This grandfathered plan will only last for a few weeks and the new changes and pricing will roll out for users at different times, the earliest being August 15. And, no new features were introduced - you'll be paying more for the same set of features.Įvernote is, however, offering a grace period to free users who need sync across more than two devices.
The monthly rates saw the smaller percent increase in price, while the annual pricing became less enticing. That's up from $5.99 (£3.99 or AU$) per month or $49.99 (£34.99 or AU$69.99) per year.įor those looking at paid tiers, that's roughly a 33 percent to 40 percent increase, depending on whether you pay monthly or annually. These features, plus up to 10GB of uploads per month, will set you back $7.99 (£4.99 or AU$11.00) per month or $69.99 (£44.99 or AU$89.99) annually.
Evernote Premium, the top tier, adds the most features, such as the ability to search for text in Office documents and PDFs, annotate PDFs, scan business cards and suggested notes and content from the web that are relevant to the note you're currently working on. It also increases the upload limit to 1GB per month. Upgrading to Evernote Plus unlocks features like accessing notebooks offline, emailing notes to your Evernote account and the ability to email customer support. What's new is a passcode lock on the mobile apps, previously a feature reserved for paying users, and a limit of two devices on which you can sync Evernote. It still limits uploads to 60MB per month and allows you to use the web clipper tool, search for text within images and share notes with other users. Evernote Basic was and is still entirely free to use.