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Notion, Airtable, and Monday.com are often compared as if they’re interchangeable project management tools. They’re not. They solve three different problems. Comparing them feature-by-feature misses the real differentiation.
Notion is a content platform. Airtable is a data platform. Monday is a workflow platform. Pick based on what your team primarily does, not on which has more features.
Notion excels at information organization. You have scattered documents, notes, procedures, knowledge. Notion collects it into one searchable place with cross-linking and hierarchy.
Notion scales well for teams under 15 people who primarily create, document, and consume information. Wiki, knowledge base, documentation, procedures, meeting notes—Notion handles all of this beautifully. A 10-person team using Notion as their internal knowledge system is efficient and effective.
Notion breaks at scale when your team size grows beyond 20-30 people and everyone needs access. Onboarding people to Notion structure is notoriously time-consuming. New hires spend days learning workspace organization, internal naming conventions, where to find things. Notion’s flexibility is a curse when you need standardization.
Notion also struggles with structured data and reporting. If you need to see “all open tasks assigned to Jeff across all projects, due in next 30 days,” Notion can do it but requires complex database views and filters. This simple query is what other tools do natively.
Airtable is a database disguised as a spreadsheet. You have structured data (contacts, projects, tasks, inventory) that needs to be queried, filtered, related. Airtable handles this beautifully.
Airtable scales well for teams doing data operations: CRM-like functions (tracking contacts, deals, interaction history), inventory management (tracking stock, locations, reorder points), project tracking (tasks with status, assignee, due date, dependencies).
Two key strengths: relationships between tables (contact has many deals, deal has many tasks) and automation (when field changes, trigger action). These are native to Airtable, not afterthoughts.
Airtable breaks when you need unstructured content or complex knowledge management. If you’re building an internal wiki or knowledge base, Airtable is terrible. Its grid view forces everything into rows and columns, which doesn’t work for hierarchical, interconnected content.
Airtable also breaks at very large scale (hundreds of thousands of records) due to pricing (you pay per base per month, and bases are roughly per “functional area” so large teams end up paying for 10+ bases). The UI also becomes sluggish with very large datasets.
Monday is built around work processes and team visibility. You have projects, tasks, dependencies, deadlines. Monday visualizes who’s doing what, when, with what status.
Monday scales well for teams managing complex workflows: client services (projects with tasks, client visibility, timelines), product development (features with dependencies, sprints, status tracking), operations (checklist-driven processes with accountability).
Monday’s strength is visibility and accountability. Every task is assigned, has a status, has a due date, and everyone sees it. This clarity drives accountability and reduces back-and-forth status checking. A team using Monday reduces “what’s the status on X” conversations by 50% because status is always visible.
Monday breaks when you need unstructured content, ad-hoc information storage, or complex data relationships. If you’re trying to use Monday as a CRM, you’ll fight the tool constantly. Monday wants everything to be a task with a due date and assignee. That doesn’t work for every use case.
Do you primarily create and share information (documents, notes, knowledge)? Use Notion. Is your team under 15 people? Notion is even better. Notion’s strengths are organization and cross-linking, not enforcement of process.
Do you primarily manage structured data with complex relationships (contacts, deals, inventory)? Use Airtable. Do you need to automate on data changes? Airtable’s automation is better than Notion’s.
Do you primarily track work and manage team accountability? Use Monday. Is your team larger and more distributed? Monday’s visibility shines. Do you need to see who’s overloaded and who has capacity? Monday shows this instantly.
At 10 people: Notion works fine for almost everything except pure task tracking and CRM-like functions. Add Airtable if you have contact/deal data to manage, or add Monday if you need explicit task assignment and visibility.
At 20 people: Notion starts to break for knowledge management (information scattered across too many individual Notion databases). Airtable and Monday both scale well to 20 people and beyond.
At 50+ people: Airtable and Monday both scale, but Notion becomes problematic for shared knowledge (too chaotic) unless you’re extremely disciplined about structure. Most 50-person teams use Notion for lightweight documentation and information sharing, but use Airtable or Monday for systems of record.
Notion + Airtable: Notion for documentation and knowledge, Airtable for contact/deal/inventory tracking and automation. Embeds of Airtable views in Notion provide single pane of glass.
Notion + Monday: Notion for knowledge, Monday for task/project visibility. Different tools, different purposes, no overlap.
Airtable + Monday: Airtable for data management, Monday for workflow visibility. Monday can pull data from Airtable (though setup is more complex than embeddings).
All three: Notion for knowledge (wiki, documentation), Airtable for data (CRM, inventory), Monday for projects (tasks, timelines). This works for teams at 20+ people and is clean if workflows are clear.
Notion: $10-15/month per person depending on plan and usage. For a 10-person team: $100-150/month.
Airtable: varies widely based on records, but roughly $10-30/month per user for small teams, $100+ per month for larger teams with many bases.
Monday: $9-25/month per seat for small teams, can get expensive at scale with larger team limits.
For cost, Notion is cheapest. For features and scaling, Airtable and Monday are more efficient (fewer wasted features, more concentrated value).