

However, you should realize that any PDFs you add after that point won't be searchable via OCR. So if you opt to only pay for Evernote for a single month and scan all your PDFs in as documents, you will still be able to search them later once you're back as a free, non-paying customer. That said, once you've indexed your PDFs, they will forever remain searchable.

This does come at a price, though at $5/month for Evernote Premium. Most services don't work that way, which is one thing that makes Evernote so awesome.Įvernote also can index your PDF files to make them searchable via the OCR technology as well. Yes there are monthly upload limits and note-size limits, but in the long run, you won't ever have to worry about running out of space. And the great thing, again is that there is no long-term storage limits. But it still is more than I will probably ever use, and I use Evernote for everything. Is Evernote's storage unlimited? No, not technically. Not so overwhelming now is it? That’s Evernote for you. That’d be a huge binder – except now think of the binder as the size of your phone, tablet or laptop. Think of a binder that has everything you need in it – 100,000 notes and 250 notebooks worth. As of now, this is the same for both free and premium customers. You are allowed 100,000 notes, 250 synchronized notebooks (all of which can be shared), 10,000 tags and 100 saved searches. Evernote also does put a limit on the amount of notes, notebooks, tags and saved searches that you can have. For instance, you are currently only allowed a size of 25MB per note if your a free customer and 100MB per note as a premium customer.
