NotebookLM quietly rolled out several new features, and some of them are really useful.
If you haven’t logged in recently, here’s the quick tour.
Prefer video? Watch here:
This is bigger than it sounds.
Previously, NotebookLM let you upload PDFs, but not PDFs stored inside Google Drive, which made no real sense to anyone using Drive as their actual document hub.
Now you can:
There’s a tiny UI glitch where the Drive picker hides behind the sources window, but clicking it brings it forward. Just pretend it’s 1997 and windows overlap.
Once imported, PDFs open inside NotebookLM with an option to pop them out into a full tab. Sheets work the same (and yes, you can open them fully and interact with them).
Under Discover, there’s now a full Google Drive option, meaning NotebookLM can find Docs, Sheets, PDFs, and Docx files without you manually navigating to them.
A small quality-of-life improvement, but a nice one.
This feature shows up in the free version first, but for me, not in my paid version….yet.
Fast Research does:
It behaves almost exactly like the old Web Search, except nicer, faster, and with clearer source previews (including PDFs).
Good for quick “get me some resources on this” tasks.
This is the big one, and again, it’s oddly only showing in the free version at the moment (for me at least).
Deep Research:
This is NotebookLM’s answer to Deep Research tools in ChatGPT, Claude, Gemini, etc.
Except this version:
And most importantly: You can leave the page while it works. NotebookLM keeps processing in the background.
This makes NotebookLM feel less like a passive note-taker and more like a proper research assistant.
After importing sources (Drive, Fast Research, or Deep Research), you can:
This makes the new research tools feel integrated.
In the demo:
This is obviously temporary, because it would make no sense for a signature feature to be stuck behind the free tier, but it’s worth noting if you don’t see it yet.
NotebookLM’s rollout logic is… an adventure sometimes.
You can now:
These upgrades make NotebookLM even more attractive as a research and knowledge tool, especially for students, researchers, nonprofit teams, and small businesses who want an organized “AI brain” that works from their own documents.
If you use NotebookLM, try these new features out and see what you think. If anything else launches (or moves to a different menu for no reason), I’ll create a new video and article.