Trello search scope defaults to all boards instead of current board
When performing a search in Trello, results default to a global scope across all boards rather than the board currently in view. Users who work across many boards have to manually apply a board filter each time, adding friction to a routine workflow. This is a minor but consistent UX gap in an otherwise capable tool.
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Similar Problems
surfaced semanticallyTrello Search Defaults to All Boards Instead of the Active Board
When using Trello's search function, results default to spanning all boards rather than scoping to the currently open board. Users looking for items within a specific project context must manually filter results, adding friction to what should be a quick lookup. Scoped search is a basic productivity feature expected in any project management tool.
Trello search fails at scale with large board collections
Teams managing large numbers of Trello boards struggle to locate the right board or card efficiently. The search function requires exact keyword matching rather than supporting natural language queries, creating significant navigation overhead as workspaces grow.
Trello search finds cards but won't navigate to the matching item inside
Trello's search shows which card contains the searched item but does not jump to it, forcing users to manually scan through long cards. User explicitly states willingness to switch to a paid product that solves this.
Trello Search Function Lacks Power and Specificity
Trello users find the search functionality insufficient for navigating large boards with many cards and historical data. The inability to filter or scope search results makes finding specific tasks difficult as project history grows. This is a recurring friction point that limits Trello's usefulness for teams managing complex or long-running projects.
Monday.com Search Is Too Weak to Reliably Locate Specific Items Across Large Workspaces
Teams using Monday.com at scale find the search functionality cannot reliably surface specific items, updates, or records buried within growing workspaces. As organizations accumulate boards and items over time, search becomes the primary navigation mechanism — making its limitations a compounding productivity drain. The weak search forces users to manually browse boards they should be able to find instantly.
Problem descriptions, scores, analysis, and solution blueprints may be updated as new community data becomes available.