Asana Mobile Hides Subtasks and Excludes Solo Users From Paid Plans
Asana's mobile app buries subtasks outside the main task view unlike the desktop app, and paid plans require a minimum of two seats, effectively excluding solo users from paid features.
Signal
Visibility
Leverage
Impact
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyAsana Core Features Locked Behind Premium Paid Tiers
Asana restricts meaningful functionality to higher-cost plans, leaving free and low-tier users unable to access features essential for team coordination. Small teams and individual contributors hit paywalls before they can evaluate the full product. This is a pricing policy complaint rather than a software gap.
Asana Advanced Reporting and Features Locked Behind Expensive Higher Tiers
Teams using Asana hit a wall when advanced reporting and analytics require expensive plan upgrades. This pricing structure forces smaller teams to either overpay or manage complex projects without visibility tools. The gap between free/basic and premium functionality is a recurring frustration across project management tools.
Asana pricing feels expensive relative to feature limitations
Users perceive Asana as overpriced relative to the functionality it delivers, with notable feature gaps. This creates friction for teams evaluating project management tools on value grounds. The perception reflects broader market pressure on SaaS pricing in the crowded PM tool space.
Asana onboarding overwhelms new users and key features are paywalled
New Asana users face a steep learning curve from feature complexity, while the most useful capabilities require paid tier upgrades. The combination makes the value proposition unclear for smaller teams evaluating adoption.
Asana Mobile Tagging and Description Editing Broken
Asana mobile app frequently fails on tagging people and editing descriptions. Not mobile-friendly overall.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.