Recs.
Updated
SpecsUpdate
Pros
Pro Blocks offer incredible flexibility
The basic unit of organization in Notion is the block, which can be a chunk of text, an image, a bullet point, or even a link to another page. Each page consists of these blocks, which can be easily reorganized, moved to other pages, converted into other content types, or generally manipulated in many useful ways. Because of blocks, restructuring information in Notion is way easier than in any other wiki or notebook app.
Pro Does a great job with both notes and to-dos
To-dos in Notion aren't just dot point lists. You can drag and drop them into columns just like Trello (Kanban style), you can have sub-tasks, and you can easily mark things off as completed so they are no longer in your way. Notes are also powerful, with proper formatting and ways to manage and search for them, which makes it a great Evernote alternative.
Cons
Recommendations
Comments
Flagged Pros + Cons
Pro Free for students and educators
The cheapest tier, "personal" is free for students and educators, even if you originally signed up for a paid account.
Out of Date Pros + Cons
Con Free plan is quite limited
The free version has a limitation of creating only 1000 "blocks". A block is a section of text, although less can be used by using Shift+Enter to make a new line in a block instead of creating an entirely new block. Unlike before, deleting blocks/pages gives whatever space was used back on your quota.
Pro Imported data doesn't count towards block limit
Importing notes and so on from other services doesn't count towards the block limit on the free tier of Notion. This can also be done automatically for a range of services.
Con Paid version has only one expensive plan
No annual plans or something like this.