Importing from an online source
When searching article databases, library catalogs, web search engines, and other resources, the connector in your browser will change to reflect the item type.
The article, book, or page icons in the address bar indicate you are viewing a single item, and clicking on that icon will import the information into your library. | If a folder appears in the address bar when you view a list of results, click on the folder to reveal a list of the items that appear on that page, then check the ones of interest and click on OK. This imports those multiple results into your library. | |
All the necessary bibliographic elements must be included in the records or the bibliography you output later will be wrong. Click on a field to make it editable and make your corrections.
Adding manually
Importing citations into your Zotero collections does not always work without a hitch. If for some reason an icon doesn't appear in the address bar or if the information isn't importing properly, you may want to use another option.
Use this option to manually add an item. Select the item type from the drop-down menu and enter the item's bibliographic information in the item details pane. | |
If you already know the ISBN, Digital Object Identifier (DOI), or PubMed ID of the item, enter it using this option. |
Importing from other tools
To import libraries from other reference management tools into Zotero, start by exporting the bibliographic data from your other software program. In Zotero, you will find the Import option under File in the menu bar. Browse to your file, select it, and click the Open button.
The Zotero documentation provides a list of bibliographic formats that can be imported into Zotero.
If you want to transfer entire Zotero libraries between different Zotero installations, you should use Zotero's sync functions, rather than the import/export function. You can also manually copy the Zotero data directory.
Importing web pages
Not all the websites you visit will provide Zotero with what is needed for the application to recognize the bibliographic information on the page. If the page cannot be "recognized," you'll see a gray page icon:
If Automatically take snapshots when creating items from web pages is enabled in the General option in Zotero settings, a copy (or snapshot) of the webpage can be saved to your computer and added as a child item. To view the saved copy, double-click the snapshot.
Right-clicking the Connector save button offers the option of saving a snapshot of the web page or saving the web page without a snapshot. Saving it with the snapshot will allow you to see the page as it was on the day you captured it.
Adding PDFs and EPUBs
If you want available PDFs or EPUBs downloaded to your library along with the bibliographic information, under the General option of Zotero settings this option should be checked: Automatically attach associated PDFs and other files when saving items.
When a PDF or EPUB is dragged into the middle pane, the program will attempt to retrieve bibliographic information for the item through a variety of searches. It will create an entry for the file and then attach the file to that entry. If this is unsuccessful, save the citation from another catalog or database, then drag the font onto the entry in your library to make it an attachment. In the General section of Zotero settings, you have choices of how you would like the attached files renamed.
Adding references from an already-created bibliography
If you have a bibliography that was created using Zotero or Mendeley, there is a tool called Reference Extractor that will help you add these references to your Zotero library.
If you have a Word document with citations inserted using Word's built-in citation feature, there are instructions at the Zotero site for extracting these.
If those methods don't apply to your circumstances, you can read this blog post which describes some options for extracting references and adding them to your Zotero library. I have not updated this since the date it was originally posted.