How to Draw on a PDF | Freehand Annotation Options

Drawing on a PDF simply means opening the file in a compatible editor, selecting a pen or freehand tool, and marking the page with a mouse, stylus, or finger before saving the changes.

A signed contract needs a signature, a design proof needs a markup, and a technical drawing needs a circle around the problem spot. Getting those marks onto a PDF is straightforward once you know which tool to reach for. The right choice depends on one thing: what device you’re using right now.

Where the Drawing Tools Live in Each App

Most PDF editors group their freehand tools under a Comment, Markup, or Draw section in the toolbar. You’re looking for an icon labeled Pen, Pencil, Free Draw, or Sketch — not a highlighter or a text box, which serve different purposes.

The table below shows the exact tool names and locations for the five most common routes, so you don’t waste time hunting through menus.

App / Platform Tool Name & Location Input Types Supported
Adobe Acrobat Reader ToolsComment → pencil icon in toolbar Mouse, stylus, touch
Microsoft Edge (Windows) Top toolbar → Pen icon Mouse, stylus, touchscreen
Apple Preview (macOS) Markup Toolbar → Sketch tool Mouse, trackpad, stylus
Drawboard PDF App toolbar → Pen tool with customization panel Mouse, stylus, finger, touch
MobiPDF CommentFree Draw Mouse, stylus, touch
PDFelement Comment tab → pencil tool Mouse, stylus, finger
Smallpdf (Web) PDF Annotator → Draw freehand mode Mouse, trackpad, stylus, finger

Step-by-Step: Draw on a PDF Using Any of These Apps

The general workflow across all these tools is the same five-step process. Once you learn it, you can hop between apps without re-learning.

  1. Open the PDF in your chosen application. Most viewers work fine — you don’t need a paid edition for basic drawing.
  2. Activate the drawing tool. Look for the pen, pencil, or free-draw button inside the Comment or Markup section. In Preview on Mac, you enable the Markup Toolbar first, then pick Sketch.
  3. Adjust the pen settings. Change line color and thickness before you start drawing. Adobe Reader and Drawboard let you pick these from a panel that appears when you select the tool.
  4. Draw directly on the page. Click and drag with a mouse, or use a stylus or finger on a touchscreen. For straight lines or perfect circles in Apple Preview, hold Shift while drawing.
  5. Save the annotated file. Use Ctrl+S on Windows or Command+S on Mac. If the app works through a web browser, look for a Finish or Export button that lets you download the updated PDF.

One common mistake is closing the file without saving — the marks look like they’re on the page until that moment. Always save before closing to keep your work.

What Each Platform Does Best

Not every tool handles the same job equally well. A web app like Smallpdf is great for quick one-off marks, but it won’t ship with your operating system. The table below helps you pick based on your real situation.

If You Are Using… The Easiest Pick One Limitation to Know
Windows 10 or 11 Microsoft Edge Pen tools (already installed) Fewer shape options than dedicated editors
macOS Apple Preview Sketch tool (already installed) No built-in cloud sync for annotations
Multiple devices / need sync Drawboard PDF (Windows, iOS, macOS, Android, Web) Smart Ink is a paid Pro feature
Browser only (no install) Smallpdf online annotator Free tier limit on number of daily files
Prefer a desktop-heavy toolkit Adobe Acrobat Reader Comment tools Comment sidebar can be slow to load with large files

Can You Add Shapes and Text Annotations Too?

Yes — most PDF editors that have a freehand pen also offer shape tools and text annotation. In MobiPDF, shapes live under Comment → Shapes and include rectangles, lines, ellipses, polygons, and connected lines. In PDFelement, the Comment tab gives you ovals, rectangles, clouds, and connected lines alongside the pencil. Apple Preview’s Markup Toolbar includes arrow, rectangle, and oval shapes, and you draw them using the same click-and-drag motion. Text annotations work the same way in all these apps: click the Text or Note tool, place it on the page, and type your comment.

The one caveat is that some free readers only let you view existing annotations, not create new ones. If you are using a bare-bones viewer with no markup toolbar at all, switch to one of the apps in the table above — they all support creating freehand marks without a paid license.

When the Obvious Tool Isn’t Working

The most common situation that causes a search for “draw on PDF” is opening a file, seeing no drawing tools anywhere, and assuming PDFs can’t be marked up. Usually the fix is simpler than you think: the app you’re using may have the tool hidden behind a toolbar toggle. In Adobe Reader, click the comment speech-bubble icon on the right side of the window to open the sidebar. In Apple Preview, click the Markup Toolbar button — a pencil tip icon — near the top-right corner. In Microsoft Edge, the Pen icon only appears after the PDF has fully loaded in the browser tab. If you have gone through the obvious step of looking for the tool and still cannot find it, the next move is to open the PDF in a dedicated app like Drawboard or Smallpdf’s web tool, which place the drawing feature front and center with no hunting required.

References & Sources

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