Mind Map Maker — Visual Brainstorming, Free, In-Browser
Create mind maps visually: central topic, branches, sub-branches, color coding. Export PNG / SVG. No sign-up.
About Mind Map Maker
A mind map maker is a visual brainstorming tool that places a central topic in the middle of a canvas and lets users grow branches outward to capture related ideas, sub-ideas, and connections in a radial structure that mirrors how the brain associates concepts — useful for note-taking, project scoping, study revision, and creative ideation. The ZTools Mind Map Maker runs entirely in the browser, supports unlimited branch depth, drag-to-rearrange, colour-coded categories, keyboard shortcuts for fast capture, and exports to PNG / SVG / JSON for sharing or backup.
Use cases
- Project kickoff brainstorm. Central node = project name; first-level branches = workstreams (engineering, design, marketing); second-level = tasks. Visual overview catches missing branches faster than a flat list.
- Study chapter summary. Central node = chapter; branches = main concepts; leaves = facts, formulas, examples. Visual structure aids recall during exams — the geography of the mind map cues memory.
- Decision exploration. Central node = decision; branches = options; leaves = pros, cons, costs. Forces structured comparison instead of relying on gut feel.
- Meeting capture. Central node = meeting topic; branches per agenda item; leaves = decisions, action items, open questions. Sharable as image at meeting close.
How it works
- Set the central topic. Click the centre node, type the main idea (e.g. "Q3 product launch"). All other ideas radiate from this.
- Add primary branches. Tab or click + Add Branch to create first-level children. Use 3-7 branches per parent — more than that is hard to scan.
- Grow sub-branches. Each branch can spawn its own children. Depth typically 2-4 levels; deeper than that, switch to a list or document.
- Colour and categorise. Pick a colour per primary branch; sub-branches inherit. Visual grouping helps during review.
- Export or share. PNG for slide decks, SVG for scaling, JSON for re-importing. Locally stored — no server upload.
Examples
Input: Central: "Personal finance review". Branches: Income, Spending, Savings, Investments, Debt.
Output: Each branch grows sub-nodes: Income → salary, side income; Spending → fixed, variable, debt service; Savings → emergency, goals; etc.
Input: Central: "Thesis chapter 3". Branches: Background, Methodology, Results, Discussion.
Output: Methodology branch: participants → recruitment, demographics; materials → instruments, ethics; procedure → step 1, 2, 3.
Input: Central: "Weekend home renovation". Branches: Tools, Materials, Steps, Time, Budget.
Output: Steps branch: prep → mask, drop cloths; paint → primer, base coat, finish; cleanup → sand, dispose.
Frequently asked questions
How is a mind map different from an outline?
Outlines are linear (1, 1.1, 1.1.1). Mind maps are radial — every level visible at once, easy to add lateral connections. Better for early-stage exploration; outlines win for final structure.
How many branches per node?
3-7 is the readable maximum. More than 7 indicates either grouping is needed (introduce intermediate categories) or some items belong elsewhere.
How deep should a mind map go?
Usually 2-4 levels. Deeper than that and it becomes a tree better expressed as a document. Mind maps are for overview, not exhaustive detail.
Can I link nodes across branches?
Yes — most mind maps support cross-links (e.g. dotted lines) to show relationships that the tree structure doesn't capture. Use sparingly to avoid visual chaos.
Why not just use a whiteboard?
Whiteboards are great in person; mind map software preserves the artifact, lets you reorganise, and exports for sharing. Both have a place.
Are mind maps proven to help learning?
Mixed evidence. Most studies show modest gains for structured topics; effect varies by learner. The act of creating the map matters more than the artifact itself.
Pro tips
- Start central, not by the corners. Central topic forces clarity; corners encourage drift.
- Use one or two words per node, not sentences. Verbosity kills the visual scan.
- Colour by category, not aesthetic — colour should encode information, not just decoration.
- Re-organise at the end of a brainstorm; first capture freely, then group similar branches.
- Export to PNG immediately — easy to lose work if the browser tab crashes.
Reviewed by Ahsan Mahmood · Last updated 2026-05-05 · Part of ZTools.
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