Miro is the undisputed leader in collaborative whiteboarding. 60 million+ users, 2,500+ templates, 160+ integrations — the numbers speak for themselves. But if you're a solo creator, a freelancer, or a small team, the question isn't "is Miro good?" — it's "is Miro's free tier good enough for what I actually need?"
ToolPick's 2026 Miro review gets to the heart of it: the free plan offers 3 editable boards with unlimited collaborators. For a single user juggling multiple projects, 3 boards fills up fast. The Starter plan at $8/user/month unlocks unlimited boards, version history, and basic integrations — but the cost scales linearly with team size.
SaaSCompared's 2026 evaluation puts it plainly: the free tier is "genuinely useful for evaluation but limiting for ongoing work." And Miro's AI capabilities — sticky note clustering, content summarization, action item extraction — are locked behind paid plans entirely. According to AI Stack Picks' 2026 pricing breakdown, the full pricing structure is:
- Free: 3 editable boards, unlimited collaborators, basic templates
- Starter: $8/user/month (annual), unlimited boards, version history, integrations
- Business: $16/user/month, SSO, advanced security controls
- AI features: require Starter or above
For a 5-person team, that's $480/year on Starter before you even use AI. The price isn't unreasonable for what you get, but it forces a question: do you actually need all of Miro?
What Happens When You Hit the 3-Board Wall
The most common scenario: you start with a personal board for weekly planning, add a project board for a client deliverable, and a third for team brainstorming. Suddenly every new idea requires deleting something. The free tier has no archiving workaround — you either upgrade or remove boards. The unlimited viewers and commenters are nice, but they can't edit, which limits real collaboration.
Alternative 1: Boardmix — The Closest Miro Experience at Half the Price
Boardmix is the most direct Miro alternative. The free tier is generous — AI-powered generation, professional diagrams (fishbone, mind maps), 200+ templates, and real-time collaboration. Boardmix's 2026 comparison positions itself as "similar to Miro but roughly half the price" — paid at $4.99/user/month. The ecosystem is smaller (fewer third-party integrations), but for the core whiteboarding use case, it delivers 80% of Miro's value at 60% of the cost.
Alternative 2: FigJam — Best for Design Teams
If your team already uses Figma, FigJam is a natural extension. The free plan (3 files, unlimited collaborators) has the same board limit as Miro, but the Figma integration is seamless — drag components directly from your design files into your whiteboard. Paid at $3/editor/month. TheTutorBridge's 2026 guide notes FigJam is "fast and lightweight" but primarily appeals to teams already in the Figma orbit.
Alternative 3: Excalidraw — Completely Different Philosophy, Completely Free
ToolPick's review flags Excalidraw as Miro's most direct competitor from the opposite end of the spectrum. Fully open source, zero signup, no tracking. It has no templates library, no AI features, no third-party integrations. It has a canvas, drawing tools, and a hand-drawn aesthetic that makes everything look approachable. For technical drawings, architecture diagrams, and quick sketches, it's better than Miro — because Miro's features would just be noise.
The real question isn't "can Excalidraw replace Miro?" — it's "do you need what Miro offers beyond the canvas?" If the answer is no, Excalidraw saves you $0 and 3 board-counting headaches.
Alternative 4: Small Whiteboard — Free, No Count, No Friction
Here's the honest truth for most readers: if you're hitting Miro's 3-board limit and your immediate reaction is frustration, not "I need more features," then what you actually need is a whiteboard with no board limit at all. Small Whiteboard is exactly that — free, browser-based, zero registration, no artificial constraints. It's built by the SmallMindMap team for people who want a drawing tool, not a collaboration platform. If your primary Miro use case is personal task planning and quick diagrams, this will cover it without the counting.
How to Decide
Here's a practical decision framework based on what I've learned from testing all these options:
- 3 boards are enough for now → stay on Miro free. Just be disciplined about archiving.
- You need AI features but don't want to pay Miro's Starter price → Boardmix free tier offers more AI without the cost.
- You sketch architecture diagrams and technical flows → Excalidraw. It's purpose-built for what you do.
- You just need a canvas, occasionally, with zero commitment → Small Whiteboard. Nothing to set up, nothing to manage.
- You run regular workshops and need the full template arsenal → Miro Starter is worth paying for. The 2,500+ templates and robust facilitation tools justify the cost.
Miro is excellent software. The question is whether you need excellent software for a task that a simple tool handles just fine.