There is fresh movement around I started using Gemini with Samsung Notes; it’s been a game-changer, and the story is worth a closer look.
We pulled together what is known so far and what it could mean for the people following it.
I have been using Samsung Notes for years, but my workflow with it rarely went beyond saving quick thoughts, screen off memos, checklists, and meeting details.
The app was reliable, but after my notes started piling up, finding the right information became a chore.
Gemini completely changed the experience for me.It has turned Samsung Notes from a simple place to store information into a tool that helps me work with it.
It already supported handwritten notes, checklists, images, PDFs, voice recording, folders, and S Pen input, so I could use it for almost anything.
The app also synced across my Samsung Galaxy devices, which made it easy to pick up where I left off.
The problem was not what I could put into it. The real issue was what happened afterward.
Over time, Samsung Notes became less of an organized workspace and more of a digital dumping ground. I kept throwing everything into it.
I would open the app looking for one specific detail and end up scrolling through dozens of unrelated notes.
Even folders and searches could only help so much when my note titles were vague, and the content was all over the place.
I had plenty of useful information stored in Samsung Notes, but accessing it and turning it into something actionable still required far too much manual effort.

Getting started with Gemini and Samsung Notes was surprisingly straightforward.
I opened the Gemini app, headed to Settings > Personal Intelligence > Connected apps, scrolled down until I found Samsung Notes, and enabled the integration.
When it was turned on, Gemini could access my notes whenever I asked it to summarize, search, or work with them.
As with any first-generation feature, there are a few limitations. I can’t ask Gemini to create new folders, reorganize my notebook structure, or share a note with someone using a simple prompt.
Those workflow shortcuts would make the integration even more powerful.
This feels very much like the first iteration of a much bigger idea, and the foundation is already solid.
Even in its current form, Gemini saves me enough time that I keep it enabled all the time.
Gemini finally won me over, but only after I changed the defaults
The Gemini integration becomes much more useful after I start putting it through real-world tasks. There are three main ways I use it.
First, I can ask Gemini to create something new and save it directly to Samsung Notes.
for example, I can say, ‘Give me a recipe for Margherita pizza and save it to Samsung Notes,’ and it creates a neatly structured note with ingredients and preparation steps.
I do not need to copy and paste anything manually or switch between multiple apps.

I have a detailed Home Lab note filled with server information, Docker services, maintenance steps, and upgrade plans.
Instead of reading the entire thing again, I can ask Gemini to summarize my Home Lab note, and it pulls out the essential information in a clean and readable format.
The same approach can work with lengthy meeting notes, research materials, project plans, lecture notes, or a detailed expense breakdown.
The third feature is retrieving specific information from a note. I can ask Gemini to find my Day 6 activity from my Japan travel itinerary, and it surfaces the relevant details almost instantly.
This is much faster than opening the app, locating the correct travel note, and scrolling through the entire itinerary.
I could also ask it to find a restaurant name from a trip plan, pull a deadline from meeting notes, locate a product idea from my article draft, or retrieve an ingredient from an old shopping list.
The possibilities feel endless, but I would still love to see Gemini gain more control over how notes are created.
It would be useful to specify a background color, note template, text style, checklist format, or folder while giving the prompt.
The current integration already handles heavy lifting around creation, summarization, and information retrieval.
With deeper formatting and organization controls, it could become one of the most powerful features on a Galaxy phone.
Gemini has changed the way I look at Samsung Notes. It is no longer just a place where I dump ideas, meeting notes, and random information before forgetting about them.
I can now summarize long entries, pull out important details, and turn my messy thoughts into something useful within seconds.
The integration still has room to improve, especially when it comes to creating folders and sharing them with prompts.