A 142-template bundle sounds impressive—but is it practical? In this review, we’ll evaluate what matters: time saved, flexibility, and whether the templates help you do real work (not just look organized).
Quick verdict
Worth it if you want a complete system across life + work + finance + study without building databases from scratch. Not worth it if you already have a mature Notion setup you love and only need one specialty template.
What you get (high-level)
- Personal planning dashboards
- Task/project systems and workspace organization
- Finance trackers (budget, expenses, subscriptions, savings/debt)
- Wellness and habit tracking
- Student dashboards and exam/study trackers
- Business/freelance CRM and operations templates
- Content planning and social media trackers
What makes a bundle “good” (and what to watch for)
Good signs
- Templates are reusable and easy to duplicate.
- Works with a free Notion account.
- Includes a clear quick start workflow.
Watch-outs
- Trying to use everything at once (leads to clutter).
- Not having a weekly review habit (systems decay without review).
If you want to try a 142-template bundle: start with one dashboard + one tracker. Keep the rest archived and add only when needed.
Recommended setup (so it doesn’t feel overwhelming)
- Duplicate the main dashboard.
- Add your projects and a simple task view (Today / This Week).
- Pick one tracker: habits OR expenses OR study.
- Do a 15-minute weekly review.
FAQ
Is it too many templates?
Only if you try to use them all. Think of it as a library: you pull what you need as your goals change.
Can I edit and personalize?
Yes—rename, change icons, add/remove properties, and adapt layouts to your style.
Conclusion
A 142-template pack is worth it when the bundle is organized, reusable, and covers real-life workflows. Use it as a foundation, not as a checklist.




