Home improvement, the Zotero way

A white house on a hillside

You could think of Zotero as a house which you may want to customise to suit your needs. Instead of adding a porch or a swimming pool, this takes the form of plugins that allow you to add features to your reference manager. With the arrival of Zotero 7, which has brought some changes to the plugin landscape, this blog post has been updated.

Add-ons and extensions – an advantage of open source software

The code of open source software like Zotero is public, so tech-savvy people can build tools on top of it. Not all are excellent, but some are really worth knowing. Their best features are often integrated into the standard version of Zotero.

These add-ons are usually hosted on GitHub, a platform on which developers can host and manage code. To install them, users need to download a file with an .xpi extension to their computer, then go to the Tools -> Plugins Manager, click on the cogwheel on the right, select Install Plugin from file and select the correct file.

Clean and tidy : so many tools!

Let’s not be afraid of clichés, the Swiss love to have everything “propre en ordre”, clean and tidy. I am all for “propre en ordre” Zotero libraries, with well-formatted metadata and no duplicate items. Linter for Zotero alerts you when you add an item that already is in your library, and automatically corrects certain errors or adds some missing information. When your documents’ abstracts are copied from a PDF, the line endings are often off, with line breaks in the wrong places: Zotero Abstracts Cleaner fixes this.

Could you use an OCR recognition tool for your attached PDF files? Or would you like to be able to translate those same PDF files quickly and easily? Perhaps you would like to customise the library display, change some of the existing columns or add new ones.

Choose your style!

There are so many styles in the Zotero repository that choosing the right one can be a daunting task. The Style Preview tab is very useful for this: just click on the button on the Cite tab of the Settings menu, select a reference in your library and click Refresh to see it formatted with all the styles you have in your Zotero. The ZoteroPreview add-on can also make your life easier, especially when you are manually entering an item and want to make sure you have it right: it adds an additional citation preview section in the right pane of the Zotero Library. You can even copy the citation and paste it elsewhere.

How many citations?

Want to know how many times the articles in your Zotero library have been cited? Several add-ons make it easy for you to find out. One is based on Google Scholar, and the other on Crossref and Semantic Scholar. If you want some qualitative information, Scite is an AI-powered tool that shows how many supporting, challenging or just mentioning citations the article in your library has received. It is freemium, so without a paid subscription, you will only get the basic features (which are already interesting), and it has a Zotero plugin that displays this information directly in your Zotero library.

From citation to note management

With its built-in PDF reader, Zotero makes your workflow smoother. You can highlight and annotate what you read, and extract those annotations to create notes attached to the reference. You can also create standalone notes to store your thoughts. You can tag your notes, link them using the Related feature, and find them using Zotero’s powerful search capabilities.
The Zotero Better Notes plugin helps you to manage your notes even more efficiently. You can create main notes on your key topics, structure and organise them. You can also export them to Markdown tools like Obsidian.


A comprehensive list of add-ons is available on the Zotero website. You will also find a page with a selection of add-ons on our Zotero libguide, and another presenting bibliometric tools.

Illustration by Ulla Alfons via Pixabay.

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