Quick Comparison
Quick Summary
Linear is the project tracker built for software teams that value speed over infinite configurability. Jira is the enterprise workhorse that can model any workflow — at the cost of a steep setup curve and a UI that shows its age.
We ran a 4-person development team through two identical 2-week sprints: one managed entirely in Linear, one in Jira Cloud Standard. Same team, same scope, same deadlines — different tools.
Winner: Linear — for dev teams under 50 people who want to spend less time managing tickets and more time shipping code. But if your org has 200+ people with compliance requirements and cross-team dependencies, Jira is still the default.
Round 1: Onboarding and Setup
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Linear wins setup. A clean workspace in 5 minutes vs. Jira's 2-hour configuration gauntlet.
Getting started in Linear feels like using a well-designed developer tool. Sign up, create a workspace, invite your team, and you're in a project in under 5 minutes. Everything is opinionated in the right way: issues have a title and a description. Cycles are your sprints. Roadmaps are projects. There's no ceremony.
Jira, by contrast, asks you 47 questions before you see your first board. What type of project? Scrum or Kanban? Who are your administrators? What issue types do you need? What's your workflow? Most teams don't know the answers to half these questions on day one — and Jira makes you answer them anyway.
The configuration burden is real. Our 4-person team spent 2 hours setting up a Jira project (workflow, board columns, issue types, permissions, notifications, automation rules) before writing a single ticket. In Linear, we were writing tickets in 3 minutes.
Linear 9/10, Jira 4/10 for onboarding speed.
Round 2: Daily Use and Developer Experience
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Linear wins daily UX. Keyboard shortcuts, instant filtering, and a UI that stays out of your way.
This is where Linear's philosophy pays off daily. Hit Cmd+K to open the command palette. C to create an issue. F to filter. I to go to your inbox. Every action is accessible from the keyboard, and the UI responds instantly. There's no 3-second spinner between views — pages render in under 200ms.
Jira's daily experience is heavier. The UI has improved with the "new Jira experience," but it still feels like enterprise software trying to be modern. Filters require learning JQL (Jira Query Language). The backlog view loads slowly when you cross 500 issues. And the visual clutter — sidebars, banners, "create" buttons in three places — is cognitively taxing.
Our team spent an average of 12 minutes per day just navigating and waiting for Jira to load. In Linear, that number was under 2 minutes. Over a 2-week sprint, that's an hour and a half of friction saved — per person.
Linear 9/10, Jira 5/10 for developer experience.
Round 3: Reporting and Visibility
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Jira wins reporting. Burndown charts, velocity tracking, and cross-project roadmaps are deeply mature.
If you need to generate a burndown chart, a sprint velocity report, or a cross-team capacity plan, Jira is the clear winner. Its reporting engine is battle-tested across decades of agile teams. You can slice data by assignee, component, label, custom field — anything you've configured becomes a report dimension. Advanced Roadmaps (Premium plan) let you visualize dependencies across multiple teams and projects.
Linear's reporting is functional but intentionally minimal. You get cycle progress, completion trends, and basic burndown charts. It's enough for a single team to know whether they're on track. It's not enough for a PMO to generate status reports for a 500-person engineering org. Linear's philosophy is that teams shouldn't need elaborate reports to know what's happening — and for small teams, that's true. For large orgs, it's a gap.
Jira 9/10, Linear 5/10 for reporting and visibility.
The Verdict
| Use Case | Winner |
|---|---|
| Startup dev team (< 10 people) | Linear |
| Scaling dev team (10-50 people) | Linear |
| Large enterprise (200+ engineers) | Jira |
| Compliance-heavy industries (on-prem required) | Jira |
| Cross-team dependency tracking | Jira |
| Speed of daily use | Linear |
| Custom workflows and automation | Jira |
| Developer happiness | Linear |
Linear wins overall (8/10 → 9/10) for the developer who wants a tool that feels like an IDE, not an enterprise portal. But Jira remains the only option when you need on-premise deployment, advanced reporting, or a workflow engine that can model any business process your company invents.
Bottom Line
- Pick Linear if: You're a software team under 50 people, you value speed over configurability, and you want your project tracker to be invisible.
- Pick Jira if: Your org is 200+ people with compliance requirements, cross-team dependencies, and a PMO that lives in burndown charts.
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