Motion review 2026: AI powered calendar for solopreneurs
I have a love hate relationship with Motion. it is the most expensive productivity tool I use at $34 per month, and every time my subscription renews I question whether it is worth it. then I look at my calendar, see how much it accomplishes without any input from me, and I keep paying.
Motion is an AI powered calendar and task manager that automatically schedules your tasks, meetings, and projects. you tell it what you need to do, set deadlines and priorities, and the AI figures out when everything should happen. your calendar fills itself.
sounds amazing in theory. in practice, it is both brilliant and frustrating. here is my detailed review after six months of daily use.
what Motion actually does
let me be specific about what Motion’s AI handles, because the marketing makes it sound like magic and the reality is more nuanced.
auto scheduling tasks. you create a task with a deadline, estimated duration, and priority level. Motion’s AI slots it into your calendar at the optimal time, considering your existing meetings, preferences (like “no deep work before 10am”), and other tasks.
dynamic rescheduling. when things change, and they always change, Motion automatically rearranges your schedule. a meeting runs over? tasks shift. a new urgent task appears? everything reprioritizes. this happens silently in the background.
meeting scheduling. Motion includes a meeting scheduler (like Calendly) that integrates with your auto scheduled calendar. when someone books time with you, Motion automatically rearranges your tasks around the meeting.
project management. you can create projects with multiple tasks, assign deadlines, and let Motion schedule the entire project. it respects task dependencies and distributes work across your available time.
deadline warnings. if you have too many tasks and not enough time, Motion warns you that something will miss its deadline. this is genuinely useful for preventing overcommitment.
the auto scheduling: how well does it actually work
this is the core feature, so let me be honest about its accuracy.
what it gets right: Motion is excellent at basic scheduling. if I have five tasks due this week with different priorities, it schedules high priority work during my peak hours, low priority work in the gaps, and respects my meeting blocks. about 80% of the time, the schedule it creates is exactly what I would have planned manually.
what it gets wrong: the remaining 20% requires manual adjustment. Motion sometimes schedules creative work right after a draining meeting, or puts a quick 15 minute task at a time when I should be doing deep work. it doesn’t fully understand energy management or the nature of different task types.
the learning curve: Motion gets better over time as you adjust its suggestions. after about two weeks of daily corrections, the accuracy improved noticeably. by month two, I was only adjusting about 10% of its scheduling decisions.
context switching: this is my biggest complaint. Motion will sometimes schedule tasks from three different projects in alternating 30 minute blocks, which creates constant context switching. I partially solved this by creating “task groups” and telling Motion to batch similar work, but it should handle this better out of the box.
pricing: is $34/mo justified
let’s address the elephant in the room. Motion costs $34 per month for the Individual plan. that is more than most solopreneurs pay for any single productivity tool.
| plan | price | features |
|---|---|---|
| Individual | $34/mo | auto scheduling, meeting scheduler, task management, projects |
| Team | $20/user/mo (min 2) | everything in Individual plus team scheduling and workspace |
| Annual Individual | $228/year ($19/mo) | same as Individual with annual commitment |
| Annual Team | $144/user/year ($12/mo) | same as Team with annual commitment |
my take: the annual plan at $19/mo is reasonable. the monthly plan at $34/mo is hard to justify unless you are earning enough that the time savings clearly pay for it. I switched to annual after my second month because I was confident I would keep using it.
here is how I calculate the ROI: Motion saves me roughly 30 minutes per day that I would spend on scheduling and rescheduling tasks. at my hourly rate, that is worth significantly more than $19/mo. your math may vary.
Motion vs Reclaim: the closest competitor
Reclaim.ai is the tool most people compare to Motion, and for good reason. both auto schedule your tasks around meetings. but they take different approaches.
| feature | Motion | Reclaim |
|---|---|---|
| price (individual) | $34/mo ($19/mo annual) | $10/mo ($8/mo annual) |
| auto scheduling | full task scheduling | time blocking for habits and tasks |
| meeting scheduler | built in | built in |
| project management | yes | basic |
| calendar support | Google Calendar | Google Calendar, Outlook |
| task integration | built in tasks | Todoist, Asana, Linear, ClickUp |
| AI intelligence | proprietary AI engine | smart time blocking |
| free plan | no | yes (basic) |
| deadline warnings | yes | limited |
when to choose Motion: you want a single tool that handles tasks, scheduling, and projects. you want the AI to make most scheduling decisions for you. you are willing to pay for the time savings.
when to choose Reclaim: you already have a task manager you love and want intelligent time blocking around it. you want a more affordable option. you need Outlook support.
I tried Reclaim for a month before Motion. it is a good tool and the $10/mo price is much easier to swallow. but Motion’s full task management and more aggressive auto scheduling ultimately won me over. if budget is a concern, Reclaim is the smart choice.
for more on this, see our guide on best focus and deep work apps for solopreneurs in 2026.
Motion vs Clockwise: different problems
Clockwise solves a different problem than Motion. while Motion schedules your tasks, Clockwise optimizes your meeting schedule to create more focus time. it is designed primarily for teams that have too many meetings.
| feature | Motion | Clockwise |
|---|---|---|
| price | $34/mo | free to $11.50/mo |
| primary function | task auto scheduling | meeting optimization |
| best for | solopreneurs and small teams | meeting heavy teams |
| task management | yes | no |
| meeting rescheduling | adjusts tasks around meetings | reshuffles meetings for focus time |
| focus time protection | basic | excellent |
when to choose Motion: you need task scheduling and project management alongside calendar optimization.
when to choose Clockwise: your problem is too many meetings eating into your focus time, not task scheduling.
for most solopreneurs, Motion is the better choice because we don’t have the “too many meetings” problem. our challenge is scheduling and prioritizing our own tasks, which is exactly what Motion does.
features I use daily
the daily planner
every morning, I open Motion and see my day already planned. tasks are scheduled, meetings are in place, and I know exactly what to work on and when. this eliminates the “what should I do next” paralysis that kills so many mornings.
the meeting scheduler
I stopped using Calendly because Motion’s meeting scheduler is built into the same calendar. when someone books a meeting, my tasks automatically rearrange. no double booking, no conflicts.
deadline tracking
Motion shows me in real time whether I am on track to meet all my deadlines. if I am overcommitted, it highlights which tasks are at risk. this helps me say no to new work before things get critical.
features I rarely use
project timelines
Motion can plan multi week projects, but I found the project view confusing. for complex projects, I still use a dedicated project management tool and just import the tasks into Motion for scheduling.
team features
the team workspace exists but I am a solopreneur, so I haven’t explored it deeply. the per user pricing makes it expensive for small teams.
pros and cons
pros
| advantage | detail |
|---|---|
| time savings | saves 20 to 30 minutes daily on scheduling decisions |
| auto rescheduling | when plans change, everything adjusts automatically |
| deadline awareness | tells you when you are overcommitted before it is too late |
| integrated scheduling | no need for a separate Calendly subscription |
| daily structure | eliminates “what should I work on” paralysis |
| improving AI | the scheduling gets better the more you use it |
cons
| limitation | detail |
|---|---|
| price | $34/mo is the highest of any calendar tool |
| context switching | sometimes schedules unrelated tasks back to back |
| learning period | takes 2 weeks of corrections before the AI is reliable |
| no offline mode | requires internet, no offline access |
| Google Calendar only | no Outlook support for individual plan |
| aggressive scheduling | can feel overwhelming when every minute is planned |
| no free trial | 7 day trial requires payment info |
when the price is justified
I think about Motion’s value in terms of who should and shouldn’t pay for it.
the $34/mo (or $19/mo annual) is justified if:
– you bill clients by the hour and the time savings directly translate to revenue
– you frequently miss deadlines because of poor scheduling
– you spend more than 20 minutes daily planning and replanning your day
– you juggle multiple projects with competing deadlines
– the “what should I work on” paralysis costs you productive hours
the price is NOT justified if:
– your schedule is simple and predictable
– you already have a task management system that works
– you don’t have enough tasks to benefit from auto scheduling
– budget is tight and $19 to 34/mo is a significant expense
– you prefer manual control over your calendar
who is this for
Motion is ideal for:
– solopreneurs juggling client work, personal projects, and admin tasks
– freelancers managing multiple clients with different deadlines
– content creators with publishing schedules across multiple platforms
– consultants who need to balance meeting time with billable work
– anyone who chronically overcommits and misses deadlines
Motion is not ideal for:
– solopreneurs with simple, repeating schedules
– people who prefer manual planning (bullet journals, paper planners)
– team managers who need full project management features
– anyone on a tight tool budget
my verdict
after six months, I am keeping Motion. the annual plan at $19/mo is worth it for the daily time savings and the peace of mind that comes from knowing my schedule is optimized. the auto scheduling is not perfect, but it is better than anything else I have tried, and it gets better over time.
if you are on the fence, try the 7 day trial and commit to using it fully. add all your tasks, set real deadlines, and let the AI do its thing. by day 4 or 5, you will know whether Motion’s approach clicks with how you work.
and if $34/mo is too much right now, start with Reclaim at $10/mo. it solves the same core problem at a lower price point, even if the execution is not quite as polished.
frequently asked questions
is Motion worth $34 per month?
on the monthly plan, it is a tough sell for most solopreneurs. on the annual plan at $19/mo, it is easier to justify if you value your time at more than $1 per hour. the 30 minutes daily savings adds up to about 15 hours per month.
how accurate is Motion’s AI scheduling?
in my experience, about 80% accurate from the start and improving to 90% after two weeks of daily use. the main issues are context switching between unrelated tasks and not understanding energy management throughout the day.
can Motion replace Calendly?
yes. Motion includes a meeting scheduler that works similarly to Calendly but integrates directly with your auto scheduled calendar. I cancelled my Calendly subscription after switching to Motion.
does Motion work with Outlook?
the Individual plan only supports Google Calendar. the Team plan supports both Google Calendar and Outlook. this is a significant limitation for solopreneurs in Outlook heavy industries.
what happens if I cancel Motion?
your tasks and meetings stay in your Google Calendar, but the auto scheduling stops. you would need to manually manage your schedule again. there is no data export for tasks, which is a concern for long term lock in.
for more on this, see our guide on airtable review solopreneurs.
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