fig. 01Text to infographic

Free timeline infographic maker

Turn events, launches, lessons, and project phases into a clean visual timeline you can refine after generation.

Style

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fig. 03How it works

How it works

From a sentence to a finished infographic in three steps.

  1. 01

    Describe

    Write what you want in plain language — the topic, the facts, the vibe.

  2. 02

    Generate

    Get a polished infographic in about a minute, in the aspect ratio you picked.

  3. 03

    Refine

    Change colors, wording, or layout with simple instructions — every version is kept.

fig. 04Make the format work harder

Make the format work harder

A timeline infographic maker is best when your idea depends on sequence: product launches, historical events, campaign plans, project phases, or a research story that only makes sense in order. Start by writing the dates or milestones first, then add one short consequence for each item. The generator works best when every milestone has a clear noun, a time marker, and a reason it matters.

For cleaner timelines, keep the range tight. Six to eight milestones are usually enough for a social graphic, report insert, or lesson handout; more than that can crowd labels and make the visual hierarchy flat. Ask for one icon per milestone, consistent badge numbers, and a visual line that moves in one direction. If some events are more important, say which ones should be larger rather than hoping the model guesses.

After the first version, use edits to tune spacing and emphasis. You can ask for shorter labels, a stronger start and end, swapped colors, or a more formal style for business material. Iteration matters because timeline images often fail in small details: overlapping dates, uneven gaps, or a milestone that looks equally important when it should be secondary. For classroom and marketing use, also check the reading direction on a phone. If labels shrink too much, ask for a square or landscape version and move supporting notes into shorter captions. A good timeline should make the order obvious before anyone reads the small text, and the title should name the range. Use one date style throughout.

fig. 05Questions about this format

Questions about this format

Make your first infographic

Describe an idea, generate it in about a minute, and refine it until it looks exactly right.