Google Keep is the sticky note of the Google ecosystem: open, jot, done. Notes appear as colour-coded cards that sync instantly to every device signed into your Google account, and capture works from anywhere on Android — share sheet, widget, or a voice memo that Keep transcribes on the spot. There is no subscription, no ad, and no premium tier; the whole app is free.
That simplicity is both the pitch and the limit. Development moves slowly, formatting stays minimal, organisation is limited to labels and colours rather than notebooks, and long or structured documents quickly outgrow the card layout. Everything you write also lives inside your Google account, which is convenient if you trust Google and worth pausing over if you would rather your notes not sit beside your search history. As a fast, free capture tool, though, Keep is hard to beat.
Shared shopping and household lists
Checklists with tick-off boxes are Keep's strongest feature, and sharing one with a partner means either of you can add milk from anywhere. Edits appear on the other phone within seconds, which quietly ends the who-has-the-list problem.
Catching a thought before it escapes
From the lock-screen widget or the share sheet, a note takes seconds to create. Voice memos are transcribed automatically, photos become notes with one tap, and the card wall makes recent scraps easy to spot later.
Reminders tied to time or place
Any note can carry a reminder that fires at a chosen time or when you arrive somewhere — the pharmacy list that pops up at the pharmacy. Reminders surface through standard Google notifications, so nothing new to learn.
Capture from everywhere on Android
Widgets, quick-settings tiles, the share sheet, and voice input all feed into Keep, and notes sync through your Google account to the web and other devices immediately. The app opens fast even on older phones, which matters for a capture tool.
Checklists with live collaboration
Lists support checkboxes, drag-to-reorder, and per-note sharing with other Google accounts. Collaborators edit in real time, no invitation ceremony beyond entering an email address — one of the simplest sharing flows in any notes app.
Text grabbed from images
Photograph a poster, receipt, or whiteboard and Keep can extract the printed text into the note, making it searchable. Combined with plain search across all notes, this covers a surprising share of what people use heavier apps for.
Labels, colours, and pinning
Organisation is intentionally light: assign labels, tint cards by colour, pin what matters, and archive the rest. There are no notebooks or folders, which keeps the app simple but frustrates anyone managing more than a few hundred notes.