Few productivity apps survive fifteen years without losing the plot. Todoist, made by the fully remote company Doist since 2007, remains what it started as: a fast place to write down tasks and a reliable system for surfacing them at the right time. Type "submit report every other Friday at 4pm #work" and the app parses the schedule, recurrence, and project from plain English. That capture speed, more than any single feature, explains its loyal user base.
The Android app is a first-class citizen rather than a web wrapper, with widgets, offline task entry, Wear OS support, and quick-add from the notification shade. Doist's business model is a straightforward subscription with no ads or data sales, which we credit in the privacy section. The trade-off arrives on the free plan, where project caps and missing reminders push committed users toward paying.
Capturing tasks before they evaporate
Quick-add is the killer workflow: a widget, tile, or share-sheet action opens a single text field, natural language sets the date, and you are done in five seconds. People abandon task apps when entry is slow; Todoist has made entry nearly frictionless.
Running a personal GTD system
Projects, sub-tasks, labels, priorities, and saved filters map cleanly onto Getting Things Done and similar methods. The Today and Upcoming views give a defensible daily plan without the configuration burden of heavier tools like Notion.
Sharing lists with family or a small team
Any project can be shared, with tasks assignable to specific people and comments attached where discussion belongs. Grocery lists, household chores, and small-team checklists work well, though larger teams will hit the ceiling of what a task list can coordinate.
Natural language date parsing
Phrases like "tomorrow 9am", "every 3rd workday", or "next month" become structured due dates as you type, in multiple languages. Competing apps have copied the idea; few match how rarely Todoist misreads intent.
Cross-platform sync
Android, iOS, Windows, macOS, Linux, browser extensions, email plugins, and Wear OS all stay in sync through Doist's servers. Changes made offline on the phone queue up and reconcile when the connection returns.
Filters, labels, and views
Saved filter queries such as overdue tasks tagged @errands across all projects create custom dashboards, and projects can display as lists, boards, or a calendar. The most powerful view options belong to the paid tiers.
Karma and streaks
A lightweight points system tracks daily and weekly completion goals. It is entirely optional and easy to ignore, which is the right amount of gamification for a tool adults use for work.