Flowing vs Zotero

Writing with cited evidence vs reference management.

Zotero organizes citations and bibliographies brilliantly. Flowing is a writing environment where AI suggestions stay anchored to PDF passages you import—many researchers use both.

AspectFlowingZotero
Primary jobDraft and revise long-form academic text with grounded AICollect, organize, and cite references; Word/LibreOffice integration
PDF handlingImport PDFs into a searchable library for recall and AI contextStore attachments; full-text search via plugins or linked files
AI writingNative recall, Ask with context, polish, and continue writing with evidence cardsNot a writing-first AI environment; plugins vary by setup
Citation outputFocus on drafting with verifiable in-text evidence from your libraryIndustry-standard bibliography styles and citation insertion
Where it runsDesktop app (macOS, Windows) with integrated editorDesktop connector + browser extension; syncs library metadata
Best togetherImport the PDFs you need for the chapter you are writing todayKeep the canonical library and final reference list for submission

Complementary, not either-or

Zotero answers “what did I read and how do I cite it?” Flowing answers “how do I draft this section with passages I can verify?” Many workflows keep Zotero for bibliography management and Flowing for the writing loop.

Fewer ghost citations while drafting

When AI suggests a claim, Flowing attaches library snippets you can open immediately—reducing the “citation looks real but the paper doesn’t say that” problem during drafting, before you finalize references in Zotero.

When Zotero alone is enough

If you only need reference storage, PDF annotation, and formatted bibliographies without AI-assisted drafting, Zotero may be sufficient. Add Flowing when you want source-grounded writing assistance in the same workspace as your manuscript.

More answers in the FAQ

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