CMS

Last tested May 2026

Notion Review

The default workspace for indie operators and modern small-to-mid teams. Powerful, flexible, occasionally over-engineered.

Paul Reviewed by Paul Published: May 20, 2026 Last tested: May 15, 2026
Rating
★★★★★ 4.5/5
VTS Score
87/100
Pricing
Free + $10/mo Plus per seat
Founded
2016
N
Standout

Linked-database model (relations, rollups, formulas), no competitor matches it ergonomically.

Standout

Linked-database model (relations, rollups, formulas), no competitor matches it ergonomically.

Known weakness

Performance degrades at large-workspace scale; search is unreliable for finding old content.

Use it if…
  • You're an indie operator or knowledge worker and want one tool for docs, notes, and lightweight project tracking.
  • You're a startup team 2-50 employees building a wiki, employee handbook, or runbook.
  • You run a content-heavy workflow (newsletter, podcast, course) and want editorial planning, asset tracking, and publishing pipeline in one workspace.
  • You're experimenting with AI-assisted writing and want it integrated into your knowledge base.
Don't use it if…
  • You're scaling beyond 50 employees and need enterprise-grade access controls, audit logs, and SSO at the basic tier. Confluence or Coda fit better.
  • Your team needs dedicated PM workflows (Gantt charts, sprint reports, complex dependency tracking), Asana, Linear, or Jira win.
  • You require offline-first or self-hosted. Obsidian or Logseq fit better.

Overview

Notion is the all-in-one workspace that has become the default knowledge-management tool for indie operators, startup teams, and increasingly enterprise teams. Docs, wikis, databases, project management, and task tracking all live in one workspace with a unified block-based editor.

Notion's positioning has shifted: from "Evernote replacement" in 2018 to "the internal operating system for modern teams" in 2026. The Notion AI layer (launched 2023) adds LLM-assisted writing, summarization, and Q&A across your workspace content.

Pros & Cons

Pros

• Block-based editor is fast, flexible, and consistent across all content types

• Linked-database model (relations, rollups, formulas) is genuinely powerful and unique in the category

• Notion AI layer (summarization, Q&A across workspace) is useful and improving fast

• Free tier is generous for personal use; team pricing is competitive vs Confluence

• Massive template ecosystem (free + paid), most use cases have a template starter

Cons

• Performance degrades with large workspaces. 10,000+ block teams see real lag

• Search is mediocre. Finding old content in a large workspace is unreliable

• Offline mode is limited vs alternatives. Notion is online-first

• Over-engineering risk: Notion's flexibility tempts teams to build elaborate systems that nobody uses

• API is functional but rate-limited vs alternatives. Building third-party integrations on Notion gets fiddly at scale

Best Use Cases

Personal knowledge management

Notion's entry point and where most users start. Notes, journals, reading lists, project tracking. Free tier covers unlimited blocks for personal use; most indie operators stay on free indefinitely.

Team wiki and documentation

Replace Confluence, Google Docs sprawl, or shared Notion-style tools. Notion's linked-database model (relations, rollups, formulas) lets teams build genuinely structured docs (employee handbook, runbook, customer database) without leaving the workspace.

Project management and OKR tracking

Database views (table, board, calendar, timeline) cover most lightweight project-management needs. Less mature than Asana or Linear for dedicated PM workflows but adequate for small teams running OKRs, sprints, or content calendars in one workspace.

Public-facing pages and lightweight CMS

Notion pages can be published as public websites (notion.site) or via super.so / Potion / Feather for custom domains. Lightweight CMS use case where the team already lives in Notion and wants to publish without a separate stack.

Alternatives to Notion

See full alternatives breakdown →

Links

Frequently asked questions

Is Notion worth paying for?
For most indie operators no — the free tier covers personal use indefinitely. For teams 3+ people, the Plus tier ($10/seat/month) is worth it for unlimited file uploads, version history, and integrations. The upgrade pressure comes from team-collaboration features, not personal-use limits.
Notion vs Obsidian: which is better?
Different tools for different needs. Notion wins on team collaboration, database functionality, and integrated workspace. Obsidian wins on offline-first, file-system ownership, plugin ecosystem, and pure knowledge-graph navigation. Pick Notion for team workspaces; pick Obsidian for personal knowledge management with privacy or offline needs.
Can I use Notion as a CMS for my website?
Yes, with limitations. notion.site publishes pages with the .notion.site subdomain. Super.so, Potion, and Feather offer custom domains, themes, and CDN delivery on top of Notion content. Strong fit for landing pages or small content sites; less suitable for high-traffic publishing or sites needing custom design control.
Is Notion AI worth it?
For most users yes, increasingly. Notion AI handles summarization, Q&A across your workspace, content generation, and translation. Add-on costs $8-$10/month per seat. Useful if you have a content-heavy workspace (docs, meeting notes, project briefs) where summarization saves real time. Less useful for sparse workspaces.
Does Notion have an affiliate program?
Yes, but as of mid-2026 the program is closed to new applicants per the official PartnerStack page. Structure (when open): up to $50 per activated paid signup plus 20% of year-one revenue, 180-day cookie, last-click attribution. Status check at affiliate.notion.so. Vibetoolstack will update when the program reopens.
In this review