Free pros and cons list maker: enter any decision as a yes/no question, add the arguments for and against, give each a 1–5 weight, and the tool keeps a live weighted tally showing whether the balance leans yes, no, or too close to call — a plain arithmetic sum, not advice.

This pros and cons generator runs entirely in your browser with no sign-up and nothing sent to a server. It is a manual builder — no AI runs on this page. To weigh a decision well, state it clearly, list pros and cons honestly, weight each point 1 (minor) to 5 (major), and watch for confirmation bias so one heavily weighted con is not buried under trivial pros. If you want AI to generate the pros and cons automatically from a paragraph, document, or meeting transcript — and let a group rate them to find consensus — that runs in the Argumentree app.

Free Tool

Pros and Cons List Maker

Add the pros and cons of any decision, weigh each one, and get a live weighted tally. Free, no sign-up — it all runs in your browser.

Prosweighted 12

  • 4No commute — saves ~10 hours a week
  • 5Higher base salary
  • 3More flexible schedule

Consweighted 5

  • 3Fewer in-person mentoring moments
  • 2Smaller, less-known company
Weighted tally:Pros 12vsCons 5
Leaning: Yes

The tally is just a sum of the weights you entered — a thinking aid, not advice. You're the decision-maker. One heavily weighted con can matter more than several small pros, so read the two columns, not only the number.

Want AI to generate the pros and cons?

The builder above is manual — you type the points in yourself, no AI runs in your browser. Want AI to generate the pros and cons from a paragraph, a document, or a meeting transcript? That runs in the Argumentree app — it extracts the arguments for and against, structures them into a pro/con map, and lets a group rate them so you can see where consensus actually sits.

Try AI extraction free

How to weigh pros and cons (and avoid common biases)

A good pros and cons list is about honest weighting, not a longer column. A few habits keep it from misleading you:

  • State the decision as a yes/no question. "Should I take the remote job?" is easier to weigh than a vague topic. The clearer the question, the cleaner the two columns.
  • Weight by how much each point actually matters. Give each pro and con a 1–5 weight. Salary might be a 5; a nicer coffee machine a 1. Counting items equally is the most common mistake.
  • Watch for confirmation bias. It's tempting to pad the side you already prefer. If one column has ten items and the other has two, ask whether you're reasoning or rationalizing.
  • Beware one heavy con. A single deal-breaker can outweigh many small pros. The tally flags balance, but you decide whether a con is a hard stop.
  • Sleep on it, then re-weight. Weights drift with mood. Come back tomorrow and see if the same points still feel like 5s.

New to structured decision-making? See what is decision-making for the bigger picture, or build a full branching map with the argument map maker.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I make a pros and cons list?

Start by writing down the exact decision as a yes/no question. Then list every argument in favor (pro) in one column and every argument against (con) in another. Give each one an honest weight for how much it actually matters to you, review the two columns side by side, and look at where the weight concentrates — not just which column is longer. This free pros and cons list maker does all of that in the browser: type your decision, add pros and cons, set a 1–5 weight on each, and it keeps a running weighted tally for you.

Is this pros and cons generator free?

Yes. The pros and cons list maker on this page is completely free, requires no sign-up, and runs entirely in your browser — nothing you type is sent anywhere. You can build your list, weigh each point, copy it to your clipboard, and close the tab. It's free forever for personal use.

How does the weighting work?

Each pro and con can be given a weight from 1 (minor) to 5 (major). The tool adds up the weights of your pros and, separately, the weights of your cons, then compares the two totals. A point weighted 5 counts five times as much as a point weighted 1. The 'leaning' indicator is simply which weighted total is larger — it is a plain arithmetic sum to help you see the balance, not a recommendation or advice. You stay the decision-maker.

Can AI generate pros and cons for me?

The tool on this page does not use AI — it's a manual builder you fill in yourself. If you want AI to generate the pros and cons automatically from a paragraph, a document, or a meeting transcript, that runs in the Argumentree app: it extracts the arguments for and against, structures them into a pro/con map, and lets a group rate them so you can see where consensus actually sits. You can try that free.

Is a pros and cons list a good way to decide?

A pros and cons list is a good way to think, not a machine that decides for you. It forces you to make your reasoning explicit and spot lopsided thinking, but a raw count of items can mislead — one heavily weighted con can outweigh five trivial pros, and it's easy to pad the side you already favor. Use the weights honestly, watch for confirmation bias, and treat the tally as one input alongside your judgment, not the verdict.

From a list to a real decision

Argumentree turns pros and cons into structured, rateable argument maps — with AI extraction from transcripts and consensus scoring so a whole group can decide together. Free to start.

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