Perplexity — Find Real Answers Without the Rabbit Hole

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Perplexity — Find Real Answers Without the Rabbit Hole

You know that feeling

You search “is ibuprofen safe to take daily?” and forty-five minutes later you have eleven tabs open, two of them contradicting each other, and you’re more confused than when you started. Perplexity is an AI search engine that reads the web for you and hands you a single, clear answer — with the sources listed right there so you can check them yourself. It’s built for anyone who wants reliable information fast, without the tab spiral.

What it is

Perplexity is a website (and app) where you ask questions in plain English and get a written answer, not just a list of links. It pulls from live web sources and shows you exactly which sites it used — think of citations like the footnotes in a school paper.

It’s not a chatbot you chat with for fun. It’s a research tool built specifically to help you find trustworthy information and trace it back to its origin.

Try it in 5 minutes

  1. Go to perplexity.ai — no account needed to start.
  2. Type your question into the search bar as if you’re asking a knowledgeable friend.
  3. Hit enter and read the answer. You’ll see numbered source links right in the text.
  4. Click any number to open the original article and verify what it says.
  5. Want to dig deeper? Use the follow-up question box that appears below the answer.

Try copying this prompt exactly:

What are the pros and cons of a high-protein diet, and what does recent research say?

A real example

You type: “What are the pros and cons of a high-protein diet, and what does recent research say?”

What Perplexity gives you:

A high-protein diet can support muscle growth, reduce hunger, and help with weight management [1][3]. However, some research suggests very high intake may strain the kidneys in people with existing kidney conditions [2]. A 2024 review in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found that 1.6g of protein per kilogram of body weight is a practical upper target for most healthy adults [4].

Sources: Healthline, Mayo Clinic, PubMed, Nutrition Journal

You get a clean, specific summary — not a wall of results — and every claim links to a real source you can open and read in one click.

Honest take

Best for:
– Researching health, finance, or news topics where accuracy matters
– Getting a quick briefing before a meeting, doctor’s appointment, or big decision
– Checking whether something you read online is actually backed up somewhere

Not for:
– Creative tasks like writing, brainstorming, or drafting emails — other tools handle those better
– Anything requiring deep source analysis: Perplexity summarizes what sources say, but it can misread or over-simplify them, so always click through on anything important

Free tier: Yes, and it’s genuinely useful. The free version gives you real-time web answers with sources at no cost. A paid tier (Pro) adds more powerful AI models and lets you upload files, but you don’t need it to get solid research done.

FAQ

Is Perplexity actually free?
Yes. You can use the core search feature without paying or creating an account. Just go to the site and start asking.

Is it safe to use?
It’s safe for general research. Treat it like any search engine — don’t enter passwords, financial details, or anything you wouldn’t type into Google.

Do I need an account?
No account is required to try it. Creating a free account lets you save your search history and continue questions in longer threads, which is handy once you’re hooked.

Today’s pick

Perplexity won’t replace your doctor, lawyer, or accountant — but it will walk you into any conversation more prepared than you were before. If you’ve ever watched a “quick Google” spiral into an hour of tab chaos, this is worth five minutes of your time today.

Tried Perplexity? Drop your favorite question to ask it in the comments — we’d love to see what our readers are researching.

Tomorrow we’re looking at NotebookLM — Google’s tool that turns your own documents into a personal AI you can have a conversation with. If you’ve ever wished your notes could talk back, you won’t want to miss it.

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