Skip to content

Yes, you can export your bibliography from EndNote for use in Overleaf. The exported file can be uploaded directly to your Overleaf project or imported from an external file-hosting service.

How to export a .bib file from EndNote

Here’s a guide (with video) showing how to export a .bib file from your EndNote library. If you do not see the export to BibTeX option in EndNote, you may need to download and install the necessary EndNote style plugin.

How to add a .bib file to your Overleaf project

After your references have been exported from EndNote, select the file upload icon (UploadIcon.png) to display the Add Files modal. The exported .bib file can be added to your project using Upload or From External URL:

The Overleaf Add Files upload windows

Using Upload

You can drag and drop your .bib file onto the Add Files window or choose a file using select from your computer.

Notes:

  • If you upload the .bib file directly into your project, you can subsequently edit it using the Overleaf editor—unless the file exceeds the 2MB editable-file limit.
  • If you edit the .bib file on Overleaf, your project’s references may no longer be in sync with those stored in EndNote.

Using From External URL

Suppose you have saved the exported .bib file in a cloud-based file hosting service that allows direct download—such as Google Drive. Using From External URL, you can import a copy of the externally hosted .bib file into your Overleaf project. For further information, see the Overleaf help article How can I upload files from Google Drive?

Note:

  • If you have imported the .bib via Google Drive, or a similar file-hosting service, you cannot edit it on Overleaf. You must update the .bib file outside of Overleaf and refresh the imported copy by selecting the .bib file and choosing the Refresh button located at the top of the page—see this video for a demonstration.

Using the exported .bib file

Once your bibliography file has been uploaded, several bibliography packages can be used to display the relevant entries in your document (as you cite them). As an example, we often use the natbib package, and the commands for natbib look like this:

...
\usepackage{natbib}
...
\begin{document}
...
\bibliographystyle{plainnat}
\bibliography{name-of-your-bib-file-here}
\end{document}

For additional information on adding a bibliography to your document, see part 2 of our Introduction to LaTeX.

Overleaf guides

LaTeX Basics

Mathematics

Figures and tables

References and Citations

Languages

Document structure

Formatting

Fonts

Presentations

Commands

Field specific

Class files

Advanced TeX/LaTeX