Notes on this plan can be up to 200MB.Įvernote’s decision to move some of its more heavily used features – like business card scanning, for instance – into a now more expensive premium tier means that it will be able to increase the revenues from its current paid user base with little effort on its part in terms of revamping or expanding its core product. Meanwhile, the new, now slightly more expensive Premium tier ($5.99 per month or $49.99 per year) unlocks all of Evernote’s features, including unlimited monthly uploads, all the features in Plus, as well as other advanced options like the ability to convert notes into presentations, search in Office documents and attachments, share and discuss Evernote files with colleagues, annotate attached PDFs, scan and digitize business cards and more. This plan also increases the supported note size to 50MB. Plus users can upload up to 1GB per month, and can access the service offline, save emails (up to 250) into Evernote, and password-lock the app on mobile devices. The new middle tier, or Evernote Plus as it’s called, is $2.99 per month or $24.99 per year and is designed for more active users who need additional storage options and an expanded feature set. Individual notes can be up to 25MB on this plan. There will continue to be a free version of Evernote’s service with the Basic plan, which will allow users to access Evernote on multiple devices and will support up to 60MB in monthly uploads. He said that Evernote would debut new pricing tiers in early 2015. The new plans, Basic, Evernote Plus and Evernote Premium, are differentiated by features like support for offline access, larger note sizes, monthly upload allowances and collaboration features among other things.Įvernote CEO Phil Libin had said last November at the Web Summit conference in Dublin that the decision to charge $5 per month for the paid tier to Evernote’s product was kind of “random,” and that the company realized as far back as a couple of years ago that the pricing it first came up with was wrong. As promised late last year, Evernote today has rolled out new pricing plans for its note-taking service in order to introduce a more affordable, middle tier that now falls in between the company’s free option and the full-featured premium plan, which is now $5.99 per month, up from the earlier $5 per month.
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