Google Meet vs Microsoft Teams — Wer gewinnt?
Wähle Google Meet, wenn: Google Workspace-Teams, die reibungslose Videocalls wollen, die einfach aus Calendar und Gmail funktionieren
Wähle Microsoft Teams, wenn: Microsoft 365-Organisationen, die Chat, Video und Datei-Collaboration auf einer Plattform vereint wollen
Unsere Einschätzung: Google Meet is easier to pick up, but Microsoft Teams is more powerful long-term.
| Google Meet | Microsoft Teams | |
|---|---|---|
| Preise | Free for 60-minute meetings (100 participants) | Google Workspace Starter $7.20/user/mo | Free with 60-minute meetings (100 participants) | Microsoft 365 Business Basic $6/user/mo |
| Funktionen | No download required (browser-based), Live captions and translation, Meeting recordings (paid), Noise cancellation, Deep Google Calendar integration | Chat, channels, and video in one app, Screen sharing and whiteboard, Meeting recordings and transcription, Copilot AI assistant, SharePoint and OneDrive integration |
| Am besten für | Google Workspace teams who want frictionless video calls that just work from Calendar and Gmail | Microsoft 365 organizations that want chat, video, and file collaboration unified in one platform |
| Lernkurve | Einfach | Mittel |
Der wahre Unterschied
Both offer free tiers, so the real question is what you get when you start paying.
Google Meet stands out with No download required (browser-based) and Live captions and translation. Microsoft Teams counters with Chat, channels, and video in one app and Screen sharing and whiteboard.
Google Meet's Achilles heel: feature-light compared to zoom — no breakout rooms on free plan, limited recording, fewer controls. Microsoft Teams's: bloated and resource-hungry — the app eats ram for breakfast and the ui is a maze of nested menus. Pick whichever weakness you can live with.
Fazit
If you value no download required (browser-based) and google workspace-teams, die reibungslose, go with Google Meet. If microsoft 365-organisationen, die chat, matters more, Microsoft Teams is your pick. Neither is a bad choice — but one will fit your workflow better.