Want to use ResearchRabbit in your native language? While we don't yet offer native language support, most modern browsers have built-in translation that works beautifully across the whole app. So you can browse, search, and organize in whatever language feels most natural.
How to translate ResearchRabbit in Chrome
There are a couple of ways to do this.
Option 1: The quick way
When you open ResearchRabbit, look for the Translate icon in your address bar. Click it, pick your language, and the whole page switches over.
You can also right-click anywhere on the page and select Translate to [Language].
Option 2: Through Chrome's menu
If the icon doesn't appear, you can still translate the page manually:
Click the three dots in the top-right corner of Chrome to open the menu
Select Translate...
On the prompt that appears, click the three dots and choose your language
That's it, the entire ResearchRabbit interface will now appear in your chosen language.
How to translate ResearchRabbit in Safari
When you open ResearchRabbit, look for the Translate icon in Safari's address bar on Mac, or tap the aA button in the address bar on iPhone or iPad. Click it, pick your language, and the whole page switches over.
You can also translate from Safari's menu bar: View → Translation → Translate to [Language].
Note: If your language isn't listed, you may need to add it first in System Settings → General → Language & Region → Preferred Languages on Mac, or Settings → General → Language & Region on iPhone/iPad.
Searching across languages
Once the interface is translated, you can also search in your own language. One thing worth knowing: search quality varies by language, because not every language is equally represented in in the literature or academic metadata. English has the richest coverage, followed by major European languages like Spanish, Portuguese, French, and German.
Languages with less open academic metadata tend to have thinner representation.
Here's how to get the most out of it:
Seed papers match your search language. If you search in Spanish, your initial results will be in Spanish. The same applies to any other language.
Iterative search works across languages. Once you've added a seed paper and start exploring related work, ResearchRabbit surfaces relevant papers based on connections.
💡 Tip: If your language returns few results, try searching in English
Most academic metadata is indexed in English, so you'll get the richest set of seed papers. Or skip keyword search altogether: add a paper directly by title or DOI, or import an existing collection from your reference manager to use as your seed.






