Best Free Study Apps You Haven’t Tried Yet
Most students know the classics: Quizlet for flashcards, Google Docs for collaboration, and maybe Notion for organization. They’re great, but let’s be honest — they’re not secrets anymore. If you want to sharpen your study routine without spending a dime, there are dozens of lesser-known tools out there that can make a real difference.
This post isn’t about the obvious ones. It’s about the free, under-the-radar apps that can help you stay organized, boost focus, and make learning more effective. Whether you’re a student, a teacher recommending tools, or a parent helping a child study smarter, these apps are worth adding to your toolkit.
1.
RemNote
– The Flashcard + Notes Hybrid
Best for: Students who love active recall but don’t want to separate notes and flashcards.
RemNote combines note-taking with spaced repetition flashcards. As you write your notes, you can instantly turn key points into digital flashcards. The app then builds review sessions for you using a spaced repetition algorithm — so you’re always studying the right content at the right time.
- Why it’s unique: Unlike Quizlet, flashcards are integrated directly into your notes.
- Use case: During biology lectures, mark terms like “mitochondria = powerhouse of the cell” as cards. Later, RemNote automatically quizzes you.
Available on: Web, Windows, Mac, iOS, Android.
Price: Free (with optional premium).
2.
Obsidian
– The Knowledge Map App
Best for: Students who want to connect ideas across multiple subjects.
Obsidian is a free, powerful note-taking app built around the idea of linking thoughts. Think of it as a digital brain. Every note you write can be connected to other notes, building a “knowledge map” over time.
- Why it’s unique: Instead of scattered notebooks, you see how your ideas interlink visually.
- Use case: A history student could link a note on the French Revolution to notes on Enlightenment thinkers, and then to themes of democracy.
Available on: Windows, Mac, Linux, iOS, Android.
Price: Free for personal use.
3.
Forest (Free Version)
– Focus Through Gamification
Best for: Students who get distracted by their phones.
Forest is a focus timer with a twist: every time you set a timer and stay off your phone, a digital tree grows. Break the focus session by leaving the app, and your tree withers. Over time, you build a forest representing your productive study sessions.
- Why it’s unique: It turns focus into a game, giving you visual proof of your consistency.
- Use case: Set 30-minute “grow sessions” during study blocks. Great for Pomodoro-style studying.
Available on: iOS, Android (with browser extension).
Price: Free (some in-app purchases optional).
4.
Coggle
– Quick, Beautiful Mind Maps
Best for: Visual learners who organize information with diagrams.
Coggle is a free, web-based app for creating mind maps. It’s simple, clean, and collaborative, which makes it especially good for group projects.
- Why it’s unique: Easy to use, with no design skills required. You can start building mind maps in seconds.
- Use case: Mapping out a literature essay — main theme in the center, characters and sub-themes branching out.
Available on: Web (with mobile support).
Price: Free basic plan.
5.
Cold Turkey Blocker (Free Version)
– Kill Distractions at the Root
Best for: Students who need full focus during long study sessions.
Cold Turkey is a distraction-blocking app for your computer. It lets you block websites, apps, or even your whole internet connection for a set period of time.
- Why it’s unique: Unlike browser-based blockers, it works at the system level — harder to cheat.
- Use case: Block YouTube, Twitter, or gaming apps until your study session is complete.
Available on: Windows, Mac.
Price: Free (with premium upgrades).
6.
Otter.ai (Free Tier)
– Smart Lecture Transcription
Best for: Students who struggle to keep up with fast-paced lectures.
Otter transcribes spoken words into text in real-time using AI. You can record lectures, discussions, or even study group sessions and get searchable transcripts later.
- Why it’s unique: Transcriptions are synced with audio, so you can click a word to hear it in context.
- Use case: In a fast lecture, you can focus on listening and engagement, knowing Otter will capture the details.
Available on: Web, iOS, Android.
Price: Free with 300 minutes per month.
7.
Notion (with Templates)
– Organize Everything in One Place
Best for: Students who like customizable study dashboards.
Notion is getting more popular, but many students still don’t realize just how much it can replace: planners, calendars, flashcard apps, and more. With free templates available online, you can set up study trackers, assignment dashboards, and note systems.
- Why it’s unique: Combines notes, tasks, and databases in one tool.
- Use case: Create a study dashboard where you track assignments, exam dates, and daily goals.
Available on: Web, Windows, Mac, iOS, Android.
Price: Free personal plan.
Choosing the Right App for You
Not every tool fits every learner. Here’s how to decide:
- If you struggle with recall → Use RemNote for spaced repetition.
- If you’re a big-picture thinker → Try Obsidian or Coggle for connections.
- If focus is your problem → Go with Forest or Cold Turkey.
- If lectures overwhelm you → Use Otter.ai for transcripts.
- If you love organization → Build a Notion dashboard.
Tips for Parents and Teachers
Parents: Encourage your child to try one app at a time instead of overwhelming them with five at once. Ask, “Which one helps you the most?” and stick with it.
Teachers: Introduce one app as a classroom tool for a week — for example, have students map a chapter using Coggle or track a project in Notion. Modeling use helps students adopt tools more effectively.
Final Encouragement
Free doesn’t mean second-rate. These apps can turn study sessions into something more structured, focused, and even enjoyable. You don’t need to use them all — start with one, test it for a week, and see how it fits into your study routine.
Because the best study app isn’t the one everyone’s talking about — it’s the one that makes your learning easier, more efficient, and more sustainable.
