NotebookLM apps are heading to Android and iOS, with Google now preparing to take its AI notetaking tool beyond the browser. The rollout promises mobile-first access to features that were previously limited to desktop use—and it could reshape how users handle research on the go.
NotebookLM apps will bring key features to phones
The mobile versions of NotebookLM will include many of the same tools that made the web app popular. Users will be able to summarize documents, ask questions based on uploaded files, and receive structured overviews generated by AI. These core features will now live on Android and iPhones, letting users tap into productivity without being tied to a desk.
Audio Overview and summarization go portable
Google’s Audio Overview tool—first introduced in the web version—is expected to make the jump to mobile. This feature provides a spoken summary of complex documents, which is ideal for multitasking or learning on the move. Combined with natural-language queries and fast summarization, the app could become a go-to tool for students, researchers, and busy professionals.
How to access the NotebookLM apps first
Early access signups are already open. Those who want to be first in line can register through Google’s official waitlist. By signing up now, users will receive a notification when the apps become available—possibly even a shot at beta testing.
NotebookLM will likely sync with Google Drive
Although Google hasn’t confirmed every integration yet, the NotebookLM apps will likely connect with services like Google Drive and Docs. That means users can import documents they already use and get AI-generated insights with just a few taps. This tight connection with Google’s ecosystem could make NotebookLM more convenient than third-party AI tools.
Smart features, now pocket-sized
NotebookLM apps are more than a web port—they’re a strategic move. By launching on Android and iOS, Google is putting its AI assistant directly into your pocket. The timing matters too: as AI becomes more central to daily workflows, having real-time document help on mobile could give NotebookLM a serious edge.
The spice flows soon
The wait may not be long. With the sign-up page already live, a full launch could follow in the coming weeks. If the mobile versions deliver what the browser did—only faster and in your hand—NotebookLM might quietly become one of Google’s most practical AI rollouts yet.