Plaud NotePin S
Summary
Your phone is already in your pocket, your laptop is already open, and yet you still leave meetings with a half-page of scribbled notes that miss the action items — because active listening and active note-taking fight each other. Plaud is a dedicated hardware-plus-software recorder that handles the capture so you stay in the conversation.
Plaud ships as a credit-card-thin device that attaches to the back of a phone via magnet or sits on a desk, recording audio and sending it to Plaud's cloud for transcription and AI summarization. The workflow is one button: press record, pocket the device, review the structured summary later. This works cleanly for one-on-one meetings, calls, and lectures where a single audio source dominates. The ceiling appears in multi-speaker boardrooms and noisy environments — community reports flag speaker-diarization accuracy dropping when voices overlap or room acoustics are poor. Teams logging high call volumes exhaust the free tier's monthly minute cap quickly, at which point continued use requires a paid subscription.
Bottom line: Plaud earns its place on a consultant's desk or a medical professional's coat pocket for clean, single-source recordings — but a sales team running fifty calls a day will hit the minute ceiling and face a cost-per-minute calculation that may push them toward a software-only transcription service with no hardware dependency.
Pricing Plans
Flat RateLast verified 2 days ago- Price
- $179.00
Plaud NotePin S
Ideal for hands-free capture with 4 accessories included
- Hands-free capture
- 4 accessories included
View full pricing on plaud.ai →
Pricing may have changed since last verified. Check the official site for current plans.
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Pros
Sign in to edit- Hardware-based passive recording means you stay present in the conversation instead of managing an app, which matters in clinical, legal, or executive settings where phone interaction reads as distraction.
- Summarization templates tuned to specific verticals — sales calls, medical notes, legal depositions — so the output maps to the document format your workflow already expects, rather than a generic bullet dump you reformat manually.
- Phone-call capture via magnetic contact with the device's speaker picks up both sides of a call without a conference dial-in or app permission, so mobile sales reps get full call transcripts without changing how they make calls.
- API access is available, so teams that want to pipe transcripts into their own CRM, note system, or data pipeline are not locked into the Plaud app as the final destination.
- Support for over forty languages, so multilingual teams or professionals working across regions avoid running a separate transcription service for non-English sessions.
Cons
Sign in to edit- Speaker diarization in multi-participant settings — a five-person strategy meeting, a panel deposition — degrades when voices overlap; community reports indicate transcript accuracy in these conditions is unreliable enough that someone still has to manually attribute quotes, defeating the core time-saving proposition.
- Transcripts are delivered after the session ends, not during it; any use case requiring live captions, real-time note access, or mid-call search — a support agent reading a knowledge base while on a call, a doctor checking prior notes mid-consultation — requires a different tool entirely.
- The free tier's monthly minute cap is a hard ceiling that activates well before heavy professional use; a consultant running six one-hour client calls a week exhausts it inside a month, and continued use shifts to a paid subscription — at which point teams with no hardware attachment to the workflow benchmark against software-only services like Fireflies or Otter that charge per seat with no device cost.
- Cloud-only architecture with no self-hosted option means all audio leaves the device for Plaud's servers; legal and healthcare teams operating under strict data-residency or sovereignty requirements will hit a compliance blocker that no configuration option resolves.
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About
- Platforms
- iOS, Android, Mac, Windows (via Plaud Desktop); cloud-accessible via Web; onboard recording on hardware
- API Available
- Yes
- Self-Hosted
- No
- Last Updated
- 2026-06-07T13:19:01.636Z
Best For
Who it's for
- Professionals in frequent meetings (executives, consultants, lawyers, doctors)
- Remote/hybrid workers conducting phone and video calls
- Sales teams needing automated call summaries and action items
- Students and educators capturing lectures
- Anyone seeking hands-free conversation capture without smartphone apps
What it does well
- Recording and summarizing client meetings and sales calls
- Capturing interview transcripts and extracting key insights
- Documenting medical consultations and patient notes
- Legal discovery and deposition note automation
- Lecture and conference talk transcription for students
Integrations
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Recommended skills for this tool
Auto-curated by the AIDiveForge recommendation matrix. These skills are predicted to enhance this tool based on category, capability, and domain signals.
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Meeting Summary Template transform 32%
Turn a raw transcript into a decision-focused recap: outcomes, owners, deadlines, open threads.
Why: category partial · caps 0/0 · domain ops
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Standup Note Synthesizer transform 32%
Merge individual standup bullets from multiple people into a single team digest with blockers surfaced to the top.
Why: category partial · caps 0/0 · domain ops
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Runbook Skeleton post 32%
Produce a first-draft runbook from a postmortem — detection, diagnosis, mitigation, rollback — so the next incident has a template to follow.
Why: category partial · caps 0/0 · domain ops
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OKR Draft Critiquer post 32%
Score draft OKRs against SMART criteria and the outcome-not-output rule, with suggested rewrites for each failing key result.
Why: category partial · caps 0/0 · domain ops
Frequently Asked Questions
- Is Plaud NotePin S free?
- Plaud NotePin S is a paid tool ($179.00). No permanent free tier is offered.
- Is Plaud NotePin S open source?
- No — Plaud NotePin S is a closed-source tool. Source code is not publicly available.
- Does Plaud NotePin S have an API?
- Yes. Plaud NotePin S exposes a developer API. See the official documentation at https://plaud.ai for details.
- When was Plaud NotePin S released?
- Plaud NotePin S was first released in 2023.
- What platforms does Plaud NotePin S support?
- Plaud NotePin S is available on: iOS, Android, Mac, Windows (via Plaud Desktop); cloud-accessible via Web; onboard recording on hardware.
Hours Saved & ROI Stories Community
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Curated lists that include this category
Plaud combines a physical recording device with a companion app and cloud-based AI pipeline to produce transcripts, summaries, and extracted action items from spoken conversations. The core workflow: the device captures audio directly (including phone calls, via magnetic contact with the phone’s speaker), syncs to the Plaud app, and the cloud layer returns a structured document — transcript, summary, and key points — within minutes. The vendor describes support for over forty languages and a library of summary templates tuned to specific use cases like sales calls, medical consultations, and legal depositions.
The differentiating factor is the hardware form. Unlike browser extensions or app-based recorders that compete for phone resources and require screen interaction, Plaud runs passively. Professionals who need to be visibly present in a room — a doctor across from a patient, a lawyer in deposition, an executive in a board meeting — avoid the optics of typing notes on a device during conversation. The physical button start means no fumbling with apps mid-handshake.
Plaud fits best in structured, lower-noise recording scenarios: one-on-ones, phone calls, lectures, and consultation rooms where one speaker dominates at a time. It breaks down in dense multi-speaker settings where overlapping voices degrade diarization, and in workflows requiring real-time transcription — the cloud processing loop means transcripts arrive after the session ends, not during it. Teams needing live captions, instant searchability during a call, or CRM-native call logging will find the post-session delivery model a mismatch. At high recording volumes the free tier’s monthly minute cap becomes a hard wall, and organizations with compliance requirements around data residency will need to evaluate Plaud’s cloud-only architecture, as no self-hosted option exists.
