Three tools dominate the "let software plan my day" category in 2026: Motion, Akiflow, and Sunsama. They attack the same surface problem — turning a messy task list into a realistic calendar — but they disagree sharply on how much control you hand to the algorithm. We spent two weeks running the same workload through all three: roughly 20 recurring meetings, a daily two-hour deep-work block, and a backlog of about 40 loose tasks with mixed deadlines. The differences show up fast.
How each one decides what you do next
The split between these three is philosophical, not cosmetic.
Motion is the only true auto-scheduler of the group. You give each task a duration, a deadline, and a priority, and Motion places it on your calendar for you — then re-places it every time a meeting moves or a task slips. When we dropped a 90-minute task with a Friday deadline into a half-full week, Motion found the gap and booked it without being asked. The flip side: it reshuffles constantly. A single dragged meeting triggered a cascade that moved six unrelated blocks, and the calendar you approved at 9am rarely survived to noon untouched.
Akiflow takes the opposite stance. Its core is a unified inbox plus a fast command bar (Ctrl/Cmd-based), pulling tasks from Todoist, Gmail, Slack, Notion, and a dozen other sources into one list. You time-block by dragging items onto the calendar yourself. The AI layer is lighter — it suggests durations and surfaces overdue items, but it does not seize control of your day. If you like keyboard-driven triage and want the final say on every block, this is the model that respects that.
Sunsama is the most opinionated about behavior rather than scheduling. It wraps planning in a daily ritual: each morning it walks you through pulling tasks from your connected tools, estimating how long each will take, and committing to a realistic list. At day's end it runs a guided shutdown that asks what carried over. There is AI assistance for task breakdown and prioritization, but the product's real argument is psychological — it wants you to plan deliberately, not to automate planning away.
Auto-scheduling sounds like a feature until it becomes noise. During our test, Motion's constant re-ordering made the calendar feel untrustworthy — we stopped glancing at it to know "what's next" because next kept changing. If you context-switch a lot, audit how often the schedule actually moves before committing your whole week to it.
Pricing and what you actually pay for
List pricing as of early 2026, for individual plans:
| Tool | Monthly | Annual (per month) | Free tier |
|---|---|---|---|
| Motion | ~$34 | ~$19 | No (trial only) |
| Akiflow | ~$34 | ~$19 | No (trial only) |
| Sunsama | ~$20 | ~$16 | No (14-day trial) |
None of them is cheap, and none offers a permanent free tier — every one runs on a trial-then-pay model, so budget for the subscription rather than expecting to coast on a free version.
The price gap matters less than what you're buying. Motion's premium reflects the scheduling engine and a project-management layer aimed at small teams; the per-seat cost climbs on team plans. Akiflow charges similarly but its value is integration breadth and input speed, not automation. Sunsama is the cheapest of the three and the most focused — it does daily planning and reflection well and deliberately does little else.
All three offer annual billing at a meaningful discount over monthly, but the trials are short (14 days is common). Connect your real calendar and task sources on day one and run a genuine work week through the tool — a tool this habitual is impossible to judge from a demo dataset.
Which one fits your week
After two weeks, the recommendation depends less on features than on how you want to relate to your calendar.
Choose Motion if you have more tasks than time and you'd rather delegate sequencing entirely. It's strongest for people juggling many deadlines who want to stop manually re-planning after every interruption — provided you can tolerate a calendar that rearranges itself. Solo founders and consultants with deadline-dense weeks got the most out of it in our testing.
Choose Akiflow if your problem is fragmentation, not scheduling. If tasks live in five apps and you keep dropping things between them, Akiflow's unified inbox and keyboard-first triage close that gap better than the other two. You keep full manual control of the calendar, which suits anyone who already has a time-blocking habit and just wants a faster cockpit.
Choose Sunsama if the issue is overcommitment rather than disorganization. Its daily plan-and-shutdown ritual is the best of the three at forcing honest time estimates and a finite to-do list. It won't auto-schedule for you, and that's the point — it's a discipline tool wearing a calendar's clothes.
If you're not sure any of the three justifies the cost yet, start with a free calendar that integrates with your existing notes, then upgrade to a dedicated planner once you know which specific friction — fragmentation, sequencing, or overcommitment — is actually costing you time.
Originally published at pickuma.com. Subscribe to the RSS or follow @pickuma.bsky.social for new reviews.
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