Notion AI arrived with an obvious promise: your second brain, but smarter. After a year of daily use, the reality is more specific — it is an excellent writing assistant inside a database, a surprisingly capable summariser, and a limited but useful automation layer. Understanding what it is not helps you use what it is far more effectively.
The AI writing features are genuinely good. The ability to highlight a rough paragraph and ask the AI to improve the flow, add structure, or condense it for an executive audience works reliably well. For note-takers who produce large quantities of rough text — meeting notes, brain dumps, raw research — the clean-up functionality alone justifies the add-on cost.
Notion AI Q&A, which lets you query your entire workspace and receive an answer with linked sources, is the feature with the highest ceiling and the most significant current limitations. For well-structured, tagged workspaces with consistent naming conventions, it works impressively. For the majority of real-world Notion workspaces — organised with good intentions and maintained imperfectly — the retrieval is unreliable enough to require verification of every answer.
The database automation features, which allow AI to auto-fill properties based on document content, are useful for specific workflows: generating tags, writing one-line summaries, classifying documents into predefined categories. They do not work well for freeform or creative classification tasks.
Verdict: Notion AI is worth the $10 per month add-on if you are already a heavy Notion user who produces a lot of written content. It is not a reason to switch to Notion if you are not already there. And it is not a substitute for a standalone AI assistant — it does not have access to the web, cannot reason about real-time information, and performs best on clearly scoped tasks within your existing workspace.
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