Free Productivity Tool · Instant Visual Brainstorm
Mind Map Builder
Create visual mind maps directly in your browser. Press Tab to add a child, Enter for a sibling, drag to rearrange. Export as PNG, JSON or Markdown. Auto-saves locally — no account needed.
How to Use the Mind Map Builder
The mind map starts with a central node already on the canvas. Furthermore, everything you create branches outward from that central idea. Results save automatically to your browser after every change.
- Edit the central ideaDouble-click the central node to edit its text. Furthermore, you can also select it and press F2. Type your main topic and press Enter to confirm. This is the root of the entire map.
- Add child branches with TabSelect any node and press Tab to add a child directly attached below it. Furthermore, the new node appears in edit mode immediately. Type your branch topic and press Enter to confirm. Repeat to build nested levels.
- Add sibling nodes with EnterWith a node selected, press Enter to add a sibling — a new node at the same level, attached to the same parent. Furthermore, this lets you rapidly build out a list of parallel ideas without leaving the keyboard.
- Drag to rearrange, scroll to zoomClick and drag any node to move it manually. Furthermore, drag an empty area of the canvas to pan. Scroll the mouse wheel to zoom in and out. Click Fit to auto-scale the view so all nodes are visible.
- Export when finishedClick PNG for a high-resolution image of the full map. Click JSON to save a data file you can import back later. Furthermore, click Markdown to export the map as a nested text outline — ideal for turning a brainstorm into a document structure.
What Is a Mind Map?
A mind map is a visual diagram that organises information around a central concept. Branches radiate outward from the centre, with each branch representing a related sub-topic. Furthermore, each branch can have its own sub-branches, creating a hierarchical tree of connected ideas.
The concept was popularised by Tony Buzan in the 1970s, who argued that the radial structure mirrors how the human brain naturally stores and retrieves information through associations. Furthermore, unlike linear note-taking, mind maps capture the relationships between ideas visually, making patterns and gaps easier to spot.
Modern mind maps are used far beyond brainstorming. Furthermore, students use them to summarise textbooks and plan essays. Project managers use them to break down work into tasks. Writers use them to structure narratives. Additionally, educators use them to explain complex subjects in a single visual overview.
Types of Mind Maps and When to Use Each
Not all mind maps serve the same purpose. Furthermore, choosing the right structure for your goal makes the difference between a useful tool and visual noise.
Brainstorm map
A free-flowing radial map with no predefined structure. Furthermore, start with the central problem and add whatever comes to mind. This works best for idea generation where you want to capture everything before filtering. The goal is quantity, not structure.
Concept map
A structured map where connections between nodes carry labelled relationships — "causes", "requires", "produces". Furthermore, this is used in academic and scientific contexts to show how ideas relate, not just what they are. It is more formal than a brainstorm map.
Outline map
A hierarchical map used to plan written documents. The central node is the thesis or title. Furthermore, level-one branches are sections, level-two branches are arguments, and leaves are supporting evidence. The Markdown export from this tool produces exactly this structure.
Decision map
A map that explores the consequences and options of a decision. Furthermore, the central node is the decision to be made. Branches represent options. Sub-branches represent pros, cons and consequences. This reduces decision paralysis by making trade-offs visible.
Project map
A planning map that breaks a project into phases, epics and tasks. Furthermore, the Project Planning template in this tool uses exactly this structure. It connects directly to how most project management frameworks organise work.
SWOT map
A four-branch map for strategic analysis. Furthermore, the four branches — Strengths, Weaknesses, Opportunities, Threats — match the classic SWOT framework. Each branch holds items relevant to that quadrant. The SWOT template in this tool is pre-configured for this.
Mind Mapping for Students — Study and Exam Preparation
Mind maps are among the most effective revision tools for students. Furthermore, the act of creating a mind map forces active recall — you must retrieve information from memory rather than passively reading it. This active engagement significantly improves long-term retention compared to highlighting or re-reading notes.
For essay planning, start with your thesis as the central node. Furthermore, add branches for each main argument. Add sub-branches for evidence, examples and analysis. The Markdown export converts this directly into a structured outline you can expand in a word processor.
For textbook summaries, create a map for each chapter with the chapter title at the centre. Furthermore, each major heading becomes a level-one branch. Key concepts within each section become level-two branches. Additionally, this creates a one-page visual summary of an entire chapter that is far faster to review before an exam than re-reading the textbook.
Mind Mapping for Project Planning and Business
Mind maps have become a standard tool in business planning and project management. Furthermore, they bridge the gap between creative brainstorming and structured execution by capturing both the full scope and the detail level of a project simultaneously.
For project planning, the Project Plan template provides a ready-made structure: project name at the centre, with Planning, Execution and Launch as main branches. Furthermore, each phase contains tasks as sub-branches. This gives an immediate visual overview of the entire project scope before committing to a detailed work breakdown structure.
For meetings and workshops
Display the mind map on a shared screen during brainstorming sessions. Furthermore, have participants call out ideas while one person captures them on the map in real time. The visual structure makes it easy to group related ideas and identify gaps in the discussion without interrupting the flow.
For solo deep work
Use the mind map to explore a complex problem before writing anything linear. Furthermore, build the map by free-associating, then collapse branches that are not relevant to focus on the most promising ideas. Export as Markdown to turn the map into a structured document outline.
Keyboard Shortcuts — Build Maps Without Touching the Mouse
Power users build mind maps entirely from the keyboard. Furthermore, the shortcut system is designed so that your hands never need to leave the home row during active ideation. This keeps the creative flow uninterrupted.
| Key | Action | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Tab | Add child node | New node attached below selected, enters edit mode |
| Enter | Add sibling node | New node at same level in same parent, enters edit mode |
| Delete / Backspace | Delete selected node | Cannot delete the root node |
| F2 | Edit selected node | Opens inline text editor on the canvas |
| Double-click | Edit clicked node | Equivalent to selecting and pressing F2 |
| Ctrl+Z / Cmd+Z | Undo | Steps back through up to 50 actions |
| Ctrl+Y / Cmd+Y | Redo | Steps forward through redo stack |
| Scroll wheel | Zoom in / out | Zooms toward the cursor position |
| Drag empty area | Pan canvas | Move the viewport without selecting nodes |
Mind Mapping vs Linear Note-Taking
Most people default to linear note-taking: writing points sequentially down a page. Furthermore, this format mirrors how information is delivered — a lecture, a book chapter, a video — but it does not mirror how the brain stores it. The brain stores information as networks of associations, not lists.
Mind maps match the brain's associative structure. Furthermore, they make it natural to add new connections across branches — linking an idea in one area to a concept in a completely different part of the map. This cross-linking is impossible in a linear list without rewriting everything.
However, linear notes have important advantages. Furthermore, they are faster to produce during a fast-paced lecture. They preserve the order and context of spoken content. Additionally, they are far easier to search and scan for a specific word. The best approach combines both: take linear notes during the session, then convert them into a mind map during review.
Best Practices for Effective Mind Maps
A mind map is only as useful as its clarity. Furthermore, several structural habits separate maps that generate insight from maps that produce visual noise.
One idea per node
Keep each node to a single word or short phrase (3–5 words maximum). Furthermore, long sentences in nodes collapse the visual advantage of the format. If you need more detail, add a child node rather than lengthening the parent text.
Use colour intentionally
Colour-code branches by theme, priority or category. Furthermore, this tool assigns a different colour to each first-level branch automatically. Consistent colour coding makes patterns and groupings visible at a glance across large maps.
Limit depth to 3–4 levels
Maps deeper than 4 levels usually signal that a branch needs its own separate map. Furthermore, excessive depth creates navigational complexity without insight. If a branch grows very deep, consider exporting it as a sub-map and linking to it.
Use collapse to focus
Click the toggle button on any node with children to collapse that branch. Furthermore, this reduces visual clutter and lets you focus on one area of the map without losing the hidden structure. Expand again when you need to reference that branch.
Frequently Asked Questions
References and Sources
The content on this page draws from the following authoritative sources on mind mapping research, cognitive science and learning strategies. Furthermore, mind map technique research is ongoing — the cited works represent the most widely referenced findings in the field.
Related Productivity and Creativity Tools
Gantt Chart Maker
Convert your project mind map into a timeline. Furthermore, the Gantt Chart Maker turns tasks and phases into a visual schedule with dependencies and dates.
→Flowchart Maker
Turn decision branches into flowcharts. Furthermore, flowcharts are ideal when your mind map reveals a process or decision sequence that needs to show directional flow.
→Word Counter
Paste your Markdown export into the word counter. Additionally, track word count and reading time as you expand your mind map outline into a full document.
→Text Summariser
Summarise a long article, then paste the key points into a mind map for visual review. Furthermore, this combination speeds up research-based mind mapping significantly.
→Random Word Generator
Generate random words to spark new branches. Furthermore, random prompts are a classic technique for breaking creative block during brainstorming sessions.
→Notes App
Take linear notes alongside your mind map. Moreover, combining visual mapping with linear capture gives you the best of both thinking styles in one workflow.
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