Drop in a PDF, lecture notes, or any document. GeniusPal reads the whole file and writes a ready-to-take multiple-choice quiz, answer key included, in seconds. Your first quiz is on us.
PDF, notes, or any document. GeniusPal reads it and builds your study set in seconds. Your first generation is on us.
Add any file you already have: lecture slides, a textbook PDF, or your own typed notes.
It scans the whole document and pulls out the ideas worth testing, with no copy-paste required.
Take a multiple-choice quiz with an answer key right away, then switch to flashcards or a summary from the same upload.
Every quiz is 20 multiple-choice questions with 4 options and the right answer marked, so you can start testing yourself immediately.
Questions come from the file you upload, not the open web, so they test what your class actually covered.
Upload a PDF, plain text, or markdown. If it has real text, GeniusPal can turn it into a quiz.
The same upload also becomes flashcards, a mind-map, and a summary, so one file covers every way you like to study.
Here is the kind of multiple-choice question GeniusPal writes from a single line of biology notes.
Your notes
“The mitochondrion is the site of aerobic respiration, where glucose is broken down to release ATP, the cell's main energy currency.”
Generated question
What is the main role of the mitochondrion?
Weighing your options first? See our honest comparison of the best AI tools to turn notes into a quiz.
Yes. Your first quiz is on us, and the free plan includes a monthly allowance of quiz generations with no credit card required. Upload a file, generate a quiz, and start studying without paying anything. If you need a lot more each month the Plus plan raises the limit, but most students can run a whole revision week on the free tier.
GeniusPal reads PDFs, plain text, and markdown, so lecture slides exported to PDF, a chapter of a textbook, or your own typed notes all work. It scans the entire document rather than just the first page, so a long PDF still produces a quiz that covers the whole thing. Anything with real text generates questions; scanned images with no text layer will not.
Each generation returns 20 multiple-choice questions, each with 4 answer options and the correct one marked. That is enough to give a topic a proper test without becoming a slog. You can generate a fresh quiz from the same file whenever you want a new set, and that upload also produces flashcards and a summary if you would rather review a different way.
They are reliable for factual recall, but treat the first quiz as a draft. Because the questions are built from your own upload rather than the open web, they stay closer to what you actually need to know than a generic quiz would. Even so, skim the answer key before you study, fix anything that reads oddly, and delete any question that is trivially easy, so every question you revise from is one worth your time.
Yes. A quiz is just one of the formats GeniusPal builds from a single upload. The same file also becomes flashcards for active recall, a mind-map for the big picture, and a tight summary when you only need the highlights, so you never have to upload the same notes twice to study them a different way.