How to Use NotebookLM for Studying: A Complete Guide (2026)
What Is NotebookLM?
NotebookLM is a research and study tool from Google that lets you upload your own sources — PDFs, Google Docs, slides, YouTube videos, audio files — and then ask questions, generate summaries, and create study materials specifically from those sources.
The key difference from ChatGPT or Claude: NotebookLM only uses your uploaded sources. It won't draw on general internet knowledge. Every answer it gives is grounded in the specific documents you've added, and it cites the exact passage it's drawing from.
This makes it exceptionally reliable for academic work — you can verify every claim it makes by clicking the citation.
Setting Up NotebookLM (5 Minutes)
- Go to notebooklm.google.com — sign in with your Google account
- Click 「New Notebook」
- Upload your sources — you can add:
- PDFs (research papers, textbooks, lecture slides)
- Google Docs and Google Slides
- Text files and Markdown
- YouTube video links (NotebookLM reads the transcript)
- Audio files (it transcribes them)
- Website URLs
- Once uploaded, your sources appear in the left panel
- Start chatting in the panel on the right
How many sources can you add? Up to 50 sources per notebook, with a limit of 500,000 words per source.
Tip: Create a separate notebook for each subject or project. Don't mix your biology notes with your history papers — keep related sources together so the AI can draw meaningful connections between them.
The 6 Most Useful Things NotebookLM Can Do for Studying
1. Generate a Study Guide from All Your Sources
This is the fastest way to review before an exam. After uploading your lecture notes and readings, ask:
Create a comprehensive study guide covering the key concepts across all my sources. Organize it by topic, not by source. For each concept, include:
- A one-sentence definition
- Why it matters
- Any key examples or case studies from the readings
NotebookLM synthesizes across all your documents and creates a structured guide, with citations showing which source each point came from.
2. Ask Questions About Specific Sections
Instead of re-reading an entire 80-page paper, ask targeted questions:
What methodology did the researchers use in the Smith et al. paper? What were the main limitations they acknowledged?
NotebookLM finds the relevant sections and summarizes them, with clickable citations so you can verify the answer in context.
3. Generate Practice Questions
Before an exam:
Generate 15 multiple choice questions based on my sources. Include a mix of:
- Factual recall questions
- Application questions that require understanding the concept, not just remembering it
- Questions that distinguish between similar concepts that students often confuse
After I answer, tell me which ones I got wrong and why.
4. Create an FAQ from Your Notes
Useful for essay preparation:
Based on my sources, what are the 10 most important questions someone studying this topic should be able to answer? For each question, give a detailed answer citing the relevant sources.
5. Compare Perspectives Across Sources
If you have multiple papers or readings that take different positions:
How do the sources in this notebook differ in their conclusions about [topic]? What are the main points of disagreement, and what evidence does each side cite?
This is invaluable for essay writing — it maps the intellectual landscape of your sources before you start writing.
6. Generate an Audio Overview (Podcast)
NotebookLM's Audio Overview feature generates a 10–20 minute podcast-style conversation between two AI hosts discussing the key ideas in your sources. Click the 「Audio Overview」 button in the top right of your notebook.
This is genuinely useful for:
- Reviewing material during a commute or workout
- Getting a high-level overview of new sources before reading them in detail
- Auditory learners who retain information better through listening
The hosts sometimes simplify complex material — treat it as orientation, not as a substitute for reading the sources.
NotebookLM Study Workflows by Subject
For Science and STEM
STEM subjects require understanding mechanisms and applying concepts to new problems — not just recalling facts. Use NotebookLM to understand before you memorize.
Workflow:
- Upload lecture slides + textbook chapters for one topic
- Ask: "Explain the mechanism of [concept] in plain language, then give me a real-world example of how it applies"
- Ask: "What are the most common misconceptions students have about this concept?"
- Ask: "Create 5 application problems I can solve to test my understanding"
After using NotebookLM to understand the concepts, move to Anki or Prismer for memorizing the specific facts and formulas.
For Humanities and Social Sciences
Essay-based subjects require synthesizing multiple perspectives and building an argument — exactly what NotebookLM is designed for.
Workflow:
- Upload all your readings for the essay topic
- Ask: "What are the main arguments across these sources? Summarize each author's position in 2–3 sentences"
- Ask: "Which sources support the argument that [your thesis]? Which challenge it?"
- Ask: "What are the strongest counterarguments to [your thesis], and how do the sources address them?"
- Ask: "Generate an essay outline for the prompt: [your prompt]. Use evidence from my sources"
For seminar preparation:
What are the 5 most debatable claims in this week's readings? For each one, summarize what the author argues and what a counterargument would be.
For Medicine and Pre-Med
Medical school reading is dense, high-volume, and requires retaining specific details over months. NotebookLM helps you process the material before adding it to Anki.
Workflow:
- Upload a Pathoma chapter or First Aid section
- Ask: "Explain the pathophysiology of [condition] step by step, connecting each step causally"
- Ask: "What are the classic clinical presentations I need to recognize for [condition]? Include distinguishing features"
- Ask: "Create a comparison table of [condition A] vs [condition B] covering pathophysiology, presentation, diagnosis, and treatment"
- Then create Anki cards from the understanding you've built
For clinical case preparation:
Present me with a clinical vignette based on the conditions in this chapter. Then let me work through the diagnosis and management before you give feedback.
For Language and Literature
Workflow:
- Upload the text you're analyzing, plus secondary sources and criticism
- Ask: "What are the major scholarly interpretations of [theme/character/text]?"
- Ask: "Find specific passages in the primary text that support [your argument]. Quote them with page numbers"
- Ask: "What would critics who disagree with [your argument] say? What textual evidence do they use?"
For Research Papers and Literature Reviews
NotebookLM is particularly powerful for academic research.
Workflow:
- Upload 10–20 papers on your topic
- Ask: "What is the consensus finding across these papers on [question]?"
- Ask: "Where do these papers disagree with each other? What are the main points of contention?"
- Ask: "What gap in the literature do all of these papers leave unanswered?"
- Ask: "Create a summary table: paper, methodology, key finding, limitations"
For a detailed guide on summarizing individual papers, see: How to Summarize a Research Paper with AI.
NotebookLM vs Other Study Tools
| Tool | What It's Best At | What It Can't Do |
|---|---|---|
| NotebookLM | Answering questions from your specific sources, cited answers, synthesizing across multiple docs | No spaced repetition, no interactive quizzes, can't go beyond your sources |
| ChatGPT | Flexible generation, explanations, practice problems | Hallucination risk, not grounded in your specific sources |
| Anki | Spaced repetition memorization | No comprehension, no synthesis |
| Prismer | Turning documents into quizzes, slides, and podcast summaries automatically | No multi-document synthesis like NotebookLM |
| Elicit | Structured extraction from many academic papers | Narrow use case |
The best workflow combines all of them:
- NotebookLM to understand and synthesize your specific sources
- Prismer to generate quizzes and slides from key documents for active recall
- Anki for spaced repetition of high-volume facts
- ChatGPT for practice problems and explanations of concepts not in your sources
For a full comparison of NotebookLM vs Quizlet vs Prismer, see: NotebookLM vs Quizlet vs Prismer: Which One Actually Helps You Learn?
NotebookLM Limitations You Should Know About
It only knows what you've uploaded. If you ask about something not covered in your sources, it will either say it doesn't know or — occasionally — draw on general knowledge while noting it's outside your sources. Always check citations.
It can simplify complex technical content. For highly specialized material (advanced mathematics, specialized medical content), verify the accuracy of explanations against your original sources.
No spaced repetition. NotebookLM doesn't track what you know or schedule reviews. It generates material for you to study but doesn't manage the study process itself. Pair it with Anki for that.
No interactive quiz mode. The practice questions it generates are plain text — you have to manually cover the answers and test yourself. Prismer provides a more interactive quiz experience if that's what you need.
50 source limit per notebook. For large literature reviews or systematic reviews with 100+ papers, you'll need to prioritize which sources to include or create multiple notebooks.
Audio Overview quality varies. The podcast format is great for overview and commuting, but the AI hosts sometimes oversimplify or miss nuance in complex academic content. Don't rely on it as your only review method.
Tips for Getting Better Results from NotebookLM
Be specific about what you need. "Summarize my sources" gives a generic summary. "Summarize the methodology sections of my sources and identify any methodological differences between studies" gives something you can actually use.
Ask for citations explicitly. "Answer this question and cite the specific page or section in my sources" forces NotebookLM to ground its answers rather than paraphrase loosely.
Use it iteratively. Don't ask one big question and walk away. Ask a question, read the answer, follow up on what you don't understand, ask for examples. The conversation format is the point.
Check the citations. NotebookLM's killer feature is that every answer is cited. Get in the habit of clicking citations to verify that the source actually says what the AI claims.
Combine with active recall. Reading NotebookLM's answers is passive. After reviewing a topic, close the window and write down everything you can remember from the conversation. That retrieval attempt is what actually builds memory.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is NotebookLM free? Yes, NotebookLM is free to use with a Google account. Google has not announced paid plans for the core features.
How many PDFs can I upload to NotebookLM? Up to 50 sources per notebook, with a maximum of 500,000 words per source. For most study purposes, this is more than enough.
Can NotebookLM read scanned PDFs? Yes, but quality depends on scan quality. NotebookLM uses OCR to extract text from scanned documents. Poorly scanned or handwritten documents may not work well.
Is NotebookLM better than ChatGPT for studying? For studying from your own specific documents, yes — NotebookLM is more reliable because it cites sources and doesn't draw on external information that might be inaccurate or irrelevant. For general explanations, practice problems, or content not in your documents, ChatGPT is more flexible.
Can NotebookLM replace Anki for memorization? No. NotebookLM generates content but doesn't schedule spaced repetition reviews. Anki is purpose-built for memorization and produces dramatically better long-term retention. Use NotebookLM to understand material, Anki to memorize it.
How do I use NotebookLM's Audio Overview? Click the 「Audio Overview」 button at the top right of any notebook. NotebookLM generates a 10–20 minute podcast-style conversation covering the key ideas in your sources. It takes a few minutes to generate. You can listen in the browser or download the audio file.
Can I share a NotebookLM notebook with classmates? Yes. Click 「Share」 in the top right to share your notebook. Collaborators can read sources and chat, but can't add or remove sources unless given edit access.
Does NotebookLM work for non-English sources? NotebookLM supports multiple languages and can process documents in languages other than English. The quality of responses may vary for less common languages.
For an interactive quiz on any topic you're studying, try Prismer free — upload any PDF and get a quiz, slides, and podcast summary in 60 seconds.
