If you’ve used ChatGPT for months, it already gets you. It knows your tone, your work, and how you like things done. It knows if you hate long answers or love structured steps. Switching to Claude shouldn’t mean teaching all that again. Here I’ll walk you through the steps to move ChatGPT memory to Claude, so you pick up close to where you left off.
Why Bother Transferring Your Memory at All
After months with ChatGPT, it has picked up a lot about you: your style, your job, how long you want responses, and what you find annoying. Strip that away, and you’re back to square one, correcting the same things over and over.
“Don’t use bullet points.” “I work in marketing.” “Keep it short.” Repeating that stuff every few sessions gets old fast. Bringing your memory over skips the whole re-training phase.
On top of that, a lot of people are switching because of trust issues. When the government pushed Anthropic to ease on Claude’s limits on tracking people and autonomous drones, Anthropic said no and was dropped, but OpenAI accepted it. This led to backlash, and it’s a reason most are boycotting ChatGPT.
For anyone thinking about where their data ends up, it’s worth checking what your AI chats might actually expose before settling on a platform.
Extract Everything ChatGPT Knows About You
In ChatGPT, open a new chat and paste this Prompt:
I’m moving to a different AI and need to export everything you know about me. Please give me all of the following in one structured response: 1. Every saved memory, word for word. 2. My custom instructions exactly as written. 3. preferences and context of anything you’ve picked up from our conversations, including my job, the tools I use, how I like to write, how I like answers formatted, and topics I ask about a lot.
Then, in the same chat, add the second prompt:
Based on our full chat history, summarize: 1. How I write: my tone, sentence length, vocabulary. 2. My most common types of requests. 3. Ongoing projects or anything that has come up repeatedly. 4. Strong opinions or preferences I’ve expressed. 5. Things I’ve pushed back on or asked you not to do. Write this as a reference document, not a reply.
You’ll get a long response. Copy it into a document or Notepad and clean the noise before you import. Remove one-off requests or outdated details. Keep what reflects how you actually work today, such as tone, formatting, and recurring tasks.
Import to Claude and Verify
Go to Claude’s Import memory page and click Get Started. Paste your profile and click Add to Memory. It can take up to 24 hours to show up fully, so give it time before assuming something went wrong.
To check, open a new chat and ask Claude: What do you know about me? If your key details come back, you’re good.
Alternatively, go to Settings → Capabilities → Memory → Memory from your chats to check for imported updates.
If you had Custom GPTs in ChatGPT, those won’t carry over. Rebuild them as Claude Projects by copying each GPT’s instructions into a new Project setup.
Heads up: Persistent memory requires Claude Pro. On the free plan, Claude forgets after each chat. You can still paste your profile at the top of a session, but it won’t stick permanently.
What You Can (and Can’t) Transfer
To move your ChatGPT memory to Claude isn’t like copying a folder. Some things come easily, and others don’t.
What carries over:
- Custom instructions and preferences
- Tone and writing style
- Formatting rules, like no bullet points, short answers, plain language
- Workflow steps and templates you use regularly
- Prompts you’ve refined over time
What stays behind:
- Your chat history. Claude won’t have access to past conversations
- Custom GPTs and their configurations
- Features that are specific to ChatGPT
Claude won’t know the conversations that shaped your preferences. It will have the preferences themselves, and that’s enough to get useful output right away.
Is It Worth Switching?
That depends on how you work. If you write long documents, edit drafts, or handle multi-step tasks, Claude’s long-context handling can feel smoother. It tends to stay on track during extended sessions.
But no assistant feels smart without adjustments. Personalization is what makes it productive. If you skip the transfer, you’ll spend the next few weeks correcting tone and structure again. If you move ChatGPT memory to Claude once, you keep that foundation intact.
Still deciding? We compared ChatGPT Plus and Claude Pro across real use cases so you can see which one fits your work before committing to either.
In the end, if you’re making the jump anyway, do the transfer. It turns what could be a rough start into something smooth, where the AI feels like it knows you from day one. That’s the real win.