Top AI Product

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Notion 3.3 Custom Agents Just Dropped, and Teams Are Already Going All-In

I’ve been keeping an eye on the AI agent space for a while now, and most of what I’ve seen feels like glorified chatbots with extra steps. So when Notion announced [Custom Agents in their 3.3 release](https://www.notion.com/releases/2026-02-24), I was cautiously curious. After spending some time with it, though, I get why people are losing their minds over this one.

The pitch is straightforward: you create an AI “teammate,” give it a job, set a trigger or a schedule, and it just runs. No prompting, no babysitting. It works around the clock across Notion, Slack, Figma, Linear, Mail, Calendar — basically wherever your team already lives. You can set up agents to triage incoming requests, answer internal questions from your knowledge base, compile daily standup reports, or even manage your inbox. And because Notion treats these agents like actual team members, you get granular permission controls, logged runs, and the ability to undo what they’ve done. That last part matters more than people think.

The early numbers are kind of wild. According to [Notion’s own blog post](https://www.notion.com/blog/introducing-custom-agents), early testers built over 21,000 Custom Agents during the beta. Notion itself is running more agents than it has employees — roughly 2,800 agents working nonstop internally. Ramp reportedly deployed over 300 agents including something they call a “Product Oracle,” and Remote claims their agents triage with over 95% accuracy while autonomously resolving more than a quarter of tickets, saving them around 20 hours a week.

The reception on [Product Hunt](https://www.producthunt.com/products/notion/launches) has been strong — 369 upvotes within a day of launch, with COOs and PMs from companies like Vercel sharing how they’re restructuring workflows around these agents. Tom’s Guide ran a [hands-on piece](https://www.tomsguide.com/ai/i-went-hands-on-with-notions-custom-agents-without-seeing-a-use-case-now-im-convinced-theyre-the-future) where the writer admitted he went in skeptical and came out convinced. [AlternativeTo](https://alternativeto.net/news/2026/2/notion-3-3-launches-custom-agents-for-autonomous-team-automation/) covered the launch too, calling it a major step toward autonomous team automation.

What makes this different from the typical “AI inside your app” story is the shift from reactive to proactive. You’re not asking an AI to do something each time — you’re configuring a persistent worker that handles recurring tasks on its own. That’s a real workflow change, not just a feature checkbox.

If you’re on a Business or Enterprise plan, Custom Agents are free to use through May 3, 2026. After that, they’ll run on a credit-based system. Honestly, if you manage any kind of repeatable process — ticket triage, weekly updates, onboarding Q&A — it’s worth setting one up now while it’s still free and seeing what sticks.


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