Account Setup
Use the right Google account
Go to notebooklm.google.com and sign in with a Google account. NotebookLM is free — and it's free tier is more than enough for most.
Check your account age
Some Studio features — Audio Overview formats (Brief, Critique, Debate), Video Overview — are restricted on Google accounts registered as under 18. If you're missing options in the Studio panel, this is almost certainly why.
If Studio features are missing, switch to a Google account registered as 18+. Everything should appear after that. This is a Google account-level restriction, not a NotebookLM setting you can change.
Creating Your First Notebook
Think of a notebook as a project
One notebook per subject, or per chapter — whatever makes sense for your workload. Don't try to put everything into one notebook.
Click "New Notebook" and name it clearly
Something like Accountancy — Partnership or Economics — Macroeconomics. You can have up to 100 notebooks.
Start simple
Add 2–3 sources, ask a few questions, and let the workflow emerge from actual use. Don't over-plan the structure before you've spent time with it.
Adding Sources
Click "Add Source" inside your notebook
NotebookLM accepts several types:
- PDF files — chapter notes, NCERT, CBSE support material, modules
- Google Docs
- Copied or pasted text
- YouTube video URLs
- Websites
Limits you'll never realistically hit
100 notebooks · 50 sources per notebook · up to 500,000 words per source. As a student, these are effectively unlimited.
YouTube as a Source
Paste a YouTube URL directly as a source
NotebookLM reads the transcript and makes the entire lecture searchable and conversational. Works for any YouTube lecture — PW, Next Toppers, or any educator with a public channel.
Check for captions before adding
NotebookLM needs a transcript. If the video has no captions, it won't be able to read it. To check: open the video, click the CC button, If it's there, you're good. If It's grayed out, then it has no Captions.
Once added, ask: "What did the teacher say about [specific concept]?" or "Summarise what was covered on [topic] in this lecture." A fully searchable, talkable version of every lecture you've ever watched.
The Studio Panel
On the right side of your notebook. Five output tools — all generate from your sources, not generic internet content.
Audio Overview Most Used
A podcast-style conversation between two AI hosts discussing your material. Four formats: Deep Dive, Brief, Critique, Debate. Brief before an exam is the most practical — low effort, decent recall boost.
Video Overview
Same as Audio but generates a video with visuals. Formats: Brief or Explainer. Uses Google's Nano Banana image model with style options — Whiteboard, Anime, Watercolor, Retro Print. Better for visual learners.
Mind Map Underrated
Interactive visual map of all your sources. Main topic in the centre, clickable branches. Good for a structural overview before a full read — covers headings, subheadings, and keywords only.
Flashcards & Quiz
Cards and MCQs built from your actual material — not a generic question bank. Customizable by count, difficulty, and focus area. More relevant than most practice tools because questions come from how the concept was actually taught.
System Prompts
Paste these into the NotebookLM chat to produce a specific, structured output from scratch. Add your sources first, then run the prompt. Designed to give clean, complete results without back-and-forth.
Chat Prompts
Copy-paste directly into the NotebookLM chat. Replace anything in [brackets] with your actual topic or concept.