Decision Support · Side-by-side
Compare pricing, strengths, and use cases so it is easier to pick the right fit.
Change tools
For most everyday users, Evernote is the more practical choice thanks to its mature mobile app, powerful web clipper, and broad feature set—but its free tier is cripplingly limited. Rhyme AI is a niche tool for teams that want to search across Slack, Google Drive, and Notion from one place, but it lacks a mobile app and clear pricing, making it risky for individuals. The single biggest difference: Evernote is a personal second brain you can use on your phone; Rhyme is a team knowledge base with no mobile access.
Evernote
Rhyme
Scores at a glance
Choose Evernote if
Choose Rhyme if
Key differences
Facts side by side
| Evernote | Rhyme | |
|---|---|---|
| Free plan | ||
| Mobile app | ||
| API access |
Common questions
Yes. Evernote is designed for individuals to capture and organize notes, tasks, and web clippings on any device. Rhyme is built for teams to search across existing tools like Slack and Google Drive—it has no mobile app and no personal note-taking features.
No. Rhyme does not have a mobile app. You can only access it through a web browser on a desktop or laptop. If you need to access your knowledge base on the go, choose Evernote.
Evernote's free tier is very limited (50 notes, 1 device), so you'll likely need the Personal plan at about $10-15/month. Rhyme's pricing is not publicly listed, but it's aimed at teams and likely costs more per user. For a single person, Evernote is the more predictable and affordable option.
Yes, Evernote now includes AI-powered search and note structuring (as of version 11). Rhyme's AI is more focused on summarizing documents and answering questions across your connected apps. Both have AI, but they serve different purposes: Evernote helps you find your own notes; Rhyme helps you find information scattered across team tools.
Not directly. Rhyme connects to Slack, Google Drive, and Notion—it does not import Evernote files. If you want to move from Evernote to Rhyme, you'd need to export your notes as PDFs or text and upload them to a connected tool like Google Drive first.
It depends on your workflow. If your team lives in Slack and Google Drive and needs a unified search, Rhyme is purpose-built for that. If your team wants to create and share notes, tasks, and calendars in one app, Evernote's collaboration features (shared notebooks, real-time editing) are more versatile.
Evernote wins for everyday personal use with mobile support and web clipping; Rhyme is a niche team tool for searching across Slack and Drive, but lacks a mobile app and transparent pricing.
If you're an individual who wants a reliable, all-in-one note-taking app that works on your phone and computer, go with Evernote—but be prepared to pay for it. If you're part of a team that's drowning in scattered files across Slack and Google Drive and you don't need mobile access, Rhyme is worth a look, but only after you get a clear price quote. For most people, Evernote is the safer bet.