Lettera vs. Scrivener

Scrivener is a project manager that happens to have a text editor. Lettera is a typewriter that happens to manage chapters. They solve different problems — and that's the point.

If you're comparing Lettera and Scrivener, you're probably a writer who cares about both the craft and the tools. Good. This page is an honest look at where each one shines and where each one doesn't. No spin, no hard sell — just two very different philosophies of what writing software should be.

The short version

Scrivener gives you a cockpit. Corkboards, outliners, split-screen research panels, metadata fields, custom compile formats, snapshots, keywords, labels, status stamps. It is built for writers who want total control over the structure and output of long, complex projects. It is very, very good at this.

Lettera gives you a page. The page has texture. The cursor follows a carriage. You type, the page shifts left. You press Enter, and it snaps back. There's a mode where backspace doesn't delete — it strikes through, like a real typewriter. Lettera is built for writers who want to feel something when they sit down to write.

LetteraScrivener
Price$29 (14-day free trial)$59.99 (one-time)
PlatformsmacOS, WindowsmacOS, Windows, iOS
Typewriter carriage
No-delete mode✓ (Purist Mode)
Paper textures
Chapter management✓ (extensive)
Corkboard / outliner
Split-screen editing
Compile / export formatsPDF, Word, Markdown, TXTPDF, Word, ePub, Final Draft, and more
Daily writing goals✓ (Paper Trail)
Per-chapter notes✓ (the Drawer)
Research panel
Local files only
Account requiredNoNo
Learning curveMinutesHours to days
AI writing featuresNo. The words are yours.No

Where Scrivener is the better choice

If your work requires serious structural tools — a PhD thesis, a multi-timeline novel with interlocking POVs, a screenplay with revision tracking — Scrivener is purpose-built for that complexity. The corkboard alone is worth the price for writers who think spatially. The compile system, once you learn it, gives you granular control over output that no other writing app matches. And the research panel means you can keep source material right next to your manuscript.

Scrivener also has an iOS app, which Lettera does not. If you need to write on your phone or tablet, Scrivener covers that.

Where Lettera is the better choice

If you've ever opened Scrivener and felt overwhelmed before writing a single word, Lettera might be what you actually need. There's no corkboard, no compile wizard, no tutorial to sit through. You open it, pick a paper, and start typing.

Lettera's carriage movement and paper textures create something no other writing app offers — a sense of place. The screen feels less like a screen. Purist Mode, where backspace strikes through instead of deleting, is designed for writers who want to stop editing their first draft and write forward. Scrivener has no equivalent.

And Lettera lets you try the full app for 14 days before you pay anything — and even then, it's $29 once, not a subscription.


Scrivener's philosophy

Writing is a project to be managed. The better your tools for organizing, structuring, and compiling, the better the final product. Power is the priority.

Lettera's philosophy

Writing is an act that should feel like something. The page should have texture, the keys should have weight, and sometimes the backspace key should be turned off entirely. Feeling is the priority.

Scrivener asks: how do you want to organize your writing? Lettera asks: how do you want your writing to feel? They're both good questions. They just lead to very different tools.

Can you use both?

Yes — and some writers probably should. Lettera is a beautiful place to draft. The carriage movement keeps your eyes on the current line. Purist Mode keeps your inner editor quiet. Paper Trail keeps you accountable day by day. When the draft is done, export to Word or Markdown and bring it into Scrivener for structural editing, corkboard rearranging, and final compile. First draft in Lettera, final draft in Scrivener. The two tools complement each other more than they compete.

The honest take

Scrivener is the most powerful writing software you can buy. That power comes with complexity — a learning curve that some writers never fully climb. Lettera is intentionally simpler, but it isn't simple for the sake of being minimal. It's simple because the point was never project management. The point was making the act of typing on a screen feel a little more like the act of typing on a typewriter. If that matters to you, Lettera is worth trying. The 14-day free trial takes thirty seconds to set up, and your files stay on your computer.

Try Lettera

Free 14-day trial for macOS and Windows. No account required.

Lettera — a quiet place to write.