Using Notion as your website? Here's how to show client reviews without leaving the Notion ecosystem.


More and more freelancers and creators are using Notion as their website - through tools like Super, Notaku, or Notion's native publishing feature. It's fast, easy to update, and looks clean.

But Notion doesn't have a testimonial component. No star ratings, no collection forms, no embeddable widgets. Here's how to add social proof to your Notion site.

Method 1: Embed a Widget

If you're using a Notion-to-website tool like Super.so or Notaku, you can embed custom HTML.

Step 1. Get your widget code from a testimonial tool like Quoted:

<script src="https://quoted.love/widget.js" data-project="your-slug" defer></script>

Step 2. In your Notion page, type /embed to create an embed block.

Step 3. Depending on your Notion-to-site tool:

  • Super.so: Use a Custom Code block. Paste the widget code. Super renders it as HTML on the published site.
  • Notaku: Add an HTML block with the widget code.
  • Notion native publishing: Currently doesn't support custom HTML embeds. Use Method 2 or 3 instead.

Step 4. Publish and check.

The simplest approach that works with any Notion setup:

  1. Create a project in Quoted and collect testimonials
  2. Add a callout block or button in Notion: "See what our clients say →"
  3. Link it to quoted.love/your-slug/wall

Visitors click through to a beautiful, dedicated testimonial page. It doesn't live inside Notion, but it looks professional and updates automatically.

This works with native Notion publishing, Super, Notaku, and any other tool.

Method 3: Manual Testimonials in Notion

If you want everything inside Notion:

  1. Create a Notion database called "Testimonials"
  2. Add properties: Name, Title, Company, Rating, Quote
  3. Create a gallery view showing the relevant fields
  4. Embed the gallery view on your page

Pros: Lives entirely in Notion. Easy to edit.

Cons: No collection form - you add everything manually. No star rating visuals. No automatic updates. Looks like a Notion database, not a professional testimonial section.

Method 4: Notion + Super + Embed

If you're using Super.so, you get the best of both worlds:

Super supports custom code injection per page. You can add the testimonial widget code to a specific page's custom code section in Super's dashboard. The widget renders on the published site while your Notion page stays clean.

This is the cleanest approach for Notion-as-website users who want dynamic, auto-updating testimonials.

Design Tips

Keep it minimal. Notion sites look best with clean, minimal design. A carousel with 3-5 testimonials fits the aesthetic better than a massive grid.

Match the vibe. Notion sites tend to be black-and-white or muted colors. Use the widget's light theme and set your brand color to something neutral.

Place below your work. The typical Notion portfolio flow: intro → services/work → testimonials → contact. Follow the pattern your visitors expect.


Add testimonials to your Notion site →

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