Best Scrum Tools 2026: 10 Options for Planning, Estimation, and Retros

Most scrum teams end up using a small stack of tools rather than a single all-in-one platform. Planning poker for estimation, a board for tracking sprint work, something for retrospectives, and sometimes an async-standup helper. The market is crowded, and a fair amount of the available tooling is either overbuilt for what a small team needs or priced for the enterprise. This guide covers ten scrum tools that real teams use — grouped by category, with honest notes on where each one fits and where it does not.

If you are looking specifically for a free planning poker tool, the first three options below are good starting points. If you are auditing your team’s full scrum stack, read on — the later sections cover scrum boards, retrospective platforms, and a few combined tools.

Planning Poker and Story Point Estimation

The shortest planning sessions tend to come from teams that use a dedicated estimation tool rather than improvising over a video call. These three are the most-used free options.

1. Scrum Poker Online (scrumpoker-online.org)

Scrum Poker Online is a free, lightweight planning poker tool built for distributed agile teams. Rooms are created instantly without registration — share a link, the team joins, and voting starts within seconds. The default deck is the standard Fibonacci sequence (1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, plus the special cards), and registered users can customize their planning poker cards to match a different scale such as T-shirt sizes.

Free: Yes, fully functional. A 40 USD/year Premium tier removes ads, adds a personal room ID, a session timer, attendance indicators, and automatic average/median calculation. Registration: Not required for participants. Card customization: Yes (registered users). Honest limitation: No native Jira or backlog integration. Teams that want story estimates written back to Jira automatically will need a different tool — or use Scrum Poker Online in a browser tab next to Jira, which is what most teams end up doing anyway.

2. PlanningPoker.com

PlanningPoker.com is one of the original online planning poker tools and is still widely used. The interface is clean and the tool supports multiple decks out of the box. The free tier is functional but caps the number of stories per session, which becomes a friction point for teams running larger backlogs.

Free: Limited free tier. Registration: Required for session hosts. Honest limitation: Some functionality is gated behind paid tiers; the upgrade prompts are noticeable.

3. PointingPoker.com

PointingPoker.com is the no-frills option. Rooms are created quickly, shared via link, and participants do not need accounts. Card sequences are fixed, so teams with non-standard scales will find it inflexible — but for the default Fibonacci flow it works reliably.

Free: Yes. Registration: Not required. Honest limitation: No card customization, no premium tier, fewer features overall.

Scrum Boards and Sprint Tracking

Once stories are estimated, they have to go somewhere. These are the tools most scrum teams use to track sprint work, manage the backlog, and visualize flow.

4. Jira

Jira is the default scrum board for a large portion of the agile world, particularly in mid-size and enterprise teams. The backlog, sprint board, and reporting features are mature, and the ecosystem of integrations and plugins is enormous. Planning poker plugins exist for Jira but are typically paid add-ons.

Free: Free tier for up to 10 users; paid tiers above that. Honest limitation: The learning curve is real, the admin overhead grows fast, and the UI tends to surface complexity even for simple workflows. Teams that just need a basic kanban board often find Jira heavier than the problem demands.

5. Trello

Trello is a lightweight, card-based board that works well for small teams running a simple sprint board. The Power-Ups system adds scrum features like story points, burndown charts, and basic reporting — but the core experience stays simple.

Free: Yes, generous free tier. Honest limitation: No built-in planning poker, no sprint-specific reporting in the free tier, and the scrum-specific features feel bolted on rather than native.

6. Linear

Linear is a newer entrant that has gained traction with modern software teams. The interface is fast, opinionated, and designed for cycle-based work that maps cleanly to sprints. Story points, sprint planning, and roadmap views are all built in.

Free: Limited free tier; paid plans are competitive with Jira for small teams. Honest limitation: Strongly opinionated about workflow — teams that need flexibility may find it constraining. No native planning poker.

Retrospective Tools

Retros are where teams turn sprint experience into improvement. A dedicated tool helps when the team is distributed or when running retros over video calls without structure has become noisy.

7. Retrium

Retrium is a guided retrospective tool with a library of formats (Start/Stop/Continue, Mad/Sad/Glad, 4Ls, and more). It walks teams through the phases of a structured retro and exports action items.

Free: Trial only; paid subscription required. Honest limitation: Cost. For a team running one retro every two weeks, the price-per-retro can feel high compared to free alternatives.

8. EasyRetro

EasyRetro is a simpler, sticky-note-based retrospective tool that is free for small teams. It supports the common formats and is fast to set up.

Free: Yes, for teams up to a certain size. Honest limitation: Fewer guided formats than Retrium; less polish in the UI; reporting is basic.

Combined and Async Tools

A few tools combine multiple scrum activities or address adjacent workflows like async standups.

9. Parabol

Parabol bundles a number of scrum activities — meeting facilitation, retrospectives, sprint poker — into one product. The pitch is reduced tool-switching, which appeals to teams tired of juggling four separate apps for four parts of the sprint.

Free: Generous free tier. Honest limitation: As a generalist, it does not match the best dedicated tool in each category — but for teams that prefer one app over four, the trade-off may be worth it.

10. Miro (with Scrum Templates)

Miro is primarily a visual collaboration whiteboard, but its template library includes planning poker boards, retro formats, and sprint planning canvases. Teams already using Miro for roadmapping or architecture often run scrum ceremonies inside it as well.

Free: Limited free tier; paid above that. Honest limitation: Miro is a visual tool first — it does what dedicated estimation, retro, or board apps do, but never quite as cleanly. Works well when the team already lives in Miro for other reasons.

How to Choose Your Scrum Stack

There is no single best scrum tool, and the right combination depends on team size, existing infrastructure, and how distributed the team is. Three rough archetypes:

Small team starting out (3–8 people, mostly co-located): Trello or a basic free tool for the board, Scrum Poker Online for estimation, EasyRetro for retros. Total cost: zero. This combination covers the essentials without setup overhead.

Distributed team using Jira (10–25 people): Jira for the board and backlog, a free planning poker tool in a browser tab for estimation sessions, Retrium or Parabol for retros. The Jira-native planning poker plugins exist, but most teams find that running estimation in a separate tool and writing the final number back to Jira is faster and friction-free.

Larger team or enterprise (25+ people, multiple squads): Jira or Linear as the system of record, Parabol or Miro for facilitated ceremonies, and a dedicated retro tool if retros are happening across multiple teams in parallel.

The most common mistake is buying into a heavyweight all-in-one platform before the team actually needs it. Start with the lightest stack that covers the work, add tools only when a specific friction point demands them, and replace tools that the team stopped opening. Scrum is meant to be lightweight — the tools that support it should be, too.