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Home Android

I used Google Keep, OneNote, Notion, and Evernote for a month on Android — only one made me a better note-taker

June 5, 2026
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Finding the perfect note-taking setup on Android usually feels like an endless cycle of downloading, configuring, and eventually abandoning apps.

Frustrated by the constant friction, I decided to lock myself into a strict, month-long experiment. I migrated my daily workflows across Google Keep, OneNote, Notion, and Evernote on my phone.

After four weeks of intense testing, three of these giants felt like digital junk drawers, while only one transformed the way I capture ideas.


The free note-taking app that helped me straighten out what Evernote could not

Notion’s modern tools and flexibility offer an improved note-taking experience

Microsoft OneNote

OneNote home Android
OneNote notebooks

On paper, Microsoft OneNote had every advantage to run away with this competition. It is the most robust, full-featured note-taking app on the market, and the fact that it offers all of this for free is quite generous.

During the first week, I was fully leaning into its advanced capabilities.

The infinite canvas concept works brilliantly. It allows me to sketch out complex article outlines and handle rich media flawlessly.

But OneNote Android has a major con. When I type something, it needs to be saved, and it needs to sync. That is where OneNote’s entire experience fell apart for me on Android.

The syncing engine is a mess. I lost count of how many times I pulled up my phone to jot down a time-sensitive idea, only to open the app later on my Windows workstation and find a blank page.

The background sync is laggy and inconsistent. There is nothing more frustrating than dealing with sync conflicts or realizing a paragraph I wrote during a quick break simply vanished because the service didn’t hand it off to the cloud properly.

Evernote

Open home menu in Evernote
Open Evernote notes

If there is one app in this lineup that surprised with updates and improvements, it’s Evernote. After a takeover from Bending Spoons, the company has pumped a massive amount of development juice into the platform.

The dedicated home menu acts as a fantastic dashboard for my day, beautifully tying together a native Task manager and a deep Google Calendar integration.

As someone who loves mapping out complex ideas visually, the newly added native support for Mermaid charts felt like a premium developer feature tucked inside a mainstream note app.

Combine that with an automated table of contents, slash commands, and collapsible toggle headers, and Evernote easily becomes one of the most powerful information hubs on the market.

But all of this comes with a couple of massive asterisks.

First, the pricing is on the higher side. Evernote has locked down its free tier so tightly that it’s practically a paid-only service now.

Finally, I have to talk about the heavily marketed AI features, which are effective but nothing groundbreaking.

Notion

Notion page with block editor
Notion home showing up on Android

I love Notion on my desktop. As a power user, I rely heavily on its databases, complex workspaces, and wikis to keep my projects organized.

So, when I started this 30-day experiment, I was eager to see if the same experience could translate into a mobile companion.

To give credit where it’s due, Notion has put in serious work to fix its mobile reputation. The company has started using native components and worked on performance improvements, too.

But despite these under-the-hood performance upgrades, the basics of Notion remain at odds with how we use our smartphones.

Notion is packed with endless features, but it is fundamentally built for a wide monitor and a mouse.

If you are looking to take some quick notes on the go, the Notion mobile app will disappoint you. You have to wait for the app to initialize, navigate to a specific database or page, wait for the block editor to load, and then write.

If your goal is to manage massive notebooks, track deep sub-pages, or build out data structures on your phone, I advise looking elsewhere.


Several Google Keep logos on a desk with some notes in the background.


6 reasons I refuse to leave Google Keep as my default note-taking app

I like keeping it simple

Google Keep

Summarize Keep note
pin a note in Google Keep

Going into this experiment, I expected Google Keep to be the first app to be eliminated. It looks almost too simple compared to the rivals. However, it turned out to be a table topper.

First of all, the app is free, cross-platform, and has a masterclass of an Android app interface. It doesn’t try to pack a desktop environment on a small screen.

To keep everything organized without nested folders, I rely heavily on tags. Whether it’s sorting article ideas or separating projects, adding a quick tag on a note keeps my workspace organized.

Unlike OneNote, the sync engine is flawless and instant. The real game-changer, though, is the native Gemini integration.

I can fire up Gemini and ask it to find specific info from my Keep Notes. I don’t even need to open Google Keep here. It’s a massive productivity booster. I can apply the same trick via Gemini integration in Android Auto, too.

While Google Keep doesn’t have fancy charts or massive databases, it covers the basics of mobile note-taking, and that changed my habits for the better.

Fly through your notes

Each app showed its true colors under pressure, but most fell short right where it mattered most on a mobile device.

Microsoft OneNote almost took the crown with its flexibility, but it failed the fundamental test of a note app: reliability.

Evernote, on the other hand, remains feature-rich, but its steep price tag is hard to justify when its heavily marketed AI features feel tacked-on at best.

Then there is Notion, a powerhouse for building databases and complex wikis, but it’s obvious it was built for the desktop, as the Android app feels sluggish and basic.

In a twist I didn’t see coming, the winner wasn’t the app with the most features, but the one that refused to get in my way: Google Keep. It’s slim on advanced formatting, keeping the mobile fundamentals in style.

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