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6 Best Workload Management Tools in 2026

We compared six platforms on how each balances team capacity, ranked by workload depth, the tier it unlocks on, and price.

By The Codegen Team · Updated June 25, 2026

Top Picks at a Glance

# Tool Best For Pricing Rating
1 ClickUp Teams wanting customizable workload at a low price Free Forever, Unlimited $7/user/mo, Business $12/user/mo (Workload view), Enterprise custom 9.1/5
2 monday.com Visual teams that want at-a-glance capacity Free (2 seats), Basic $9/seat/mo, Standard $12/seat/mo, Pro $19/seat/mo (Workload view), Enterprise custom 8.7/5
3 Asana Program leads planning across many projects and a quarter ahead Personal free, Starter $10.99/user/mo, Advanced $24.99/user/mo (Workload), Enterprise custom 8.5/5
4 Smartsheet Agencies and services teams that bill against forecasted capacity Free (1 user), Pro $9/user/mo, Business from $19/user/mo, Resource Management add-on extra, Enterprise custom 8.1/5
5 Jira Agile engineering teams that plan capacity against velocity Free (10 users), Standard $7.91/user/mo, Premium custom (capacity planning), Enterprise custom 7.6/5

Workload management stopped being a premium afterthought and became a buying decision of its own. Every platform here ships a capacity view, but they differ wildly on which plan unlocks it and how granular it gets. The real question is no longer whether a tool shows workload, but what it costs to reach the view that helps.

How We Evaluated

We judged each platform on what decides whether a workload view earns its keep. Capacity depth carried the most weight. We looked at whether the tool measures load by hours, points, or task count, and whether it tracks each person or only the team as a whole.

We then scored tier placement, which is the plan you must reach before the Workload view shows up. A strong view gated behind a costly tier helps fewer teams. Price at team sizes of 10 to 50 seats, setup effort, and how well capacity links to the rest of the work filled out the rest. We valued everyday use over sales demos, since most teams live on the plan they can justify.

Which tools made the list, and why?

1

ClickUp

9.1/5 Free Forever, Unlimited $7/user/mo, Business $12/user/mo (Workload view), Enterprise custom
Best for: Teams wanting customizable workload at a low price
ClickUp is an all-in-one work management platform built by ClickUp in 2017. It bundles tasks, docs, dashboards, and a Workload view in one workspace, used by teams ranging from startups to large enterprises across nearly every department.

ClickUp puts a working Workload view at the lowest entry price of any platform here, and lets you size capacity by hours, story points, or raw task count. The view shows each person’s load against a capacity line, and you drag tasks to rebalance. What separates it from monday.com is the tier it lands on. Workload arrives at the Business plan rather than a step higher, and that same plan carries Goals, Timeline, and a large monthly automation budget. For mixed teams that estimate some work in hours and some in points, the flexible capacity unit removes the spreadsheet workarounds other tools force on you.

The cost is setup time and a billing surprise. New users report two to four weeks before the workspace feels natural, because the same flexibility that powers the Workload view also means more setup choices up front. Custom per-person capacity values sit one tier higher, on Business Plus. And the 2024 change that reclassified internal same-domain guests as billable members caught existing customers off guard, with some bills more than doubling overnight.

Strengths
  • Workload view arrives a full tier earlier than monday.com or Asana
  • Capacity measured by hours, story points, or task count, your choice
  • Custom per-person capacity values once you reach Business Plus
Limitations
  • Two to four weeks to reach proficiency because every view is configurable
  • Granular per-person capacity needs the Business Plus tier, not Business
  • AI features require the separate Brain add-on, not bundled in any plan
2

monday.com

8.7/5 Free (2 seats), Basic $9/seat/mo, Standard $12/seat/mo, Pro $19/seat/mo (Workload view), Enterprise custom
Best for: Visual teams that want at-a-glance capacity
monday.com is a visual work operating system from monday.com Ltd., used by more than 225,000 organizations. Teams build customizable boards to run projects, operations, and cross-functional work, with a Workload view among its higher-tier views.

Where ClickUp wins on price, monday.com wins on how the Workload view looks and feels to use. Color-coded capacity bars make an overloaded person obvious without reading a single number, and the bars size themselves from whichever effort column you choose. For non-technical, cross-functional teams who want capacity they can read at a glance, nothing here is more approachable. The reason it sits just behind ClickUp is the gate. The Workload view is a Pro-tier feature, which is two steps above the Basic plan and one above the Standard plan most teams start on.

The seat model is the other catch. Pricing comes in buckets, so a seven-person team has to buy the ten-seat plan and pay for three empty chairs. Automation actions are metered too. A busy team can burn through the Standard plan’s monthly action budget in under three weeks once email automations start counting against it, which pushes them onto Pro anyway.

Strengths
  • Color-coded capacity bars make overload obvious without reading numbers
  • The most approachable workload setup for non-technical teams
  • Unlimited free viewers on every paid plan
Limitations
  • Workload view requires the Pro plan, two tiers above Basic
  • Bucket pricing makes a seven-person team pay for ten seats
  • Standard's automation actions run out fast once email rules count
3

Asana

8.5/5 Personal free, Starter $10.99/user/mo, Advanced $24.99/user/mo (Workload), Enterprise custom
Best for: Program leads planning across many projects and a quarter ahead
Asana is a work management platform built by Asana, Inc. in 2008. It organizes work as tasks, projects, and portfolios with a Goals layer on top, and serves mid-market and enterprise teams coordinating cross-functional work.

A program lead juggling fifteen projects gets more planning depth from Asana than from anything else on this list. Asana pairs a task-level Workload view with a separate Capacity Planning layer that allocates people to projects across a quarter, and Goals tie all of it back to company objectives. Effort spreads realistically across days, so a ten-hour task booked over a week reads as two hours per weekday instead of one alarming spike. For teams that plan both the current sprint and next quarter, that two-layer model is the strongest here.

The price and the setup tax are what hold it at third. Workload is an Advanced-tier feature, the most expensive workload entry of the six. And the math only works if discipline holds, because every task needs an assignee, start and due dates, and a populated effort field. Building an org-wide view means adding every project to a master portfolio by hand. Teams that skip that hygiene end up staring at a Workload view full of blanks.

Strengths
  • Task-level Workload plus quarter-level Capacity Planning in one tool
  • Effort auto-distributes across days for a realistic daily load
  • Goals link workload to company objectives for exec reporting
Limitations
  • Workload sits on the Advanced tier, the priciest entry here
  • Org-wide views require adding every project to a master portfolio by hand
  • Empty effort fields leave the Workload view blank and useless
4

Smartsheet

8.1/5 Free (1 user), Pro $9/user/mo, Business from $19/user/mo, Resource Management add-on extra, Enterprise custom
Best for: Agencies and services teams that bill against forecasted capacity
Smartsheet is a spreadsheet-based work management platform launched in 2005. It runs projects through a grid interface layered with Gantt, automation, and reporting, and is favored by enterprise, construction, and services teams managing data-heavy work.

The first thing to know about Smartsheet workload is that the real engine is a separate purchase. The Business plan includes basic team workload tracking, but the demand forecasting, time and expense tracking, and people-to-work matching live in Resource Management by Smartsheet, a distinct add-on bought on top. For agencies and services teams that bill against capacity, that add-on goes deeper than any built-in view here, and a 2026 refresh decluttered its schedule view so individual workloads read more clearly.

Cost stacking and the interface are the tradeoffs. You are layering an add-on onto a Business subscription, and the spreadsheet-first model asks more of new users than a board or a list does. There is also a labeling trap. The Business plan advertises single sign-on, but it is OIDC only, and SAML for compliance requires the Enterprise plan. What offsets some of the cost is the free-collaborator model, where viewers and form-fillers consume no paid licenses, so a project can share schedules with dozens of outside stakeholders for nothing.

Strengths
  • Resource Management add-on forecasts demand and tracks time and expense
  • Free collaborators view schedules and submit forms without paid seats
  • Data Shuttle pulls external system data into capacity plans
Limitations
  • The real resource engine is a separate add-on on top of Business
  • Spreadsheet-first interface takes longer to learn than a board
  • Business single sign-on is OIDC only, SAML needs Enterprise
5

Jira

7.6/5 Free (10 users), Standard $7.91/user/mo, Premium custom (capacity planning), Enterprise custom
Best for: Agile engineering teams that plan capacity against velocity
Jira is an agile issue tracker built by Atlassian and used by more than 300,000 businesses. It runs Scrum and Kanban workflows around issues, sprints, and backlogs, and is the default tracker for software engineering teams.

If your team already lives in sprints, Jira ties capacity to velocity better than any general work tool here, but you pay for the privilege in tiers and plugins. Native capacity planning lives only in Jira Premium, through the Jira Plans feature, and it works at the team and sprint level using story points or hours per iteration. For engineering teams running formal ceremonies, planning the next sprint against historical velocity is a natural fit, and scenario planning lets you test commitments without touching live data.

The native model is thin once you look past sprints. It does not track individual workloads, account for vacation, or show a cross-team overload heatmap, so most teams bolt on a Marketplace app like Tempo or ActivityTimeline. Stack those apps and a Confluence license and the real cost runs two to three times the headline price. Kanban teams get the worst fit, because the capacity model assumes timeboxed iterations they do not run.

Strengths
  • Capacity ties directly to sprint velocity and story points
  • Jira Plans supports scenario planning across multiple teams
  • Deep Marketplace fills native capacity gaps with apps like Tempo
Limitations
  • Capacity planning is locked to the Premium tier
  • No native individual workload, vacation accounting, or cross-team heatmap
  • Marketplace apps and Confluence push real cost two to three times higher
6

Linear

7.2/5 Free (250 issues), Basic $10/user/mo, Business $16/user/mo (Insights), Enterprise custom
Best for: High-velocity engineering teams that plan in cycles, not hours
Linear is a modern issue tracker founded in 2019 by former Uber engineers. It centers on issues, projects, and time-boxed cycles for engineering, product, and design teams, and is known for speed and a keyboard-first interface.

Linear tracks what your team is building faster than anything here, but it was never built to balance people’s hours. Workload in Linear is cycle-based, meaning time-boxed sprints with estimate-driven capacity and automatic rollover of whatever does not get finished. Linear Insights, on the Business plan, surfaces team velocity and cycle performance. For a high-velocity engineering team that thinks in output rather than utilization, that is often all the capacity signal they need.

It is the lightest workload tool on this list by design. There is no per-person capacity, no vacation accounting, and no cross-functional resource allocation, because Linear is built for engineering, product, and design teams and nothing else. The free plan’s issue cap also fills within weeks of real use, so any team relying on Linear for capacity will be on a paid tier quickly.

Strengths
  • Cycle capacity with automatic rollover of unfinished work
  • Linear Insights reports team velocity and cycle performance
  • Fast, keyboard-first interface keeps planning overhead low
Limitations
  • No per-person capacity, vacation tracking, or resource allocation by design
  • Built for engineering teams only, not cross-functional operations
  • Free plan caps at 250 active issues and fills within weeks

The six split into two camps. One group treats workload as a people problem. ClickUp, monday.com, Asana, and Smartsheet all model capacity by person, with a view that asks who is overloaded and who has room to take more. The other group treats it as a flow problem. Jira and Linear plan capacity against sprint velocity, caring more about whether the next cycle is overcommitted than whether any single engineer is buried.

Teams with a dedicated project manager or resourcing lead tend to thrive in the first camp, where the per-person detail pays off. Engineering teams that self-manage and ship in two-week cycles prefer the second, where lighter tooling means less overhead. A third pattern now cuts across both. Agents that pick up routine tasks and update status on their own are starting to change what capacity even means, once part of the backlog runs itself.

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