OpenClaw + Notion
By Linas Valiukas · March 1, 2026
You've built a second brain in Notion. The problem? You have to open Notion to use it. OpenClaw changes that. Connect the two and your knowledge base becomes something you can talk to — ask questions, save notes, pull up old decisions. All from a text message.
What OpenClaw does with Notion
- Save anything by text: "Save this: the client prefers net-30 payment terms." Done. OpenClaw files it to the right Notion page.
- Query your knowledge base: "What were the key decisions from Q1 planning?" OpenClaw searches your Notion workspace and comes back with the answer.
- Research to Notion: Ask OpenClaw to research something. Results go straight to a Notion page — organized, formatted, ready to reference later.
- Meeting notes automation: Meeting over? Text your key takeaways. OpenClaw organizes them into your Notion template.
- Task and project tracking: Create tasks. Update them. Check status. All from a text message — Notion databases stay current without you opening them.
Your second brain, accessible anywhere
Notion is powerful. But you have to open it. That's the gap. OpenClaw makes your entire knowledge base queryable from a text. Walking down the street and need to recall something? Text OpenClaw. In a meeting and want to save a note? Text OpenClaw. The barrier drops to zero.
How to connect
With TryOpenClaw.ai, connecting Notion is one click. Standard OAuth. Pick which workspaces and pages OpenClaw can access, and it starts working right away. You stay in control of what it sees and modifies.
Software engineer and founder of TryOpenClaw.ai. Been writing code since age 14.
Try it right now
This is just one example — OpenClaw adapts to whatever you need. Describe any workflow in plain language and it figures out the rest. Pay $1 for a full 24-hour trial, pick your messaging app, and start chatting with your own instance in under 60 seconds. Love it? $39/mo. Not for you? Walk away — we delete everything.
Try OpenClaw for $124h full access. No commitment. Cancel anytime.