Paste from Quizlet

On your Quizlet set: ⋯ menu → Export → Copy text → paste below.

Upload a file

Anki: File → Export → .apkg (tick “Support older Anki versions” on Anki 23+). CSV/TSV exports work too.

Parsed entirely in your browser — your deck is not uploaded anywhere until you save it to your account.

What you get after importing

  • Spaced repetition on every deck, free — no paywalled study modes.
  • Real LaTeX rendering — fractions, integrals and matrices display properly instead of as plain text.
  • Audio study podcasts generated from your deck, and print-ready practice exams generated from your notes.

Frequently asked questions

Is importing really free and unlimited?

Yes. Imports are parsed in your browser and never touch the AI pipeline, so they cost us nothing — and we pass that on. Imported decks do not count against the free plan's monthly deck limit, and there is no cap on how many sets you bring over.

How do I export my set from Quizlet?

Open your set on quizlet.com, click the three-dots menu, choose Export, keep "Tab" between term and definition and "New line" between rows, then Copy text and paste it here. (Export works on your own sets; for sets you study but don't own, save a copy on Quizlet first.)

How do I export my deck from Anki?

In Anki: File → Export, format "Anki Deck Package (.apkg)", pick your deck, and tick "Support older Anki versions" if you are on Anki 23 or newer. Upload the .apkg file here — basic and cloze notes both import.

Does my math import correctly?

Anki LaTeX and MathJax delimiters are converted automatically and render properly here — real LaTeX, including fractions, integrals, and matrices. Quizlet text imports as-is; you can add $…$ math delimiters after import.

What happens to images and audio?

They are skipped for now — text on both sides imports cleanly, and cards that were only an image are dropped (you'll see a count). Media support is on the roadmap.

What can I do with an imported deck?

Everything a generated deck can do: study with FSRS-style spaced repetition, take quizzes, and turn the deck into an audio study podcast. You can also upload your class notes alongside it and generate a print-ready practice exam.