Miro provides a visual workspace for innovation that enables distributed teams of any size to dream, design, and build the future together. Today, Miro counts more than 60 million users in 200,000 organizations who use Miro to improve product development collaboration, to speed up time to market, and to make sure that new products and services deliver on customer needs.
$10
per month per user
Pricing
Miro
Editions & Modules
1. Free - To discover what Miro can do. Always free
$0
2. Starter - Unlimited and private boards with essential features
$8
per month (billed annually) per user
3. Business - Scales collaboration with advanced features and security
$16
per month (billed annually) per user
4. Enterprise - For work across the entire organization, with support, security and control, to scale
contact sales
annual billing per user
Offerings
Pricing Offerings
Miro
Free Trial
Yes
Free/Freemium Version
Yes
Premium Consulting/Integration Services
No
Entry-level Setup Fee
Optional
Additional Details
Monthly billing also available at $10 per month for the Starter plan, or $20 for the Business plan.
Miro's UI and UX is better overall in my opinion. FigJam seems way too complicated in some areas and underdelivers in other areas. I really like how FigJam handles sticky notes though, a but more than Miro in that area.
I very much prefer Miro over the ClickUp whiteboard tool. It is easy to use, and in ClickUp, I spend so much time just trying to format individual nodes.
Enterprise grade, learning curve, SSO integration, security for teams' data/boards, and number of concurrent collaborators is where Miro was able to shine and partly why we suggested it over the other tools.
OW is quite pricy in comparison to Miro and it doesn't provide nearly 1/3 of the value and ease of use that Miro does. Miro provides real-time collaboration tools which OW does not and serves more as a glorified notepad w/ some good tagging features.
FigJam is much more underdeveloped compared to Miro and it is also more widely known. The free features are also better and the loading time is also faster with bigger sized boards.
Miro offers more flexibility and a larger canvas compared to Visio, which is page-based and can make it difficult to maintain a smooth flow for a process.
In my current project, it was nice to be able to print out a working version on a roll of paper and not have a booklet of …
I’m using Miro because it’s my organization's platform. I think Miro is similar but because I was exposed to MURAL first I appreciate the visuals and options and ease of use compared to Miro.
Miro is visually appealing, very inviting, and easy to use for the most part. It has all the drawing tools to connect shapes, create aligned diagrams, change colors, establish a layout, and color them. You can quickly change font sizes. In our meetings, teammates are very …
Miro is actively being pushed in my former workplace and my university. It is user-friendly, and I have been using it since the start. It has fast-tracked my team collaboration process, helped me with quick idea-generation processes, helped me with research organization, and …
draw.io is a dated collaborative diagramming product and is very limited in what you can do with it. Its saving and collaboration system is convoluted and frustrating to use. Miro's cloud-saving process requires no action from the user and just works out of the box. …
Miro has an advantage in live collaboration over Lucid Chart - which is a software our company still uses from time to time in addition to Miro. For any collaborative flow charts/diagrams, we tend to use Miro.
Miro has more capabilities. FigJam is sometimes easier to integrate bc our team uses Figma a lot. But Miro is better when expanding out to people outside our department.
Miro helps me and my team more in the initial phases of a project. I do not like drawing freehand, so I prefer Miro over InVision. Figma and Adobe XD I only utilize towards the end of the project when prototyping begins.
Oh, Miro is much better. I like the brand color, its toolbox, and how easy it is to switch between a Mobile app and a laptop. Mural, as I remember, did not offer a fully functioning app back then. Maybe they do now. This makes me want to recheck the Mural and see how they have …