Free tool for medical students

Anki cards for med students — from your own notes.

Upload your lecture PDFs, Pathoma chapters, or typed notes and generate board-style Anki cards. Clinical stems, multi-cloze drug pairs, system-based tags. Free, no account needed.

Generate medical Anki cards from your own material

Select the Medical domain in the generator to get board-style prompting. Works with PDF uploads and pasted notes.

Open the generator

Built for medical learning patterns

Board-style card formatClinical stems ("most likely diagnosis…", "best next step…") instead of plain Q&A.
Multi-cloze for drug pairsDrug name, mechanism, and indication tested from the same sentence using c1, c2, c3 cloze.
System-based tagsCards auto-tagged by organ system and discipline so you can filter decks in Anki.
Works with your PDFsUpload your First Aid pages, Pathoma chapters, or lecture PDFs and set a page range.
No preset deck requiredEvery card comes from your own notes and PDFs — not from someone else's interpretation.
Export to Anki instantlyDownload .apkg and import into AnkiDesktop or AnkiMobile. No copying, no reformatting.

How to get the best medical cards

Use targeted page ranges. Rather than uploading all 500 pages of First Aid, upload pages 100–130 (cardiovascular) and generate a focused deck. Specificity produces more testable, atomic cards.

Choose the Medical domain. The Medical domain prompting uses clinical stems, multi-cloze for drug-target pairs, and board-relevant phrasing. It produces cards like "A 45-year-old presents with… most likely diagnosis?" rather than "What causes chest pain?"

Use Cloze for pharmacology. Drug mechanisms, receptor types, and side effects work much better as cloze cards than basic Q&A. The generator will use multiple cloze numbers on the same card to test drug name, mechanism, and indication together.

Use Basic for pathophysiology comparisons. "What is the difference between Type 1 and Type 2 diabetes?" works better as a basic card where you can give a structured comparison on the back.

Why not just use premade decks?

Premade decks like Anki Bros or Zanki are excellent — but they are built from someone else's lecture and someone else's interpretation of First Aid. They won't match your professor's emphasis, your school's question style, or the specific cases you were taught.

This tool generates cards from your material. You bring the source; it builds the deck. The result is cards that test exactly what you need to know, in the phrasing your school uses, with the clinical context from your own lectures.

Use premade decks for broad coverage. Use this tool for your specific lectures, missed questions, and weak areas.

Build your deck from your own notes

Free, no login. Select the Medical domain in the generator.

Open the generator