6 open source alternatives to Wunderlist

Love lists? Check out this handy list of open source apps for managing all your lists!
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a checklist for a team

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Wunderlist is an app for lists, loved by many, but gone for good as of May 6, 2020. The website encourages existing users to download and use Microsoft To Do in its place. That's tempting because it makes it easy to import all of those lists you've made over the years. Then again, maybe it's a chance to Marie Kondo those lists and pare things down. Do you really need 30 lists? (Apparently, I've decided that I do, so I won't judge.)

I have lists for all sorts of things, from "Plants for the garden 2020" to "Gifts for the husband." Some are checklists, some are To Do lists, and some are lists for list's sake.

For my husband and me, the most useful list is our shared grocery list. We both have the app on our phones, we both add things to the list, we review it together but separately on our phones before he goes shopping (yes, you read that correctly), and he checks things off as he puts them in the cart. It makes the whole thing surprisingly efficient, and I think we save some money because we're into sticking to THE LIST.

While its users loved it, Wunderlist isn't entirely unique. There are a gazillion list apps out there. With Wunderlist, I've specifically enjoyed its combination of simplicity and design, and that it managed to implement useful features like sharing and collaboration with others, dynamics checkboxes for lists, and a great user experience across both mobile and web interfaces. I've also enjoyed using it for a list that isn't an "active" document: a list I don't review weekly or make regular progress on—like my many lists I've used for brainstorming an idea (including that novel I've been meaning to write...).

From the many wonderful articles we've published over the years, I've curated a list of open source alternatives to Wunderlist that may work for your needs, from simple task management and to-do lists to complex note-taking and process management. Or, if you are that person scribbling tasks and notes on paper scraps and post-it notes that are lying... er, around somewhere and everywhere... this might be a good time to try one of these digital options out.

Tasks—works with OwnCloud

Tasks is a free and open source app you can install from F-droid. Tasks is a mobile-only application, but it's extremely flexible in what it can sync to. You can save your lists to NextCloud or OwnCloud, Google Tasks, Apple Reminders, and just about any CalDAV server you have an account on.

The default view of Tasks is a daily view, so any task you enter is assumed to be a task from today onward. If you're like me and you want to maintain several unique lists, you can do that with Tags. When you create a tag, you create a category for tasks. You can assign a colour and an icon so each list of tasks is unique.

It takes a little getting used to, but tagging has many advantages. Because all tasks are tagged, you can view groups of tasks by clicking the tag you want to filter for, but you can also filter by day and even by place. That means that when you go grocery shopping, your grocery list becomes the active default list, and your everyday life list becomes active again when you return home.

By syncing your data to one of your online accounts, you can share lists with loved ones, collaborators, and colleagues.

Another great feature is that if you the same tasks every morning when you get to work, or the same 20 items in your weekly grocery list, you can create tasks that repeat on a regular basis.

Reviewed by Seth Kenlon

Screenshot of Tasks interface

OpenTasks—best for long lists

OpenTasks is an excellent task management tool for creating individual tasks with a wide variety of settings. It supports a wide range of fields when creating a task, ranging from basic things, such as name and description, to more complex items, such as choosing if the task is private, public, or confidential. The biggest thing that sets OpenTasks apart from the alternatives is its use of tabs on the app's main screen. These tabs quickly allow you to see the tasks due, tasks starting soon, tasks sorted by priority, and tasks sorted by current progress towards completion. Many of the other apps support doing things like these, but OpenTasks quickly easily accesses these lists.

Read the full OpenTasks review by Joshua Allen Holm

OpenTasks in Google Play store

Mirakel—great for nested lists

Mirakel is a task management app with a modern user interface and support for just about every format you might want in such a program. At Mirakel's basic level, it supports multiple lists, which are referred to as "meta lists." Creating an individual task has a plethora of options with deadlines, reminders, progress tracking, tags, notes, sub-tasks, and file attachments, all comprising a part of a task's entry.

Read the full Mirakel review by Joshua Allen Holm

Screenshot from website of Mirakel app

Todo—simple and effective, works anywhere

Todo.txt is one of the two to-do list and task management apps that I keep coming back to over and over again (the other is Org mode). And what keeps me coming back is that it is simple, portable, understandable, and has many great add-ons that don't break it if one machine has them and the others don't. And since it is a Bash shell script, I have never found a system that cannot support it. Read more about how to install and use Todo.txt.

Read the full todo.txt review by Kevin Sonney

Drop-down menu for Todo.txt

Joplin—best for private lists

Joplin is a NodeJS application that runs and stores information locally, allows you to encrypt your tasks and supports multiple sync methods. Joplin can run as a console or graphical application on Windows, Mac, and Linux. Joplin also has mobile apps for Android and iOS, meaning you can take your notes with you without a major hassle. Joplin even allows you to format your notes with Markdown, HTML, or plain text.

Read the full Joplin review by Kevin Sonney

Joplin graphical version

CherryTree—great alternative to Evernote / OneNote / Keep

CherryTree is a GPLv3-licensed application that organizes information in nodes. Each node can have child nodes, allowing you to easily organize your lists and thoughts. And, child nodes can have their own children with independent properties.

Read the full CherryTree review by Ben Cotton

CherryTree's hierarchical note layout

Bonus: Wekan—for fans of Kanban

Kanban boards are a mainstay of today's agile processes. And many of us (myself included) use them to organize not just our work but also our personal lives. I know several artists who use apps like Trello to keep track of their commission lists as well as what's in progress and what's complete. But these apps are often linked to a work account or a commercial service. Enter Wekan, an open source kanban board you can run locally or on the service of your choice. Wekan offers much of the same functionality as other Kanban apps, such as creating boards, lists, swimlanes, and cards, dragging and dropping between lists, assigning to users, labeling cards, and doing pretty much everything else you'd expect in a modern kanban board.

Read the full Wekan review by Kevin Sonney

Wekan kanban board
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Jen leads a team of community managers for the Digital Communities team at Red Hat. She lives in Raleigh with her husband and daughters, June and Jewel.

10 Comments

Hi Gen, nice article. I have few from the list including wunderlist. thank for the great info.

I have tried most of them, but i am still looking out which can actually make me procrastinate less. None of them helped me to actually complete my tasks.

AngadArora: I also tried some of these open task lists, but at the time they were each missing things I found useful, like recurring tasks based on completion date, or a decent mobile version, etc. I need to revisit them again as some weren't on my radar them and others have improved quick a bit.

The big thing that's missing from every task manager I've ever looked at is subtasks that automatically become primary tasks on the "today" or "next actions" task list when they are up. The ONLY one I've found that does that is GTDNext. It's fantastics and I would like to move to that app, but haven't found the time or motivation yet. I also worry they don't have critical mass to survive and there is a significant learning curve that may be a barrier to wider adoption.

Addendum: Looks like Christian is starting a new task app. I hope it's as good or better than Wunderlist, and I hope he's learned his lesson.

It'd be neat if he released his new app as open source. That way, if that project gets bought up by a company that EOLs it, its community still has access to the code. That's one of the many advantages of open source even for SaaS offerings.

In reply to by Digitalis

Looks like the new app is not a task app, but instead aimed at disrupting Powerpoint: https://pitch.com/about

No mention of Free software there, which I don't think is a surprise given that Wunderlist was not open code either.

I definitely choose Free software over proprietary whenever possible. It is key to be able to control your own destiny. But it doesn't always guarantee vitality of the project.

I went to Wunderlist after Astrid Tasks was bought by Yahoo! and shut down just months later. Astrid was Free software, but there was no fork that was cooked-enough for me to use for a long time. There is a fork under ongoing development now at https://tasks.org/. I think I need to explore that again. It does hide tasks until due!

I'm not a fan of SaaS as somebody can pull the plug for any reason. Too often I've been caught out by those shutdowns with no recourse: Astrid, Wunderlist, Crashplan, Wuala, Google Reader, the list goes on.

I just came up with a new acronym (and palindrome): SOMOS - Software On My Own Server(TM)

It's my goal to eliminate all SaaS from my life and entirely use only SOMOS!

In reply to by sethkenlon

Tried most of the ones listed above. Some of them are lacking features while others require a premium subscription if I wish to use all of their features.
It's such a shame that Wunderlist is shutting down, haven't found a software as good as this.
Here are three softwares I tried before that's not on the list:
Zenkit: easy-to-use, but lacking in many features. I decided to use other softwares after a few weeks.
Quire: The only software I find that is close to Wunderlist. Free, can collaborate with others, reminders, subtasks, Kanban boards, mobile app can sync offline... They're new though, so they're probably developing more features.
Todoist: You need to pay in order to use their features (very limited) Not worth the price.
Currently sticking with Quire. I'm not interested in using a task management software that requires paying monthly fees.

One of my favorite gripes on any list or calendar is the lack of ability to set custom recurring things such as 'every third Tuesday' or 'twice yearly.
There's a lot of so called custom builds but they mostly seem to default to one or two limited, inbuilt selections .

You should look at Tasks (the first on the list of this article), in that case. It does arbitrary repeat schedules — even every 3rd Tuesday (or whatever).

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