Miro Review (2026)
We researched Miro in depth - brainstorming sessions, design sprints, retrospectives, and diagram building - through verified user reviews, official documentation, and pricing data. Here's exactly what we found.
Miro is the category leader in visual collaboration - an infinite canvas where teams brainstorm, map processes, run retrospectives, design systems, and plan sprints together in real time or asynchronously. The Starter plan at $8/user/month unlocks unlimited boards, custom templates, board versioning, and facilitation tools (voting, timer, video chat). The learning curve is practically zero: share a link, and collaborators are adding sticky notes and moving elements within two minutes of joining. Major review platforms both score it 4.7/5 - among the highest ratings in the entire productivity software category.
Where it loses: Miro is not a project management tool. There are no task assignments, due dates, Gantt views, or resource management features - it works alongside PM tools, not instead of them. The free plan is limited to 3 editable boards, which is genuinely restrictive for any regular team use. Board performance can degrade with heavy content - boards loaded with high-resolution images, embedded PDFs, and hundreds of objects can slow noticeably. And as more design and productivity tools add whiteboarding capabilities, teams already deep in those ecosystems may find native alternatives sufficient.
How Miro scores
Six weighted axes, same rubric we use on every tool. Score = weighted average, not vibes.
Pros & Cons
Everything we found - after 10 hours of research and analysis.
What Miro nails
- Near-zero learning curve - collaborators are productive within minutes of receiving a board link, no account required for guests on paid plans
- Real-time collaboration is seamless: live cursor tracking, simultaneous editing, and instant updates work reliably at scale
- 2,500+ templates covering brainstorming, user story mapping, retrospectives, wireframing, Kanban, and strategic planning
- Infinite canvas with no content size limits - diagrams, mind maps, and workshop boards grow without friction
- Facilitation tools built in: anonymous voting, timer, presentation mode, and video call overlay for running live workshops
- Miro AI (Miro Assist) generates mind maps, diagrams, and sticky-note clusters from a text prompt - significantly speeds up workshop prep
- Native integrations with Jira, Azure DevOps, Asana, Slack, and Microsoft Teams - boards embed directly in project workflows
- Starter plan at $8/user/month is the most accessible paid whiteboard plan in the category
Where it falls short
- Free plan is capped at 3 editable boards - insufficient for any team using Miro regularly
- No task management features: no due dates, assignees, Gantt views, or progress tracking
- Board performance degrades on heavy boards - large images, embedded PDFs, and dense object clusters cause noticeable lag
- Mobile app offers limited editing capabilities compared to the web app - not a reliable primary interface
- Miro AI credits are capped per plan (50/member on Business) - power users hit the limit quickly
- Boards are not version-controlled at the element level - restoring a specific earlier state requires manual rollback
- Teams already using tools with built-in whiteboards (Figma FigJam, Notion, Microsoft Whiteboard) may find paid Miro redundant
Who should - and shouldn't - use it
Miro is excellent for a specific profile. Being honest about the mismatch saves you a painful migration later.
Great fit for you if…
- Remote and hybrid teams that run regular workshops, retrospectives, planning sessions, or brainstorming meetings
- Product and design teams doing user journey mapping, wireframing, and design sprint facilitation
- Scrum and agile teams running sprint retrospectives, PI planning, and story mapping visually
- Consultants and facilitators running structured client workshops who need a polished, low-friction shared canvas
- Cross-functional teams that need a visual layer on top of an existing PM tool - boards link directly into Jira and Asana tasks
Skip Miro if…
- You need task management, due dates, and Gantt charts - Miro does not replace a PM tool
- Your whiteboarding needs are covered by tools already in your stack (Figma, Notion, or Microsoft 365)
- Your team uses Miro occasionally - the 3-board free limit is either enough or the $8/user/month Starter isn't justified for rare use
- Board performance on large, media-heavy canvases is a daily requirement for your team
- Your team is fully mobile-first - the web app is required for full functionality
What Miro actually costs
Prices verified May 2026. See pricing page for current rates.
| Feature | Free | Most popular Starter | Business | Enterprise |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price/ user / mo · annual | $0 | $8 | $20 | Custom |
| Editable boards | 3 | Unlimited | Unlimited | Unlimited |
| Private boards | — | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Board version history | — | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Custom templates | — | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Voting & timer (facilitation) | — | ✓ | ✓ | ✓ |
| Guest access (no seat) | — | — | ✓ | ✓ |
| Jira / Azure DevOps sync | — | Jira only | ✓ | ✓ |
| SAML SSO | — | — | ✓ | ✓ |
| Miro AI credits / mo | 10/team | 25/member | 50/member | Custom |
| SCIM / data residency | — | — | — | ✓ |
Prices shown in USD. Regional pricing may differ - miro.com/pricing/
The full review
Axis-by-axis, in the order that matters most.
The fastest onboarding in the category - zero friction for first-time collaborators
Miro's onboarding is the best in the productivity software category. Creating a board takes under 30 seconds. Inviting collaborators takes one link - recipients can join, view, and add content without an account on free boards and without a paid seat on Business guest plans. The template gallery loads with thumbnails sorted by use case: retrospectives, brainstorming, planning, research, design, and strategy. A well-matched template gets a team from empty canvas to structured working session in under five minutes.
The learning model is discovery-based rather than tutorial-driven. Miro's canvas behaves consistently - sticky notes, shapes, frames, and connectors all work the same way regardless of the template you're using. New users figure out the core interactions within the first five minutes of a collaborative session simply by watching others. The only onboarding investment required is for advanced features: diagramming, wireframe libraries, and the Miro AI tools benefit from a brief orientation but are not required for basic workshops.
Infinite canvas, live collaboration, and smooth navigation - the performance gap is real on heavy boards
Miro's canvas navigation is the most polished in the category - pan, zoom, and trackpad gestures work at the speed of thought. The toolbar is minimal and contextual: selecting an element surfaces only relevant options rather than the full feature set. Frames (sections of the canvas) let teams divide large boards into structured zones - a retrospective board might have separate frames for Start/Stop/Continue, action items, and a parking lot - and the frame navigator on the right panel lets presenters jump between sections cleanly.
Real-time collaboration is Miro's strongest technical capability. Live cursors are visible with user names, simultaneous editing has no conflict lag, and the follow-me presentation mode lets a facilitator guide all participants through the board without them losing their place. The performance gap emerges with board size: boards containing 50+ high-resolution images, dense connector diagrams, or large embedded PDFs begin to lag on load and during zoom. This is a known limitation and most impactful for teams doing heavy visual design work rather than standard workshop facilitation.
2,500+ templates, strong AI, and facilitation tools - shallow on PM workflows
Miro's feature set is built for visual collaboration and facilitation, not project management. The template library - 2,500+ templates across dozens of categories - is the largest in the whiteboard category and covers every major workshop format: Design Thinking, SWOT analysis, OKR mapping, user story mapping, event storming, PI planning, competitive analysis, and dozens of agile ceremony formats. Templates load with pre-built zones, prompts, and example content that a facilitator can adapt in minutes rather than building from scratch.
Miro AI (Miro Assist) generates mind maps from a one-line prompt, clusters sticky notes by theme, converts diagrams to structured summaries, and suggests connections between concepts on a canvas. The AI sticky-note clustering is the most practically useful feature - it can take the output of a 20-person brainstorm and group 80 notes into 6 themes in seconds. Facilitation tools - anonymous voting, countdown timers, and the embedded video call overlay - are well-integrated and reduce the need for a separate meeting tool during live workshops.
Solid documentation and active community - live support is plan-tiered
Miro provides email support on paid plans and priority support on Business and Enterprise. Email response times average 6–10 hours on Starter and 3–6 hours on Business during business hours. Support quality for standard canvas, template, and integration questions is good - agents provide clear, specific answers with relevant screenshots or links to documentation. Complex SSO, SCIM, or enterprise security questions are escalated to the security team with a typical 24-hour follow-up.
Miro's Help Centre is comprehensive and well-organised, covering every feature with short video walkthroughs and written guides. The Miroverse - Miro's community template marketplace - is one of the best community resources in the category: thousands of user-contributed templates including highly specialised formats (Design Sprints, Wardley Maps, RICE scoring frameworks) shared by practitioners who use them in real teams.
Starter at $8 is fair - the free plan's 3-board limit is the main friction
Miro Starter at $8/user/month (annual) is the most accessible paid whiteboard plan in the category. For teams running regular workshops, retrospectives, or visual planning sessions, unlimited boards, custom templates, and board versioning at $8/seat represent clear value. A 5-person team runs the core workshop stack for $40/month - lower than the Starter tier of most PM tools while adding a collaboration surface those tools don't include.
The free plan's 3-board limit is where most teams hit friction. Three boards sounds like enough at sign-up and runs out quickly: one retrospective board, one brainstorming board, and one process diagram already fills the quota. The jump from Free to Starter ($8/user/month for the whole team) is the right move for any team using Miro more than once a month. Business at $16/user/month justifies itself primarily on guest access - for teams that regularly collaborate with external stakeholders without requiring them to hold Miro seats.
PDF and image exports work well - structured data portability is limited
Miro exports boards as PDF, PNG, or CSV (for grid-structured content like tables and sticky note data). PDF exports preserve the visual layout accurately and are suitable for sharing with stakeholders who don't have Miro access. PNG exports at high resolution work well for embedding boards into documents or slide decks. The CSV export captures text content from sticky notes and tables but loses visual layout and connection data.
Miro boards do not have a standard import format that other whiteboard tools can read - moving boards to another whiteboard platform requires manual recreation. The Miro REST API provides programmatic access to board content including items, connections, and comments, which enables custom export scripts for teams with engineering resources. Board links shared publicly can be accessed without a Miro account, which provides a low-friction way to preserve and share archived boards without maintaining active subscriptions.
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Miro questions
The questions readers ask before they sign up.
Is Miro free?
How much does Miro cost in 2026?
Is Miro a project management tool?
What is Miro AI (Miro Assist)?
What is the difference between Miro Starter and Business?
How this review was researched
A fixed research protocol - identical for every review on this site. Sources inform the score, never the other way around.
Updated May 2026