published apr 15, 2026

How to Audit Your Business with Notion's Built-in Claude Agents

beginner
Step 1

Find the preset agents

Notion has a full library of prebuilt agents, and most people are scrolling right past them.

  • In the app: open the sidebar, scroll to Agents, click the + button, and choose Browse templates.
  • In your browser: go to notion.com/custom-agent-templates and filter by category.
Pro tip: The browser view is easier to filter. Sort by popularity. Some of these agents have tens of thousands of downloads, so you do not need to reinvent the wheel.
Step 2

Install the Business Workspace Auditor

Start with the Business Workspace Auditor. It scans a page or database and returns a scored report with the biggest scalability risks at the top.

CleanShot 2026-04-15 at 17.13.22@2x
  • Open Business Workspace Auditor.
  • Click Get template.
  • Pick the workspace you want it to live in.
  • Under Permissions, add any private pages you want it to see. By default, it can only see shared pages.
  • Hit Save.
Pro tip: Managing permissions is the one annoying part, but do not skip it. Scoping the bot to the pages you actually want audited keeps it focused and keeps it from touching things you do not want it touching.
Step 3

Run the audit

Open the agent and @ mention the page or database you want reviewed. You can also drop the link directly in the chat.

The prompt can be simple because the agent is already preconfigured with a long system prompt written by Notion experts:

Prompt
Audit this database.
Pro tip: You can also @ mention the agent in a comment on any page to trigger it, the same way you would tag a teammate. This is useful for async audits.
Step 4

Read the report and let it fix things

The agent returns a scored report with:

  • Schema issues, such as duplicate status fields or orphaned properties.
  • Missing relations between databases.
  • Naming inconsistencies.
  • Severity on each finding.
  • A recommended fix.

If you gave the agent edit permissions, you can ask it to apply selected fixes directly:

Prompt
Go ahead and apply fixes 1, 2, and 4.

The agent will make the changes in the database itself, without copy-paste or manual cleanup.

Pro tip: These agents are more critical than many AI tools. Notion's preset agents can call out structural issues directly, so lean into that feedback.
Step 5

Watch your token usage

These agents use credits, so it is worth knowing where to check usage.

  • Pricing is $10 per 1,000 credits.
  • You can check usage per agent in the agent settings.
Pro tip: Check the per-agent usage panel before and after a big run. That is the fastest way to figure out which agents are worth keeping on and which are burning credits on tasks a cheaper tool could do.
Step 6

Keep going

Once the Workspace Auditor has cleaned up one database, the same install flow works for the rest of the marketplace. The ones worth installing next:

  • Business Process Audit: paste in an SOP or describe a process, and it maps the steps, flags bottlenecks, and suggests fixes.
  • Task Triager: paste a messy brain dump, and it routes each item into your Tasks database with project, priority, and due date filled in.
  • Weekly Planning agents: useful out of the box for roll-ups and weekly reviews.
  • Email help agents: morning inbox triage without the setup work.

You can also pair these with free Notion templates from the marketplace. Filter to Notion and Free, grab a starter kit like a Tasks or Reports database, and point a preset agent at it.