Comparison

Cram vs RemNote

RemNote is a study powerhouse — a linked notes app, PDF reader, and flashcard system in one, with AI that turns your notes and documents into cards and spaced repetition to review them. It's a favorite of medical and university students building a whole 'second brain.' Cram makes a narrower bet: open your phone, drop in what you're studying, and get a clean deck in seconds — no knowledge base to build.

Both use AI and spaced repetition. The difference is scope: RemNote is an all-in-one workspace you set up and live in; Cram is a focused iPhone app that turns your material into a deck and gets out of your way.

Download on the App StoreFree trial · iPhone

Cram vs RemNote at a glance

Cram compared with RemNote, feature by feature
FeatureCramRemNote
AI generates your cards
Yes
Yes
From PDFs, notes, links & topics
Yes
YesNotes, PDFs, documents, transcripts
Spaced repetition
Yes
YesBuilt-in, configurable spaced repetition
Cloud sync & backup
Yes
Yes
Study offline
Yes
Yes
No ads
Yes
Yes
Platforms
iPhone
Web, Desktop, iOS, Android
Pricing
Free trial, then subscription
Free; Pro ≈ $6–8/moApprox.; a lifetime option (~$300) exists — verify on remnote.com

Competitor details are approximate and current as of June 2026. Always check RemNote's official site for the latest pricing and features.

What is RemNote?

RemNote is an all-in-one learning tool combining hierarchical note-taking, PDF and document annotation, AI-generated flashcards, and built-in spaced repetition. It runs on the web, desktop, iOS, and Android, works offline with sync, and requires an account. A free tier covers unlimited notes and flashcards with limited PDF uploads; a Pro subscription adds more AI, backups, and higher limits. It's especially popular with students building a long-term knowledge base.

Where Cram stands out

One job, done in seconds

RemNote is a deep workspace — outliner, PDF reader, flashcards, AI tutor — with a real learning curve. Cram does one thing cleanly: add your notes, PDF, link, or topic and get a study-ready deck, with nothing to configure.

Built for the phone

RemNote is at its best on desktop and web, where you build and link a knowledge base. Cram is a native iPhone app designed for studying on the go — material in, deck out, review anywhere.

No knowledge base to maintain

RemNote rewards people who invest in structuring everything they learn. Cram doesn't ask for that — drop in this week's material and start reviewing, with no system to keep up.

Private by design

Cram shows no ads, doesn't sell your data, and never uses your study material to train AI models. Your decks live on your device and sync to your account on EU-hosted servers.

Where RemNote stands out

A true all-in-one 'second brain'

RemNote links notes, PDFs, flashcards, and an AI tutor in one connected workspace. If you want everything you learn in a single structured system, it's far more capable than a focused flashcard app.

Cross-platform

RemNote runs on web, desktop, Android, and iOS with sync across all of them. Cram launches on iPhone first.

Generous free tier and deep SRS

RemNote's free plan includes unlimited notes and flashcards, and its spaced-repetition system is powerful and configurable for long-term learners.

Choose Cram if

iPhone users who want AI to turn their own notes and PDFs into a deck in seconds, with spaced repetition and offline review — and no system to set up.

Choose RemNote if

Students who want an all-in-one notes-plus-flashcards knowledge base to build and live in across every device.

The verdict

Choose RemNote if you want an all-in-one workspace to build a linked knowledge base of notes, PDFs, and cards across every device. Choose Cram if you want a focused iPhone app that turns your material into an AI deck in seconds — spaced repetition, offline review, and nothing to set up.

Turn your notes into a deck in seconds

No ads, offline review, synced to your account. Built for cramming.

Download on the App StoreFree trial · iPhone

Cram vs RemNote: FAQ

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