Notion vs ClickUp pricing for 50 seats: real per-seat math and verdict
On each side's cheapest paid per-seat tier with annual billing, ClickUp is the cheaper option at 50 seats: $350 per month vs $400 per month. Higher tiers and monthly billing close or widen the gap; the full breakdown is below.
Notion and ClickUp sell to overlapping buyers at 50 seats, but they answer different questions. Notion is the wiki and lightweight project tool a docs-first team standardizes on; ClickUp is the work-management platform a project-first team consolidates on.
Cheapest paid per-seat tier on each side at 50 seats
Each side is shown on its cheapest paid per-seat tier with annual billing. Free tiers and custom-quote tiers are excluded so the comparison stays apples-to-apples.
When the more expensive one is the right pick
Pick the more expensive of the two if the cheaper one would force you to keep paying for a second tool you wanted to drop. Tool consolidation savings dwarf any per-seat price gap between these two.
Annual billing savings on each side
What is not in the Notion number
- AI, guests, and member provisioning should be checked against the current workspace setup.
What is not in the ClickUp number
- AI, storage, permission depth, and automation volume should be checked before migrating from Asana or Jira.
Sources
Pricing changes frequently. Confirm directly with each vendor before purchase.
Frequently asked questions
Which is cheaper at 50 seats, Notion or ClickUp?
ClickUp on the Unlimited tier is the cheaper option at 50 seats on annual billing, landing at $350 per month. The full per-tier table on this page shows the gap on monthly billing and at higher tiers.
What does Notion cost for 50 seats per month?
On the Plus tier with annual billing, Notion runs $400 per month for 50 seats, or $4,800 per year. Monthly billing typically adds 15 to 25 percent on top.
What does ClickUp cost for 50 seats per month?
On the Unlimited tier with annual billing, ClickUp runs $350 per month for 50 seats, or $4,200 per year. Higher tiers and monthly billing change the math; see the table on this page for the full breakdown.
Can a 50-person team replace both Notion and ClickUp with just one?
Sometimes, but it depends on the team's writing culture. Engineering and ops-heavy teams usually do fine on ClickUp alone with its built-in docs. Marketing, content, and product teams that ship a lot of written work usually find Notion's editor too central to abandon, even if ClickUp covers the project side.