AppVetter
HomeApp ReviewsProductivity › Trello: Manage Team Projects
safe
Trello: Manage Team Projects icon

Trello: Manage Team Projects

4.3
CategoryProductivity
Download50M+
PriceFree
RatedEveryone
RequiresAndroid 9.0+
DeveloperAtlassian

Screenshots

Trello: Manage Team Projects screenshot
Trello: Manage Team Projects screenshot
Trello: Manage Team Projects screenshot
Trello: Manage Team Projects screenshot
Trello: Manage Team Projects screenshot
Trello: Manage Team Projects screenshot

About this app

A Trello board explains itself in about ten seconds: lists run left to right, cards move through them, and the state of a project is visible at a glance. That kanban clarity made Trello one of the most approachable project tools ever shipped, and the Android app carries it over well, with drag-and-drop cards, checklists, due dates, and attachments.

Atlassian has owned Trello since 2017, and the free tier shows the usual signs of a product that needs to convert users: each workspace is capped at ten boards, Butler automation runs are rationed monthly, and views beyond the basic board — calendar, timeline, dashboard — sit behind paid plans. For personal projects and small teams the free version remains genuinely useful; larger teams should budget for a subscription or expect to feel the walls.

A personal pipeline

Job hunts, house moves, and side projects map naturally onto To Do, Doing, Done. Because a board carries its own state, you can drop it for two weeks and pick up exactly where things stood, which few to-do lists manage.

Small-team workflow tracking

Editorial calendars, support triage, and client work suit boards where each card is a deliverable with an owner, a due date, and a checklist. Members see changes immediately, and card comments keep the discussion attached to the work.

Coordinating with people outside your company

Inviting a freelancer or client to a single board is painless compared with provisioning them into heavier project suites. They see that board and nothing else, and the learning curve for a newcomer is close to zero.

Boards, lists, and cards

The core model has barely changed in a decade because it works: cards hold descriptions, members, labels, due dates, attachments, and comments, and dragging one across lists updates status for everyone. The mobile app handles all of this comfortably.

Butler automation

Rules like "when a card moves to Done, mark the due date complete" run without code, plus scheduled commands and one-tap card buttons. Free workspaces get a limited monthly quota of runs; paid plans raise it substantially.

Power-Up integrations

Power-Ups connect boards to Slack, Google Drive, Jira, calendars, and hundreds of other services, and even free boards can now use them without a count limit. The catalogue varies in quality, but the essentials are well maintained.

Checklists, labels, and advanced card fields

Checklists break a card into steps, colour labels support filtering, and paid tiers add custom fields and checklist item assignees. Card cover images and stickers sound trivial but genuinely help scanning a crowded board on a phone screen.

Privacy & Data Safety

Trello's biggest privacy hazard is a setting, not a breach: boards can be private, workspace-visible, or public, and public boards are readable by anyone and indexed by search engines. Researchers have repeatedly found companies leaking credentials, HR records, and customer data through boards someone set to public and forgot. Separately, in 2024 profile data for millions of Trello accounts, gathered through a public API endpoint, circulated on a hacking forum.

  • Check every board's visibility setting. Public means the entire internet, permanently crawlable — never keep passwords, keys, or client data on a board without confirming it is private.
  • A free Atlassian account is required, and workspace admins control membership and can see all workspace-visible boards; on enterprise plans, organisation admins gain broader oversight.
  • The 2024 scraping incident exposed names, usernames, and email addresses linked to accounts — not passwords — but it fuels convincing phishing, so treat unexpected Trello emails with suspicion.
  • Data is stored in Atlassian's cloud, encrypted in transit and at rest, with no end-to-end option; assume anything on a work board is visible to your organisation.

Advantages

  • The most intuitive project tool a non-technical person can be handed
  • Free plan is workable for individuals and very small teams
  • Butler automation removes real drudgery once configured
  • Fast, capable Android app with offline support for recent boards

Updates

Trello updates land steadily on Android without drama — mostly stability work, interface polish, and parity fixes trailing the web app, where new capability tends to appear first. The product's larger shifts, such as revised views and inbox-style card capture, have arrived through Atlassian's platform announcements and reach the mobile app gradually. Nothing about the update pattern suggests neglect, but mobile is clearly the second screen here.

  • Catching the Android app up to web features, particularly newer board views and card editing
  • Deeper ties into the Atlassian account system and cross-product integrations
  • Automation refinements and template improvements aimed at converting free workspaces to paid plans

Editor's Assessment

Our verdict

Trello has stayed relevant by refusing to become complicated, and that is still its edge: any collaborator, technical or not, understands a board in one sitting. The free plan honestly covers personal use and small groups, and Standard pricing is reasonable when you outgrow it. Teams needing dependencies, resource planning, or reporting will hit the model's ceiling and should look at heavier tools, Atlassian's own Jira included. Whatever the plan, audit board visibility settings before putting anything sensitive on one.

What works

  • The most intuitive project tool a non-technical person can be handed
  • Free plan is workable for individuals and very small teams
  • Butler automation removes real drudgery once configured
  • Fast, capable Android app with offline support for recent boards

What to know

  • Ten-board cap per free workspace arrives faster than expected
  • Calendar, timeline, and dashboard views require paid plans
  • Struggles past a certain scale — big teams outgrow cards-on-lists
  • Publicly misconfigured boards remain a recurring source of data leaks

FAQ

What are the free plan's actual limits?

Free workspaces are capped at ten boards, with unlimited cards and members and a small per-file attachment size limit. Butler automation runs on a modest monthly quota, and the calendar, timeline, table, and dashboard views are excluded. Individual users rarely hit these walls quickly; a team of ten usually does within months.

Is Trello safe for confidential work information?

It can be, if configured deliberately. Keep boards private, restrict workspace membership, enable two-factor authentication on Atlassian accounts, and never rely on obscurity for a public board. The recurring horror stories about leaked credentials on Trello trace back to visibility settings, not to Trello's infrastructure being compromised.

How does Trello compare with Jira, since Atlassian owns both?

Trello is the lightweight end of the range: visual, flexible, minimal setup, best for straightforward workflows. Jira adds issue types, sprints, permissions schemes, and reporting, at the cost of real administrative overhead. Atlassian positions Trello for general teams and Jira for software development, and many companies genuinely use both.

Download this App

Similar Apps

More from Productivity