ToolsRanks

Quire review (2026): verdict, pros & cons

Nested-task project management that breaks big goals into hierarchical to-dos, with Kanban, timeline and calendar views and a generous free plan.

Here is an independent read on Quire: where it shines as a task management option, where it slips, and whether it earns its price.

Verdict: Quire is a confident pick when breaking goals into subtasks is the job to be done. Our editorial rating is 4.2/5 — an editorial assessment from sourced research and feature comparison, not an average of user reviews.

Who Quire is for

Reach for Quire first when your work centres on breaking goals into subtasks, small teams on a budget and nested to-do workflows. Match it against your own priorities: a clean fit means quick returns, a loose one usually means paying for range you won't touch.

Notable features

In practice, the features that define Quire are concrete:

Unique nested task hierarchy that lets you toggle the same project between an outline and a Kanban board.

Pros & cons

What we like

Trade-offs

Pricing: Free plan; Professional from ~$8.50/member/mo; Premium ~$14.95/member/mo; Enterprise ~$19.95/member/mo (billed annually; verify current tiers). · full pricing breakdown →

Bottom line

The short version: Quire rewards anyone whose work leans on breaking goals into subtasks, a free plan lets you trial it at zero cost, and paid plans start around $8.5/mo, so run a quick trial on a live project before committing.

Full Quire overview →

FAQ

Is Quire good?

In our assessment, yes for its core use case: breaking goals into subtasks. We rate it 4.2/5 editorially. Quire is a confident pick when breaking goals into subtasks is the job to be done.

Is Quire worth the money?

Paid plans start around $8.5/mo. For breaking goals into subtasks it generally justifies the cost; if that is not your main need, weigh it against cheaper alternatives first.

What are the downsides of Quire?

Reporting and analytics are limited; Free plan capped at 100 MB storage and 8 sublists per project; Smaller ecosystem and fewer integrations than major tools.

Sources

Our read on Quire draws on these independent reviews and vendor pages: