Consensus

★★★★ 4.3
VS

Semantic Scholar

★★★★ 4.4
Feature Consensus Semantic Scholar
Pricing Free / from $11.99/mo Free only
Free Plan ✓ Yes ✓ Yes
Rating 4.3 / 5 4.4 / 5
Best For researchers, students, science-communicators, evidence-based-practitioners researchers, phd-students, academics, literature-reviewers
Founded 2021 2015
Academic Search
Ai Synthesis
Study Snapshots
Consensus Meter
Citations
Topic Pages
Semantic Search
Tldr Summaries
Citation Graphs
Research Feeds
Author Profiles
Open Api

✓ Consensus Pros

  • Evidence-based answers only
  • Academic source quality
  • Good synthesis of findings
  • Copilot for research

✗ Consensus Cons

  • Limited to academic papers
  • Can oversimplify complex findings
  • Newer platform

✓ Semantic Scholar Pros

  • Completely free to use
  • AI-generated paper summaries (TLDR)
  • Influence and citation metrics
  • Research feeds and alerts

✗ Semantic Scholar Cons

  • Coverage gaps in some disciplines
  • No full-text access
  • Interface less intuitive than Google Scholar

The Verdict

Consensus is built for researchers and students, with a focus on academic-search and ai-synthesis. Semantic Scholar targets researchers and phd students and leads with semantic-search and tldr-summaries.

Semantic Scholar uses custom enterprise pricing, while Consensus starts at $11.99/mo — a tangible advantage for teams with a fixed budget.

Both offer free plans, so you can test each with your real workflow before committing to a subscription.

Both tools are a solid fit for researchers — in those cases, the decision often comes down to workflow style and how your team prefers to organize work.

This is a genuinely close comparison. If you can, sign up for both free trials (where available) and run a one-week test with your actual team tasks before deciding.

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