If so, it will then communicate the changes across “the relevant customer touchpoints,” a representative for the company explained. The company confirmed it’s been running a test with less than 1% of its free users to determine if it will implement the new plan. Other plans, including the personal and professional plans, currently discounted to $10.83 per month and $14.17 per month, respectively, offer support for larger notes and uploads and syncing to unlimited devices, among other things.Įvernote said its website had not been updated with the new information because the change is not yet final. Instead, its website explains that free users are only limited to things like 60 MB of monthly uploads or 25 MB maximum note size. Despite seeing the messaging in the app itself, the Evernote website’s pricing plans page didn’t indicate there was any such limit on free plans - which made the pricing bump seem like a hidden fee change that Evernote didn’t want to publicize.