Linear is a product development system for software teams that want to plan, track, and ship work in one place. It spans Intake, Plan, Build, Diffs, and Monitor, with Triage Intelligence, Linear Agent automations, Linear Insights, Linear Asks, and project updates. It connects with Slack, GitHub, Microsoft Teams, Intercom, Zendesk, Salesforce, Zapier, Notion, PostHog, Glean, Granola, Google Sheets, Figma, Jira, Sentry, and Discord, and is trusted by OpenAI, Ramp, Opendoor, and 25,000 companies. Plans run Free $0, Basic $10 per user/month, Business $16 per user/month, and Enterprise custom.
Verdict. Linear combines issue intake, project planning, code-review context, and AI-assisted automation in one system, with Business at $16 per user/month adding Triage Intelligence, Linear Insights, and Linear Asks for teams that want tighter workflow control.
Reviewed byMathijs BronsdijkLast verifiedHow we evaluate

Linear is a product development system for software teams that want to plan, track, and ship work in one place. It is aimed at product, engineering, and operations teams that need a faster alternative to fragmented issue tracking and status updates. The platform organizes work around issues, projects, cycles, and initiatives, while also supporting AI-era workflows for teams that collaborate with agents and external tools. Its core workflow spans Intake, Plan, Build, Diffs, and Monitor, with features such as Triage Intelligence, Linear Agent automations, Insights, Asks, and project updates. Linear also connects with Slack, GitHub, Microsoft Teams, Intercom, Zendesk, Salesforce, and more, and its public API supports custom integrations. The company says it powers over 25,000 product teams and is trusted by more than 25,000 companies, with customers including OpenAI, Ramp, and Opendoor. Security pages show SOC 2, GDPR, and HIPAA compliance, plus SSO and SCIM for enterprise deployments.
Turns feedback, bug reports, and customer requests into issues so teams can capture work at the source instead of copying it manually.
Structures priorities into projects, cycles, and initiatives, helping teams set clear directives and keep roadmaps visible.
Supports execution with AI agents and collaboration around active work, so teams can move from planning to delivery in one workspace.
Lets teams review code changes alongside issues, keeping implementation context attached to the work being shipped.
Tracks projects and analytics in one place, helping teams spot progress, blockers, and delivery trends without switching tools.
Connects Linear with tools such as Slack, GitHub, Microsoft Teams, Zendesk, Intercom, Salesforce, Zapier, Notion, PostHog, Glean, Granola, Google Sheets, Figma, Jira, Sentry, and Discord.
Automates triage and workflow actions with Linear Agent, including MCP-connected workflows that can pull context from tools like Granola, Glean, Notion, and PostHog.
Provides SOC 2, GDPR, and HIPAA compliance, plus SSO, SAML, SCIM, audit logs, app approvals, and encryption for controlled access.
Product managers use Linear to turn scattered feedback into actionable issues with Intake, then organize priorities in Plan. They can keep customer requests moving into projects and updates instead of losing them in chat threads.
Engineering leads use Linear to manage active work in Build and review changes in Diffs, keeping code context attached to issues. Monitor helps them follow progress and spot blockers before releases slip.
Support and customer experience teams use Linear Asks and integrations like Slack or Intercom to capture requests where they happen. That gives them a cleaner path from inbound messages to tracked work and visible project updates.
Yes. Linear offers a free plan for everyone, with unlimited members, 2 teams, 250 issues, an Agent platform, and Linear Agent beta access. It's meant to let teams get started without paying upfront.
Yes. Linear offers a public API for integrations with other tools. The pricing page also references API and webhook access, which makes it suitable for custom workflows and automation.
Yes. Linear integrates with Slack, GitHub, and Microsoft Teams, and also lists Zendesk, Intercom, Salesforce, Zapier, Notion, PostHog, Glean, Granola, Google Sheets, Figma, Jira, Sentry, and Discord.
Yes. Linear for Microsoft Teams lets you mention @Linear in channels, create issues from conversations, and post project updates back into Teams. The changelog also says you can install it in Teams settings.
Yes. Linear's security page lists SOC 2 Type II, GDPR, and HIPAA compliance, plus SSO, SAML, SCIM, audit logs, app approvals, and encryption. Enterprise pricing also includes granular admin controls and migration support.
Yes. Linear says it has mobile applications for both iOS and Android, so teams can track work away from the desktop app.
Linear is designed for software development projects, but the vendor says it can be adapted for broader project management needs. Customer stories show product teams at OpenAI, Ramp, and Opendoor.
Linear includes Customer Requests and Linear Asks, which help teams capture inbound feedback from channels like Slack, email, and web forms. That makes it easier to turn requests into tracked work and keep stakeholders updated.
Editor's read
Check the Free plan's caps before rollout: it allows 2 teams and 250 issues, while Basic raises that to 5 teams and unlimited issues. If your team will exceed either limit quickly, validate the upgrade path early.