Productivity review
Sunsama
A daily-planning app built around the ritual of pulling tasks out of every other app into a realistic plan for today. Slower than a regular to-do list, on purpose.
At a glance
- Pricing
- 14-day free trial. $20/mo billed monthly, $16/mo billed annually
- Category
- Productivity
- Last reviewed
- Best for
- Solos who suffer from over-committing, calendar collisions, and the gap between what they planned and what they shipped.
Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend tools I've used and would happily suggest to a friend.
Benchmarks
How Sunsama actually scores.
Five axes that matter for a one-person business. Each score is editorial, 1–10, higher is better. A tool that maxes every axis doesn't exist; the shape of the chart is the signal.
- Price
- Value for a one-person budget
- Solo fit
- Built with solo operators in mind
- Learning curve
- How fast a beginner gets useful work done
- Lock-in
- How easy it is to leave (high = easy)
- Support
- Quality and responsiveness of help
Scores are set by the editor after hands-on use and revised as the tool evolves. They're not paid for and don't change based on affiliate partnerships.
The case for
- Daily planning ritual forces realistic time estimates and weekly review by design
- Pulls tasks from Notion, Asana, Linear, Trello, Gmail, GitHub, Slack into one daily list
- Native calendar integration means you can timebox tasks into actual time slots
- Weekly review prompts that feel like a coach without being preachy
The case against
- Expensive for what it is. $20/mo for what is fundamentally a daily-planning app
- The deliberate slowness frustrates anyone who just wants a quick capture tool
- Smaller team than the established productivity players; some integration depth is shallow
What Sunsama actually is
Sunsama is not a to-do list. It is a daily planning app that takes the position that the to-do list and the calendar are not the same thing. A task on a list does not exist until it has time on the calendar to do it. The whole product is built around that premise.
The morning ritual is the core feature. You sit down with Sunsama, it surfaces tasks from every app you connect (Notion, Linear, Gmail, Asana, Trello), and it asks you to pull a small number into today. Each task gets a time estimate. Each task gets a slot on the actual calendar. The app deliberately slows you down so you cannot over-commit.
Why this is useful for solos
The failure mode of every solo is the same: a to-do list with 47 things on it, a calendar with no margin, and a Sunday-night feeling that you did not ship what you wanted to. The cause is almost never "I did not work hard enough". The cause is that the list and the calendar are running in different universes.
Sunsama forces them to meet. Picking five tasks for today, estimating each, and dropping them onto the calendar makes it physically impossible to over-commit. If the five tasks add up to nine hours and your day has six, the maths is right in front of you. You have to cut two or you have to push to tomorrow. There is no escape into the fantasy of "I'll just do all 47".
What it does well
Integration coverage is broad. Most solos already have Notion, Gmail, and one of Linear/Asana/Trello, and Sunsama pulls from all of them into one daily view. The weekly review ritual is gently insistent without being preachy. The calendar integration is bidirectional, so timeboxed tasks actually show up in your real calendar and protect the time.
The "shutdown" ritual at the end of the day, which asks what shipped and what to move to tomorrow, is the part most solos do not have and most need.
Where it breaks down
The price is the main objection. $20/mo for a daily-planning app is on the high end. Notion plus a calendar can replicate maybe 70 percent of this for free. Whether the 30 percent of polish and ritual is worth $240/year is a value judgement that depends on how badly you over-commit.
The deliberate slowness, which is the point, is also frustrating when you just want to dump a quick task. Sunsama is not a capture tool, and trying to use it as one will leave you cold.
Some integrations are shallower than the marketing suggests. Linear and GitHub pull tasks but not subtasks or full context.
Verdict
Worth the trial if your problem is over-committing rather than under-planning. The ritual is the product. If you stop running the morning planning, the tool stops paying back. Skip if you already have a working daily planning practice in a tool you like.
Bottom line
Ready to try Sunsama?
Solos who suffer from over-committing, calendar collisions, and the gap between what they planned and what they shipped.
Disclosure: Some links on this page are affiliate links. I may earn a commission at no extra cost to you. I only recommend tools I've used and would happily suggest to a friend.
Compare Sunsama with the alternatives
Side-by-side reviews of the other Productivity tools we've covered.
Sunsama vs Granola
3.5/5 vs 4/5 · Free for 25 meetings total. Pro $14/mo billed annually
Sunsama vs Raycast
3.5/5 vs 4/5 · Free for individual use; Pro $8/mo or $96/yr
Sunsama vs Calendly
3.5/5 vs 3.5/5 · Free for one event type. Standard $12/mo, Teams $20/mo per user, all billed annually
Sunsama vs Notion
3.5/5 vs 3.5/5 · Free for personal use, paid plans from $10/mo
Living document
What did we miss about Sunsama?
Every review evolves. Spot something wrong, missing, or out of date — drop a note. The most useful ones land in our monthly "Reader corrections" post, with credit if you're up for it.
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