Notion blog on autopilot.
Articfly ships 30 SEO articles a month into your Notion database. Auto-detected property mapping, HTML to Notion blocks, brand voice. Pairs with Super, Potion, and Feather. $89/mo flat.
Notion is the database. Articfly fills it. Your frontend ships the blog.
Notion has become a popular blog backend thanks to tools like Super, Potion, and Feather that render a Notion database as a public blog on your own domain. The missing piece is content volume, manually writing 30 articles a month into Notion is the same bottleneck as everywhere else.
Articfly connects to your Notion database via an Internal Integration Token, auto-detects your property schema (Title, Slug, Date, Tags, Status), and publishes full articles as native Notion pages with HTML converted to proper Notion blocks.
The workflow that wins: Articfly populates Notion, your Notion-to-blog frontend renders clean SEO-friendly HTML on your domain. You get a content engine feeding a CMS you already love.
Every Notion-specific feature
Notion blog automation FAQ
How does Articfly connect to Notion?
Via a Notion Internal Integration Token. Create the integration at notion.so/my-integrations, share the specific database you want to publish to with that integration (Notion scopes access per-database), then paste the token into Articfly. A two-step wizard validates the token, lists your shared databases, and lets you pick one. Setup takes about 2 minutes.
Does Articfly auto-detect my database columns?
Yes. After you pick a database, Articfly reads its schema and auto-maps properties by name: the single title-type property becomes Title (required), a rich_text property named slug/permalink becomes Slug, a date property becomes Date, a multi_select or select named tags/categories becomes Tags, and a status or select named status/state becomes Status. All optional except Title.
Can I use this with Super, Potion, or Feather?
Yes. Those tools turn a Notion database into a public blog. Articfly populates the database, your tool renders it. This is actually the recommended path for Feather users, since Feather syncs from Notion, Articfly to Notion to Feather gives you a full content engine. The same applies to Super and Potion.
Does the article body update if I republish?
No. Notion update writes properties (title, tags, date, cover) but not the body. Notion API does not support clean replace-all-children, so republishing with new content creates a new page. Metadata-only edits patch the existing page. You edit the body in Notion natively. This is a Notion API limitation, not an Articfly choice.
What happens to long articles, do they hit Notion limits?
No. Notion caps block-children appends at 100 blocks per request. Articfly chunks long articles automatically, the first 100 blocks via pages.create, the rest via blocks.children.append in batches. A 3,000-word article with tables and lists publishes cleanly without manual splitting.
Can Notion content rank on Google?
Raw Notion pages (notion.site URLs) rank poorly, Notion is not built as a CMS for SEO. To rank, use a Notion-to-blog frontend (Super, Potion, Feather) that serves clean HTML on your own domain with proper meta and schema. Articfly populates the Notion database, the frontend handles the SEO-friendly rendering. The combination ranks.
How does Articfly handle the Status property?
Best-effort with a fallback. Articfly tries to set your Status property to Published (or your configured value). If Notion rejects it (status options are user-defined, "Published" might not exist in your database), Articfly retries once stripping only the status property, so the rest of the article still publishes. No silent data loss.
Connect Notion. Fill the database.
$89/mo flat. 30-day money-back. Cancel any time.