If you went looking for a clean "Cron vs Notion Calendar" face-off, here is the punchline up front: they are the same product. Notion acquired Cron in 2022, and in January 2024 the app shipped under a new name — Notion Calendar. The download you get today at the Cron URL redirects you to it. So the real question is not which one wins. It's whether the keyboard-first, focus-respecting calendar that Cron's small team built survived being folded into a larger productivity suite.
That distinction matters if you build things for a living. A maker's calendar problem is not "I forget my meetings." It's "meetings shred the four-hour blocks where I actually ship." The tools you reach for should defend deep work, not just display it. Below is what carried over from Cron, what changed, and where it still leaves gaps.
What survived the rename
The parts that made Cron worth switching to are still there. It is still a desktop-first app (macOS and Windows), still sits on top of your existing Google Calendar accounts, and still leans hard on the keyboard. You can create an event by typing a date in natural language, jump between days without touching the mouse, and join a video call from a menu-bar button that appears a minute before the meeting starts. None of that was watered down in the transition.
The multi-account, multi-time-zone handling also came along intact. If you juggle a personal account, a company account, and a contractor account, they render in one unified grid instead of three browser tabs. For anyone collaborating across time zones, the secondary time-zone column down the side of the day view remains one of the genuinely useful features that the default Google Calendar web UI never matched.
Notion Calendar is free and does not require a paid Notion plan to use. You sign in with a Google account; Notion-workspace features (like linking a calendar event to a Notion database entry) are optional layers on top, not a paywall around the calendar itself.
What the rename added is the Notion integration. You can attach Notion documents to events, and pull a Notion database that has a date property into the calendar as its own layer. If your project tracker already lives in Notion, seeing those deadlines next to your meetings — without copying them by hand — is the one feature the standalone Cron could never have shipped.
Where it still falls short for makers
Honesty section. A calendar that "respects a maker's schedule" implies it actively protects your focus blocks. Notion Calendar mostly does not. It is an excellent surface for seeing and entering time, but it has no scheduling-link feature comparable to Calendly, no automatic focus-time defense, and no analytics on where your week actually went. If a colleague drops a meeting onto a Tuesday morning you had mentally reserved for building, the app will render it cleanly and do nothing to push back.
There is also a hard dependency worth naming: it is built around Google Calendar. Support for other backends has been limited and inconsistent over the app's life, so if your team runs on Outlook/Microsoft 365 as its source of truth, this is not a drop-in replacement. Check the current account-connection options before you commit a whole team to it.
Because Notion Calendar reads and writes your real Google Calendar, every event you create in it is a live event your invitees see immediately. There is no private "draft" layer. If you block focus time you don't want teammates to schedule over, mark those blocks busy — a free-floating "focus" event that reads as available won't stop anyone.
For the protect-my-deep-work job specifically, the pattern that works is layering: keep Notion Calendar as the fast keyboard front-end for your day, and put your real planning — the project deadlines, the sprint dates, the editorial schedule — in a Notion database that surfaces back into the calendar. That way the calendar shows commitments, and the database holds intent.
How does it stack against the obvious alternatives a solo builder actually considers?
The table makes the trade-off plain. If your priority is a fast, distraction-free way to read and enter time — and your other work already lives in Notion — the former Cron is the strongest free option in that lane. If your priority is software that fights for your focus hours, you want a purpose-built time-blocking tool and you'll likely pay for it.
So which should you pick
You cannot actually pick "Cron" anymore, so the decision collapses to: is Notion Calendar the right keyboard-first calendar for you? Pick it if you live on Google Calendar, want a desktop app that respects keyboard muscle memory, and already keep projects in Notion. Skip it if your org runs on Microsoft 365, or if the feature you really need is automated focus-time protection rather than a nicer way to look at your week.
The broader lesson for makers evaluating tools: a clean interface is not the same as a schedule that defends your time. Notion Calendar gives you the first reliably. The second is still mostly on you and how you structure the blocks behind it.
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