates
Markup Tools
Resource Management
Budgeting
Billing and Invoicing
Customizable Roles/Permissions
Guest/Client Access
Where to Buy
$9.99 Per Person Per Month
at GanttPRO
 
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Visit Site
at Teamwork
 
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$49.00
at Teamwork
 
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Free Trial
at Zoho Projects
 
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$5 Per User Per Month
at Zoho Projects
 
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Starts at $25 Per User Per Month
at Celoxis
 
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Compare Prices
at Software Advice
 
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Start Your Free Trial
at Liquid Planner
 
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Visit Site
at ProofHub
 
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Visit Site
at Redmine
 
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$19/Month
at Smartsheet
 
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Visit Site
at TeamGantt
 
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Compare Prices
at Software Advice
 
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Visit Site for Plans and Pricing
at Wrike
 
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$24.80 Per User Per Month
at Wrike
 
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About Jill Duffy

Jill Duffy

My Experience

I've been contributing to PCMag since 2011, at times as an analyst and columnist, and currently as deputy managing editor for the software team. My column, Get Organized, has been running on PCMag since 2012. It gives advice on how to manage all the devices, apps, digital photos, social networks, email, and other technology that can make you feel like you're going to have a panic attack.

My latest book is The Everything Guide to Remote Work, which goes into great detail about a subject that I've been covering as a writer and participating in personally since well before the COVID-19 pandemic.

I specialize in apps for productivity and collaboration, including project management software. I also test and analyze online learning services, particularly for learning languages.

While I only dabble in technology for health and fitness these days, I had the pleasure of writing a review of the original Fitbit Ultra and similar products that came after it.

Prior to working for PCMag, I was the managing editor of Game Developer magazine. I've also worked at the Association for Computing Machinery, The Examiner newspaper in San Francisco, and several other publications. My first job in publishing was copy editing peer-reviewed papers on chemical physics.

Follow me on Twitter @jilleduffy or get in touch via my contact page.

My Areas of Expertise

  • Remote work

  • Personal productivity and organization

  • Productivity software

  • Project management software

  • Collaboration software

  • Language-learning apps and software

  • Online learning

  • Fitness and consumer health apps

  • Wearable consumer technology (not medically necessary) for health and fitness

The Technology I Use

I put off buying new hardware until I've squeezed every last bit of usage out of the devices I already own. They include a 2011 iMac that's still kicking, a 2015 Macbook Pro, a 2017 Microsoft Surface, and a OnePlus 6. Recently, I upgraded my iPhone to the 2022 SE choosing that model solely because it has a physical home button. On my wrist I wear a Garmin Venu Sq. MyFitnessPal knows what I eat. A Garmin Index scale knows how much I weigh.

My life is organized by Todoist, my notes live in Joplin, and I prioritize my work tasks with Asana. Where would I be without Dashlane as my password manager? Probably locked out of all my many online accounts—I'm just shy of 1,000 of them. 

When I give out my contact information, it's an excruciatingly long list of phone numbers, messaging apps, and email addresses because it's important to stay flexible but also mysterious.

Read the latest from Jill Duffy