Google NotebookLM has finally added a long-requested feature to its arsenal by supporting native LaTeX rendering. This will enable mathematical equations and symbols to appear perfectly formatted throughout its Chat, Flashcards, and Quizzes features.
This means that users would be able to input formulas directly using standard LaTeX syntax, and those expressions will be instantly and elegantly rendered in all main learning modes the platform offers.
Studying math notes used to feel like: \int_a^b f(t)dt.... Now it"s: ∫𝑓(𝑡)𝑑𝑡
— NotebookLM (@NotebookLM) October 15, 2025
LaTeX has officially arrived in @NotebookLM! 🎈 All of your equations are now perfectly rendered in Chat, Flashcards, and Quizzes.
So that upcoming algebra final should be easy as π. pic.twitter.com/Afj8LKj2Zw
For starters, NotebookLM is a research and learning assistant developed by Google that uses Gemini to help users understand and work with complex material more effectively. It allows users to upload documents, PDFs, websites, or slides, and then automatically generates summaries, recently announced Learning guides, quizzes, or even audio and video overviews based entirely on their own sources.
What separates NotebookLM from other chatbots like ChatGPT is that it is "source-grounded", which means that it only uses the material you provide to answer questions and create content, ensuring accuracy and relevance.
Support for LaTeX rendering would be welcomed by a majority of NotebookLM users, many of whom are students, educators, and researchers. Previously, technical users reported (via Reddit) that NotebookLM struggled to display equations correctly, was sometimes unable to render them, and left them in plain text, and users would have to settle for forced workarounds like browser extensions or markdown edits.
Google has been providing a slew of updates to NotebookLM recently, many of which focus on creative and educational use cases. For instance, NotebookLM now features dynamic video summary formats such as Brief and Explainer, which are powered by Google"s in-house Nano Banana image generation model, and a set of new customizable visual styles for multimedia note presentations.
These features are first available to NotebookLM Pro subscribers, with a wider rollout to all users expected soon.