The 10 Best AI Tools for Project Management in 2027
Project management software in 2027 is no longer a static board you drag cards across. The tools below ship real AI: agents that draft project plans from a prompt, models that summarize 200-message threads into three bullets, and predictive engines that flag a slipping deadline before your team does.
This ranking covers the ten best AI tools for project management in 2027, scored on real output quality, pricing, and how well the AI actually saves a project manager time versus generating busywork.
Direct Answer
For most teams, ClickUp is the best overall AI project management tool in 2027. Its ClickUp Brain layer writes tasks, summarizes docs, generates standup updates, and answers questions across your whole workspace, and it sits on a genuinely capable free plan with paid tiers starting at $7/user/month (Unlimited).
The best value pick is Notion, whose AI is bundled into the Business plan at $20/user/month and replaces a separate docs, wiki, and lightweight PM tool in one subscription, with a usable free tier for individuals.
This list is for project managers, team leads, founders, and operations people who want AI to remove planning and reporting overhead rather than add another dashboard to babysit. Every tool here is real, available today, and priced from its current public plans.
How We Ranked the Top 10
We scored each tool against six weighted criteria, drawing on G2 and Capterra review volumes, official pricing and changelog pages, and hands-on use across real project workflows in 2026–2027.
- AI output quality — 30%. Does the AI write accurate task breakdowns, useful summaries, and correct status rollups, or does it hallucinate and need heavy editing?
- Core PM strength — 20%. Tasks, dependencies, Gantt/timeline, workload, and views — the AI is worthless if the underlying tool is weak.
- Price / value — 20%. Real per-seat cost, whether AI is bundled or a paid add-on, and free-tier limits.
- Ease of use & learning curve — 15%. Time-to-value for a non-technical PM and the team they have to onboard.
- Integrations & export — 10%. Slack, GitHub, Google Workspace, Microsoft 365, API access, and clean data export.
- Automation & predictability — 5%. No-code automations, AI agents, and forecasting that flags risk early.
Scores reflect the product as shipped in 2027, not roadmap promises. Where an AI feature is a paid add-on, we say so.
1. ClickUp 🏆 BEST OVERALL
Best for: all-in-one teams that want AI woven through every view | Pricing: Free / $7/user/mo (Unlimited) / $12 (Business) | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
ClickUp Brain is the most complete AI layer in mainstream project management, drafting subtasks, writing project briefs, summarizing comment threads, and generating standup and progress reports across docs, tasks, and chat. The underlying model routing draws on GPT and Claude-class models behind the scenes, and Brain can answer plain-English questions about your workspace ("what's blocking the launch?") rather than just generating text.
The free plan is unusually generous with unlimited tasks and members, while Brain is an add-on at roughly $7/user/month on top of paid tiers, or bundled in newer Brain MAX packaging. ClickUp's depth — 15+ view types, native docs, whiteboards, goals, and time tracking — means the AI has rich context to work from, and the tool consolidates what used to be three or four subscriptions.
The trade-off is that the same depth makes ClickUp the steepest setup on this list.
Pros:
- AI reaches every object — tasks, docs, comments, and chat all share one Brain context
- Generous free tier with unlimited tasks and members for small teams
- Consolidates docs, whiteboards, goals, and time tracking into one tool
- Strong automation builder plus AI agents that act on triggers
Cons:
- Steep learning curve; new teams can feel overwhelmed by options
- Best AI features require the Brain add-on on top of the seat price
Verdict: The most capable AI-plus-PM combination available, and the right default for teams willing to invest a few hours in setup.
2. Asana
Best for: mid-size and enterprise teams that need reliable AI reporting | Pricing: Free / $10.99/user/mo (Starter) / $24.99 (Advanced) | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
Asana Intelligence (now packaged as AI Studio) lets you build no-code AI agents that triage incoming work, draft project status updates, and surface risk across portfolios. Asana's strength is enterprise-grade reliability: clean timeline and workload views, robust goals and portfolios, and the smart summaries that turn a noisy project into a one-paragraph health check.
The AI shines on "Smart Status," which writes an accurate status update by reading actual task progress instead of guessing. Pricing is per-seat at $10.99 (Starter) and $24.99 (Advanced), with AI Studio metered by credits on higher tiers, which can get expensive at scale. Asana is the safe choice for organizations that prioritize stability and governance over raw feature count.
Pros:
- Smart Status writes status updates from real task data, not invention
- AI Studio builds no-code agents for triage and routing
- Excellent portfolio and goal tracking for leadership reporting
- Mature, stable platform trusted by large enterprises
Cons:
- AI Studio credits add metered cost on top of seats
- Free plan is capped at 10 users
Verdict: The most dependable AI reporting layer for mid-market and enterprise PMs who value governance.
3. Notion 💎 BEST VALUE
Best for: lean teams replacing docs, wiki, and a PM tool at once | Pricing: Free / $20/user/mo (Business, AI included) / Enterprise | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
Notion AI is bundled into the Business plan at $20/user/month, and that single subscription replaces a separate wiki, docs app, and lightweight project tracker. The AI can draft project plans, summarize meeting notes, fill database properties automatically, and answer questions across your entire workspace using connected Slack and Google Drive context.
Built on a flexible database model, Notion lets you spin up a kanban, calendar, or timeline view of the same data, and Notion AI Agents can now execute multi-step tasks like updating a tracker after a meeting. For a five-person startup, paying one $20 seat that covers docs, knowledge base, and project management is the best dollar-for-dollar deal here.
The catch: Notion is a build-it-yourself tool, so PM structure that ClickUp or Asana give you out of the box, you assemble yourself.
Pros:
- AI included in the $20 Business plan — no separate add-on
- One tool replaces wiki, docs, and a PM tracker
- Workspace-wide Q&A pulls from connected Slack and Drive
- Free tier is genuinely usable for individuals and tiny teams
Cons:
- You build the project structure yourself; little is pre-configured
- Weaker native Gantt and dependency handling than dedicated PM tools
Verdict: The best value on the list — bundled AI plus three tools in one subscription for $20.
4. Monday.com
Best for: visual teams that want colorful boards plus AI automations | Pricing: Free / $9/seat/mo (Basic) / $12 (Standard) / $19 (Pro) | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
monday AI layers generative blocks and AI Blocks into monday's signature color-coded boards, letting you auto-categorize incoming requests, summarize updates, draft text, and build formulas from a plain-English prompt. The monday AI agents (including the "monday Expert" and digital workforce features) can handle routine triage and answer setup questions.
Pricing scales by seat at $9 (Basic), $12 (Standard), and $19 (Pro), billed in seat minimums, with some AI usage metered by credits. Monday's visual approachability is its edge — non-technical teams adopt it fast — and its WorkForms and dashboards make intake and reporting easy.
It loses points only because the AI is more an assistant than a deep planner, and seat minimums can inflate the bill for very small teams.
Pros:
- AI Blocks automate categorization and summaries inside boards
- Friendliest visual interface for non-technical adopters
- Strong dashboards and intake forms for request management
- Large app marketplace for integrations
Cons:
- Seat minimums raise the effective cost for tiny teams
- Some AI usage is credit-metered on top of the seat price
Verdict: The most approachable AI-plus-boards tool for visual, non-technical teams.
5. Microsoft Planner with Copilot
Best for: organizations already standardized on Microsoft 365 | Pricing: Included with Microsoft 365 / Copilot add-on ~$30/user/mo | Platform: web, desktop (Teams), mobile, API
The new Microsoft Planner unifies To Do, the old Planner, and Project for the web, with Microsoft 365 Copilot generating full project plans, tasks, and goals from a prompt and answering questions inside Teams. If your company already pays for Microsoft 365, the base Planner is included, and Copilot is a ~$30/user/month add-on that also powers Word, Excel, Outlook, and Teams — so the project management AI is one slice of a broader Copilot investment.
Copilot can draft a project plan from a goal, create the task hierarchy, and assign owners, then surface it directly inside Teams chat. The strength is deep integration with the Microsoft stack and enterprise security; the weakness is that without a Copilot license the AI features are off, and the standalone PM depth still trails ClickUp and Asana.
Pros:
- Copilot drafts entire project plans from a single goal prompt
- Native to Teams and Microsoft 365 with no extra tools to learn
- Enterprise-grade security and compliance baked in
- Base Planner included with existing M365 licenses
Cons:
- AI requires a pricey ~$30/user/month Copilot add-on
- Standalone PM depth trails dedicated tools
Verdict: The obvious choice for Microsoft-365 shops that already license Copilot.
6. Wrike
Best for: marketing and professional-services teams managing client work | Pricing: Free / $10/user/mo (Team) / $24.80 (Business) | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
Wrike's Work Intelligence brings AI risk prediction, smart project summaries, document processing, and a generative assistant that drafts subtasks and content. Wrike's calling card is complex cross-functional work — proofing and approvals, request forms, resource management, and time tracking — which makes it a favorite for agencies and services teams.
The AI's project risk prediction is a real differentiator: it flags projects likely to miss deadlines based on historical patterns. Pricing runs $10/user/month (Team) and $24.80 (Business), with the heavier AI and analytics on higher tiers. Wrike is more capable than it is simple, so smaller teams may find it heavier than they need, but for billable, deadline-driven work it earns its place.
Pros:
- AI risk prediction flags likely-to-slip projects early
- Strong proofing, approvals, and request forms for client work
- Resource and workload management for billable teams
- Granular permissions for client-facing collaboration
Cons:
- Heavier and pricier than small teams typically need
- Best analytics and AI gated behind upper tiers
Verdict: The best AI PM tool for agencies and services teams that live on approvals and deadlines.
7. Smartsheet
Best for: spreadsheet-native teams running large, structured programs | Pricing: Free / $9/user/mo (Pro) / $19 (Business) | Platform: web, mobile, API
Smartsheet AI brings generative formulas, text and summary generation, and AI-assisted analysis to a grid that looks like a spreadsheet but behaves like a project engine. It's the natural upgrade for teams who manage programs in Excel and have outgrown it, offering Gantt, card, and grid views, dynamic dashboards, and heavyweight automation.
The AI helps write complex formulas in plain English, summarize sheet data, and generate text in cells, lowering the barrier to Smartsheet's powerful but technical formula system. Pricing is $9/user/month (Pro) and $19 (Business), competitive for the capability. Smartsheet wins on enterprise program and portfolio management at scale; it loses casual-team points because its grid-first interface feels more like work software than a playful board.
Pros:
- AI writes complex formulas from plain-English prompts
- Spreadsheet-familiar interface eases migration from Excel
- Powerful automation and dashboards for large programs
- Trusted for enterprise portfolio management
Cons:
- Grid-first UI feels utilitarian to casual teams
- AI features are more assistive than transformative
Verdict: The best AI PM choice for spreadsheet-native teams running structured, large-scale programs.
8. Airtable
Best for: data-driven teams building custom project apps | Pricing: Free / $20/user/mo (Team) / $45 (Business) | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
Airtable AI (now central to its Cobuilder app-building experience) turns a database into a project app with AI fields that summarize, categorize, extract, and generate content automatically as records change. Airtable's relational model is ideal for teams whose projects are really data problems — content pipelines, product roadmaps, applicant tracking — and the Interface Designer lets you publish clean app views to stakeholders.
The AI can build an app from a prompt and run per-record automations like auto-tagging or drafting summaries. Pricing runs $20/user/month (Team) and $45 (Business), with AI credits metered by plan. Airtable is the most flexible tool here for custom workflows, but that flexibility means more building and a higher price than simpler board tools.
Pros:
- AI fields auto-summarize and categorize records at scale
- Cobuilder generates working apps from a prompt
- Relational database model handles complex, connected data
- Interface Designer ships polished stakeholder views
Cons:
- Higher price and credit-metered AI usage
- Requires building; not a turnkey PM tool
Verdict: The best pick for data-heavy teams that want AI to run a custom project app.
9. Height
Best for: product and engineering teams that want an autonomous PM agent | Pricing: Free / ~$8.50/user/mo (paid) / Enterprise | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
Height rebuilt itself around an autonomous project management agent that handles the chores PMs hate: chasing updates, triaging bugs, deduplicating tasks, updating specs, and adjusting timelines in the background. Marketed as "self-driving" project management, Height's AI proactively keeps the tracker clean instead of waiting for a prompt, which is a different posture than the assistants in most tools here.
It targets software and product teams with strong GitHub and Slack integration and a fast, modern interface, with paid plans starting around $8.50/user/month. The bet is that the agent reduces the manual upkeep that eats PM time. The risk is trust — an autonomous agent editing your tracker requires confidence that it won't make wrong calls, and the tool is younger and less proven than the incumbents above.
Pros:
- Autonomous agent maintains the tracker without prompting
- Auto-triages bugs and deduplicates tasks in the background
- Tight GitHub and Slack integration for product teams
- Fast, modern interface built around the AI
Cons:
- Autonomous edits require trusting the agent's judgment
- Younger product with a smaller track record
Verdict: The most forward-looking pick for product teams ready to let an AI agent run upkeep.
10. Trello
Best for: individuals and small teams who want simple AI-assisted boards | Pricing: Free / $5/user/mo (Standard) / $10 (Premium) | Platform: web, desktop, mobile, API
Trello remains the simplest entry point to AI-assisted project management, with Atlassian Intelligence powering its newer features and the Trello AI / Inbox + Planner layer that turns scattered notes into organized cards. The AI can summarize cards, generate checklists, and help draft card content, while Trello's famously simple kanban boards stay easy enough for anyone to adopt in minutes.
Pricing is the friendliest on the list — a strong free tier, then $5/user/month (Standard) and $10 (Premium) — and it connects to the wider Atlassian and Jira ecosystem for teams that grow into heavier needs. Trello won't run a complex program, but for personal projects, small teams, and lightweight tracking, its low cost and zero learning curve are exactly the point.
Pros:
- Lowest paid pricing at $5/user/month with a strong free tier
- Zero learning curve — adopt boards in minutes
- Atlassian Intelligence powers summaries and card assistance
- Connects to Jira and the Atlassian ecosystem as you scale
Cons:
- Too lightweight for complex, multi-team programs
- AI is assistive rather than a true planning engine
Verdict: The best simple, low-cost AI board for individuals and small teams.
Which One Is Right for You?
What to Look For
- Bundled vs. Add-on AI. Notion and monday include AI in a plan tier, while ClickUp Brain, Asana AI Studio, and Microsoft Copilot are paid add-ons or credit-metered — check the real all-in cost per seat before you commit.
- Data privacy and training opt-out. Confirm whether your workspace content trains the vendor's models. Most enterprise tiers here let you opt out, but the default on lower plans varies, so read the AI data terms.
- Export and lock-in. Verify you can export tasks, docs, and history cleanly (CSV, API). Tools like Airtable and ClickUp hold a lot of structured data, and migrating later is painful if export is weak.
- Integration with your actual stack. If your team lives in Slack, GitHub, or Microsoft Teams, weight that heavily — Height and Planner shine inside their ecosystems, and AI context is only as good as the connected sources.
- AI accuracy on your real data. Run a two-week trial on a live project. AI status summaries that hallucinate are worse than none, so test whether the AI reads actual task state or guesses.
What matters less than the hype: the raw number of AI features. A tool with two reliable AI actions you use daily beats one with twenty you never trust.
FAQ
What is the best AI tool for project management in 2027? ClickUp, because ClickUp Brain reaches every part of the workspace — tasks, docs, comments, and chat — and it sits on a deep, low-cost PM foundation starting at $7/user/month. For teams that want the cheapest capable option, Notion at $20/user/month with AI included is the value winner.
Is there a free AI project management tool? Yes. ClickUp, Asana, Notion, monday.com, Wrike, Trello, Airtable, and Height all offer free plans, though AI features on free tiers are usually limited. Notion's free plan includes a capped amount of AI, and Trello's free tier is the most generous for simple boards.
Does AI project management software actually save time? For status reporting, meeting summaries, task drafting, and triage, yes — these are repetitive tasks AI does well. The biggest real wins are auto-generated status updates (Asana Smart Status) and workspace Q&A (ClickUp Brain, Notion AI) that replace manual digging.
Which AI PM tool is best for software and product teams? Height, built around an autonomous agent that triages bugs and maintains the tracker, plus ClickUp and Asana for their GitHub integrations. Notion is also popular with product teams for combining specs, roadmap, and docs in one place.
Will the AI train on my company's data? It depends on the plan. Enterprise and business tiers from these vendors generally let you opt out of model training, and several state they do not train foundation models on customer content. Always confirm the current AI data-use terms before storing sensitive project data.
How much does AI project management cost per user? Paid plans range from Trello's $5/user/month to Airtable's $45/user/month (Business), with most landing at $7–$25. AI may be bundled (Notion $20) or an add-on (ClickUp Brain ~$7, Microsoft Copilot ~$30) on top of the seat price.
Bottom Line
The best overall AI project management tool in 2027 is ClickUp, whose ClickUp Brain drafts tasks, summarizes threads, and answers workspace questions on top of the deepest PM foundation here, starting at $7/user/month with a strong free plan. The best value is Notion, bundling AI into its $20/user/month Business plan while replacing a wiki, docs app, and tracker in one subscription.
Pick ClickUp for all-in-one depth, Notion for value, Asana for enterprise governance, monday.com for visual simplicity, and Trello when you just want a cheap, simple AI-assisted board.
Sources
- ClickUp Brain and pricing
- Asana AI Studio overview
- Notion AI and plan pricing
- monday.com AI features
- Microsoft 365 Copilot and Planner
- Wrike Work Intelligence
- Smartsheet AI
- Airtable AI and Cobuilder
- G2 project management software grid
*AI tools for project management review — best AI for project management, project management AI reviews, ratings, best AI project management tools 2027, and a review of the top picks.*









