
Most AI note-taking roundups mix meeting transcription with knowledge management, two different problems. Here's what's worth paying for in each, as of July 2026.
TL;DR
- "AI note-taking" covers two completely different tool families: meeting transcription and knowledge management. Most people need one, not both. Buying the wrong type wastes money and creates friction.
- NotebookLM got its biggest upgrade on June 8, 2026, running on Gemini 3.5 with agentic research capabilities including web browsing, code execution, and new output formats. The free tier still works.
- **Notion AI is no longer a
10 add-on.** As of early 2026, it's bundled exclusively into the Business plan at20/user/month. Solo users on the Plus plan lose AI access.- Limitless (formerly Rewind AI) is gone. Meta acquired the company in 2025. The app stopped working December 19, 2025. If any roundup you read still lists it, the rest of that post is probably stale too.
- Best free picks: NotebookLM for research and documents; Fathom for unlimited meeting transcription.
- Best paid picks: Granola ($14/mo, bot-free meeting notes) for privacy-conscious professionals; Obsidian + Smart Connections for local knowledge management.
Every "best AI note-taking apps" roundup you'll find today lists the same eight tools in a slightly different order and calls it a day. What they don't do is explain that "AI note-taking" is actually two separate categories with completely different tool families, use cases, and price points. Buying a meeting transcription tool when you need a knowledge base, or vice versa, is how people end up cancelling subscriptions after 30 days.
Here's what's actually worth paying for in July 2026, with verified pricing and the updates most posts haven't caught up to yet.
Before comparing any tools, answer this question: What problem are you actually solving?
Meeting transcription tools capture what people said in calls and meetings. They record audio (or system sound), transcribe it, summarize action items, and sometimes sync to a CRM. The output is a structured record of a past conversation. Examples: Granola, Fathom, Fireflies, Otter.
Knowledge management tools help you think, organize, and retrieve information across documents, notes, and research. You feed them PDFs, articles, your own notes, and they help you find connections and generate insights. The output is understanding. Examples: NotebookLM, Notion AI, Obsidian, Mem.
These categories overlap slightly (Notion can log meetings; NotebookLM can accept meeting transcripts as sources) but they are fundamentally different products. A tool that excels at one usually mediocres at the other.
Three out of four professionals now use an AI note-taker in their work meetings, up from roughly one in three in 2023, according to Laxis's State of Meeting Note-Taking 2026 report. Sixty-two percent of those users say they recover 4+ hours per week. That's a month of productive time per year per person.
The tools that do this well have split into two camps: bot-based (a virtual participant joins the call visibly) and bot-free (audio is captured from your device without sending anyone a calendar invite).
Granola captures audio from your computer's system output, so no bot appears in the participant list. Other people on the call have no technical indication you're recording. Based on the company's product documentation, it's the only bot-free option with a full Business tier now available on both Mac and Windows (as of May 2026).
Pricing (as of July 2026):
The bot-visibility question is more than a comfort issue. Depending on your jurisdiction and company policy, recording without disclosure has legal implications. Granola sidesteps the "is there a bot in this meeting?" question entirely. At 14/month for Business, it's also cheaper than Fathom's paid tier (20/month), tl;dv ($18/month), and most Fireflies plans.
What it doesn't do: Granola is explicitly a meeting notes tool. It won't build a searchable knowledge base from your notes over time, and it doesn't have native CRM auto-sync on the free plan.
Fathom's free plan offers unlimited recording and transcription with no time cap, which is a genuinely rare offer in this market. The catch is the standard one: a Fathom bot joins your meeting as a visible participant. Some meeting hosts find this awkward; most users stop noticing.
The free plan covers individual use well. Teams who need CRM sync, custom templates, or shared access move to the paid tiers ($20+/month). For solo knowledge workers who just want reliable meeting summaries without paying anything, Fathom is the most defensible free choice in July 2026.
Both tools are solid for organizations that need structured templates, CRM sync, and multiple people sharing meeting data. They're less competitive for individuals.
The recurring complaints worth knowing: Otter's 300-minute monthly limit on the free tier gets hit fast by active users, and both tools struggle with accuracy when audio quality is poor (background noise, strong accents, low-quality mics). If you have a messy audio environment, budget extra time for cleanup.
Google's NotebookLM received what the company called its biggest upgrade ever on June 8, 2026, running on Gemini 3.5 and Antigravity. The practical changes are substantial: every notebook now has a secure cloud computer, allowing NotebookLM to write and execute code, browse the web autonomously to find sources, generate charts and spreadsheets, and export PowerPoint decks natively.
The product went from a solid document-chat tool to something closer to an agentic research assistant. Earlier in 2026, Google also added customizable infographic styles, EPUB support, PPTX export, and persistent flashcard progress. The Audio Overview feature (a two-host podcast-style summary of your sources) now has a Cinematic Video Overview companion.
Pricing (as of July 2026, via notebooklm.google/plans):
The free tier is genuinely useful for most people. If you upload fewer than 50 sources to a given notebook and aren't hitting the 50 daily chat limit, there's no reason to pay. The agentic capabilities (web browsing, code execution) roll out first to Ultra/Workspace Business subscribers, so the June 8 upgrade matters most if you're on those tiers.
NotebookLM's hard limit: It's a source-based research tool. It can't organize your life, manage tasks, or collaborate with a team on a shared workspace. If you need organizational structure, it's the wrong tool.
Notion AI integrates directly with everything already in your Notion workspace: pages, databases, tasks, projects. It can answer questions across your entire workspace, draft content, fill database fields, and run AI agents. For anyone whose work already lives in Notion, it's the most deeply integrated AI assistant available.
The pricing change matters. As of early 2026, Notion AI is no longer a standalone add-on. It's bundled into the Business plan at [20/user/month (annual)](https://www.notion.com/pricing). The custom agents (launched September 2025) run on a metered credit system: 10 per 1,000 Notion credits. Solo users on the $10 Plus plan no longer have access to AI features.
If your team is already paying for Notion Business, the AI is included and the value is strong. If you're a solo user who was paying 10 for Notion Plus plus the old 10 AI add-on, you now pay $20 for the same capability, or lose access. That's not a disaster, but it changed the math for a lot of individual users.
Notion AI vs. NotebookLM: Notion wins when research and organization are part of the same system. NotebookLM wins when you're doing source-intensive research or studying specific documents. They don't really compete: one is a workspace, the other is a research tool.
Obsidian is a local-first note-taking app: your notes are Markdown files on your device. There's no required cloud account. The AI experience comes from plugins, not the app itself.
For most setups in 2026, the recommended pairing is Smart Connections (semantic vault search using local embeddings) and Copilot for Obsidian (a chat sidebar that draws on your notes). Together they cover most "second brain" use cases. Smart Connections works locally using models like nomic-embed-text via Ollama: no API key, no monthly fee, no data leaving your machine.
The tradeoff is setup time. Getting local AI running in Obsidian takes roughly an hour of configuration for someone comfortable with developer tools. For non-technical users, this is a real barrier. For anyone with a privacy requirement or a large vault they're not comfortable pushing to a third party, it's the right choice.
Obsidian the app is free (with optional 50/year sync/publish add-ons). Smart Connections has a free tier and a Pro tier at around 16/month for cloud model access.
Mem 2.0 (relaunched early 2026) is closer to a personal AI assistant for your notes than a structured knowledge base. You write notes naturally; Mem automatically connects related ideas without requiring you to tag or organize anything. Mem Chat lets you ask questions across your entire note history and get source-attributed answers.
Pricing: Free (25 notes/month, limited AI chat); Pro at $12/month (unlimited notes, Mem Chat, PDF ingestion, Mac/Windows/iOS/web).
Based on user reviews, Mem works well for people who want a low-friction capture system and don't want to think about structure. It works less well for heavy research workflows where NotebookLM's source citation and organization by project is more appropriate.
| Tool | Category | Free Tier | Paid Entry |
|---|---|---|---|
| NotebookLM | Knowledge | Yes (100 notebooks, 50 sources, 50 chats/day) | $7.99/mo (Plus) |
| Notion AI | Knowledge | No (requires Business plan) | $20/user/mo |
| Obsidian + Smart Connections | Knowledge | Yes (local only) | ~$16/mo (Smart Connections Pro) |
| Mem | Knowledge | Yes (25 notes/mo) | $12/mo (Pro) |
| Granola | Meeting | Yes (limited history) | $14/user/mo (Business) |
| Fathom | Meeting | Yes (unlimited recording) | $20/mo (individual paid) |
| Fireflies | Meeting | Yes (limited transcripts) | $10/seat/mo (Pro, annual) |
Pricing as of July 2026. Always check the official pricing page before subscribing.
Limitless (formerly Rewind AI): Meta acquired Limitless in 2025. The app stopped working December 19, 2025. Existing subscribers were moved to an unlimited free plan through end of 2026 for data export, but no new sign-ups are accepted. Any post recommending Limitless is working from outdated research.
Evernote: The 2024-2025 period saw consistent reports of sync failures, note reversion, and note disappearance documented on Reddit. The product has improved under new ownership, but the trust is gone for many long-term users. There are better options at every price point.
Notta: As of January 2026, 86% of Notta's TrustPilot reviews are 1 star, with consistent complaints about difficult cancellation and poor transcription quality for non-native English speakers. This may improve, but the pattern is a meaningful signal.
Start with meeting transcription if: you spend 4+ hours per week in calls and currently take notes manually or not at all. Start free with Fathom. Pay for Granola Business ($14/month) if the bot-visibility issue matters.
Start with knowledge management if: you consume a lot of research, read PDFs, or want to be able to ask questions across your own documents and notes. Start free with NotebookLM. Add Mem ($12/month) if you want conversational capture. Consider Obsidian if data ownership is a priority.
Don't start with Notion AI unless your team is already on Notion Business. The $20/user/month entry price is hard to justify as a note-taking tool alone.
If you're weighing whether any paid AI subscription makes sense for your workflow, the free vs. paid AI tools breakdown for 2026 covers the framework for making that call.
Is NotebookLM still free in 2026? Yes. The free tier includes 100 notebooks, 50 sources per notebook, and 50 chats per day, with no credit card required. The June 2026 agentic features (web browsing, code execution) are rolling out to paid tiers first, but the core document-chat experience remains free.
What's the best free AI note-taking app overall? For meetings, Fathom (unlimited recording, no time cap). For research and documents, NotebookLM (most powerful free knowledge tool available). Using both covers 80% of what people spend money on note-taking apps for.
**Is Notion AI worth 20 a month?**
Only if your team is already running on Notion Business and you're treating AI as part of the workspace, not just a note-taking feature. For a solo user specifically after AI note-taking, it's not competitive with NotebookLM (free to start) or Mem (12/month).
Does Obsidian have good AI now? Yes, with the right plugins. Smart Connections and Copilot for Obsidian together deliver semantic search and chat over your vault, including fully local operation via Ollama. The setup takes an hour and requires some comfort with configuration. The result is private, offline AI over your notes with no monthly fee for the local model.
What happened to Limitless / Rewind AI? Meta acquired the company in 2025. The Limitless app stopped accepting new users and stopped working for existing users on December 19, 2025. It's gone.
Pick your category first, then your tool. Most people overpay because they buy a full knowledge management suite when they just needed something to recap their Monday standup.
For most knowledge workers in July 2026: start with NotebookLM (free, upgraded June 8, best for source-heavy research) and Fathom (free, best for unlimited meeting notes). Together they cost $0 and cover the majority of what this category promises. Upgrade when you hit a specific limit.
If you're already using AI agents to automate broader workflows, the practical guide to AI agents shows how meeting summaries and knowledge bases can feed into automated pipelines, which is where this category is heading in the next 12 months.
ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, DeepSeek, Grok & 25+ more
Voice + screen share · instant answers
What's the best way to learn a new language?
Immersion and spaced repetition work best. Try consuming media in your target language daily.
Voice + screen share · AI answers in real time
Flux, Nano Banana, Ideogram, Recraft + more

AI autocomplete, rewrite & expand on command
PDF, URL, or YouTube → chat, quiz, podcast & more
Veo, Kling, Grok Imagine and more
Natural AI voices, 30+ languages
Write, debug & explain code
Upload PDFs, analyze content
Full access on iOS & Android · synced everywhere
Chat, image, video & motion tools — side by side

Save hours of work and research
Trusted by teams at
No credit card required