Midjourney + Notion Integration Guide

Yes—Midjourney integrates with Notion through third-party automation platforms, allowing you to capture generated images, store prompts, and organize creative assets directly in your Notion workspace.

What You Need to Know

Midjourney is an AI image generation tool that creates visuals from text prompts. Notion is a workspace platform for documentation, databases, and team collaboration. While Midjourney and Notion don’t have a native direct integration, third-party automation services like Zapier and Make bridge the gap, enabling workflows that automatically save generated images and metadata to Notion databases.

This integration is particularly valuable for creative teams, marketing departments, and content creators who generate multiple images and need a centralized system to catalog, tag, and reference them. Instead of manually copying images and details between tools, automation handles the heavy lifting.

How the Integration Works

  • Trigger-based capture: When you generate an image in Midjourney, a third-party automation tool (Zapier, Make, or a custom webhook) detects the completion and captures the image URL, prompt text, and metadata.
  • Data mapping to Notion: The automation maps Midjourney data (image URL, prompt, generation parameters, timestamp) to a Notion database with corresponding fields (Image, Prompt, Date, Status, etc.).
  • Automated database entry: A new Notion page or database row is created automatically, embedding the generated image and storing searchable prompt information.
  • Asset organization: Teams can tag images with properties (campaign, style, status, client) within Notion, enabling filtering, sorting, and easy retrieval across projects.
  • Workflow flexibility: Advanced setups can include conditional logic—for example, only saving images that meet certain criteria, or routing different image types to separate Notion databases.

Key Features & Capabilities

  • Automatic image archiving: Every Midjourney generation is logged in Notion with the original prompt, eliminating manual copy-paste and reducing lost work.
  • Searchable prompt library: Store all your prompts in a Notion database so you can search, filter, and reuse successful prompts across future projects.
  • Multi-property tagging: Organize images by campaign, client, style, approval status, or any custom field you define in Notion, making retrieval instant.
  • Team collaboration and feedback: Share Notion databases with team members who can review images, add comments, and update status fields without leaving Notion.
  • Batch processing: Automation platforms allow you to set rules for processing multiple generations at once, saving time on high-volume creative work.
  • Integration with downstream tools: Once images are in Notion, you can further automate handoffs to design tools, email campaigns, or project management platforms.

Setup Difficulty

Medium (15–30 minutes)

Setting up this integration requires no coding, but does involve configuring automation rules in a third-party platform. You’ll need to:

  • Connect your Midjourney account (via webhook or API token) to Zapier or Make.
  • Authorize Notion and select or create a database to receive image data.
  • Map fields from Midjourney to Notion columns (image URL, prompt, timestamp, etc.).
  • Test the workflow with a sample image generation.

If you’re comfortable navigating automation platforms and databases, expect 15–20 minutes. If you’re new to these tools, allow 30 minutes and consult the platform’s documentation or support.

Common Setup Considerations

Midjourney access: You need a Midjourney subscription and access to the Discord server or web interface where you generate images. Some automation workflows trigger via Discord bot integration or API webhooks.

Notion database structure: Before setting up automation, create a Notion database with fields that match your workflow (e.g., Image, Prompt, Generation Date, Client, Campaign, Status, Notes). This ensures data maps correctly and is useful to your team.

Image storage: Midjourney images are hosted on Midjourney’s servers. The integration stores URLs in Notion, not local copies. Ensure you understand Midjourney’s terms around image rights and retention.

Rate limits: Automation platforms have rate limits on API calls. High-volume image generation may require a paid tier to avoid delays between generation and Notion entry.

Alternatives to Third-Party Automation

  • Zapier: The most user-friendly option for non-technical teams. Offers pre-built Midjourney and Notion integrations with a free tier for testing.
  • Make (formerly Integromat): More powerful automation engine with advanced conditional logic. Better for complex workflows but steeper learning curve.
  • Custom API integration: Developers can build a custom script using Midjourney’s API and Notion’s API to create a tailored workflow, offering maximum flexibility but requiring technical resources.
  • Manual export + Notion import: For small teams or infrequent use, manually downloading images and creating Notion entries may be simpler than setting up automation.

Real-World Use Cases

Marketing teams can maintain a centralized library of AI-generated social media assets, organized by platform, campaign, and approval status. Team members review in Notion before posting.

Design agencies use the integration to catalog client-approved concepts and variations, making it easy to retrieve past work for inspiration or client reference.

Content creators build a searchable archive of prompts and results, allowing them to refine techniques and avoid regenerating similar images.

Product teams use Notion as a staging ground for AI-generated mockups and concept art, embedding feedback and iteration notes directly in the database.

Limitations & Disclaimers

This integration relies on third-party automation platforms, which means you’re dependent on their uptime and API access. If Midjourney or Notion changes their API, the integration may break temporarily until the automation provider updates their connector.

Image URLs from Midjourney may expire or change. For long-term archival, consider downloading and storing images locally or using a dedicated asset management tool alongside Notion.

Automation platform pricing varies. Zapier’s free tier covers basic workflows, but high-volume use may require a paid subscription ($20–$99/month depending on usage).

Note: Integration features and availability may change. Always verify current capabilities on the official Midjourney and Notion documentation, and test your automation workflow before relying on it for critical projects.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I automatically save Midjourney images to Notion without third-party tools?

No, Midjourney and Notion don’t have a native direct integration. You’ll need a third-party automation platform like Zapier or Make to bridge them. However, the setup is straightforward and doesn’t require coding.

What happens if Midjourney deletes an image—will the Notion link break?

Yes, if Midjourney removes an image from their servers, the URL stored in Notion will no longer display the image. For critical assets, download and store images locally, or use a dedicated asset management platform alongside Notion.

Can I organize images by multiple properties in Notion?

Absolutely. Create a Notion database with custom fields for campaign, client, style, approval status, and any other property relevant to your workflow. The automation can populate these fields automatically if you set up conditional logic, or your team can tag them manually.

Is there a cost to set up this integration?

Zapier and Make offer free tiers that cover basic workflows. If you generate images frequently or need advanced automation, you may need a paid plan ($20–$99/month). Midjourney and Notion subscriptions are separate costs.