Todoist vs Apple Reminders: When “Good Enough” Stops Being Enough
Todoist vs Apple Reminders: compare how Todoist offers structure, visibility, and collaboration for real workloads, while Reminders is fine for basic lists,
If you’re comparing Todoist and Apple Reminders, you’re probably not trying to build a complex workflow empire. You just want something reliable.
Apple Reminders is already on your iPhone. It’s free. It’s clean. It works well for shopping lists or reminders to call someone back.
For a lot of people, that’s perfectly fine.
Things start to change when your workload stops being simple. Work and personal tasks overlap. Recurring commitments stack up. It’s no longer just about remembering things. You need to see what’s coming and make decisions ahead of time.
That’s where Todoist starts to make more sense.
Both apps are simple to begin with. Only one keeps working as things get more complex.
At a glance: Todoist vs Apple Reminders
Category | Todoist | Apple Reminders |
|---|---|---|
Platform availability | iOS, Android, Windows, macOS, web, browser extensions, wearables | Apple devices only |
Task input | Natural language date parsing (“Submit taxes next Friday at 4 PM”) | Manual date/time selection or Siri |
Organization | Projects, sections, sub-tasks, labels, filters, priority levels | Lists and smart lists |
Planning views | Today view, Upcoming view, calendar layout (Pro plan) | Today view and Scheduled list |
Recurring tasks | Flexible natural language recurrence (“every 2nd Monday”, etc.) | Basic repeat options |
Collaboration | Shared projects, task assignment, comments, permissions and team workspaces | Shared lists via iCloud with other iCloud users |
Price | Free plan. Pro and Business plans unlock advanced features. | Free (included with Apple devices) |
Where Apple Reminders makes sense
Apple Reminders does a few things really well.
It’s already there. No setup. It works seamlessly with Siri. If you’re fully in the Apple ecosystem and mostly managing quick, personal tasks, it’s hard to beat for convenience.
It’s built for things like:
“Buy milk”
“Call the dentist”
“Pick up dry cleaning”
You open it, add something, and forget about it.
There’s no structure to think about. No system to maintain. And if your needs stay fairly light, it can feel perfectly sufficient for a while.
Where Todoist starts to feel different
Todoist starts to make sense when your task list stops being a few quick reminders and starts reflecting everything you’re responsible for.
Work. Home. Recurring commitments. Things that actually need planning, not just remembering.
Planning beyond today
Apple Reminders is good at showing what’s due.
Todoist shows you what’s due and what’s coming.
When you can see your week laid out, you start making better calls. You notice when things are getting crowded, think twice before adding more, and adjust before it all piles up.
You stop checking lists and start planning your days.
Structure when you need it
You can use Todoist as a simple list. Nothing forces you into a complex setup.
But if your workload grows, you have room to organize it:
Projects to separate areas of responsibility
Sections to break big efforts into stages
Sub-tasks for detail
Labels to group similar work
Filters to create focused views
Priority levels (p1 through p4) to clarify what matters
You don’t have to use all of it. Many people don’t. The point is that the tool doesn’t run out of road when your responsibilities expand.
Apple Reminders stays intentionally minimal. That’s part of its appeal. It just doesn’t evolve very far to deal with the inevitable complexities of work and life.
Work and life in one place
Apple Reminders is primarily personal.
Todoist is built to handle both personal and collaborative work without feeling like two separate systems. You can plan a client project, organize a wedding, track a fitness goal, and manage a shared team initiative — all without switching apps.
If you ever need to:
Share a project with someone who isn’t on Apple
Assign tasks to teammates
Comment inside a task
Access everything from a work PC
Todoist handles that natively.
If you don’t collaborate much, this may not matter. If you do, it certainly does.
Faster capture when you’re busy
In Todoist, you can type: “Submit report next Friday at 4 PM.”
Smart date recognition automatically picks up the date and time.
It sounds like a small thing, but when you’re adding tasks throughout the day, it reduces friction. You stay in flow instead of clicking through menus.
Apple Reminders relies more on manual date selection. That’s perfectly workable. Just a bit slower and more cumbersome.
When Apple Reminders is probably the better fit
Apple Reminders makes sense if you:
Only use Apple devices
Prefer very light structure
Mostly manage short, one-off lists
If it’s working and you don’t feel constrained, there’s no reason to change.
Why people move to Todoist
People rarely switch because they want more features. They switch when staying on top of everything starts to feel harder than it should.
Common triggers:
They can’t see their week clearly.
Recurring tasks require too much manual upkeep.
Work and personal responsibilities live in separate tools.
They can’t collaborate the way they want to
Their lists are growing, but there’s no easy way to organize them.
Todoist solves this by adding just enough structure to restore clarity and confidence.
So which one should you choose?
Apple Reminders is great at being simple and readily available.
Todoist is what you reach for when that’s no longer enough.
When your task list starts to carry real weight, you need more than a place to jot things down. You need to see what’s coming, stay organised, and feel on top of it all.
Try it with your actual workload. Not a test list. Add your recurring tasks. Look at your week.
If it clicks, you’ll feel the difference straight away.
And once you do, it’s hard to go back.
The Todoist Team
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