Here is the question a lot of people are quietly Googling: do I actually need Adobe Acrobat, or am I just paying for it out of habit?
It is a fair question. At around $240 a year for a single user, Adobe Acrobat Pro is not cheap — especially when Microsoft 365 already handles a lot of PDF tasks through Word and Edge, and a dozen free tools will handle most of what the average person actually does with PDFs. But for some workflows, Acrobat really is the right answer. The trick is knowing which camp you are in.
This guide cuts through the noise. We will look at what Adobe Acrobat actually gives you for that price, what Microsoft’s PDF tools genuinely cover, and where the alternatives — free and paid — do a perfectly good job for a lot less money. By the end, you should have a clear picture of which tool makes sense for your situation.
Note on 2026 pricing: Adobe announced a price increase for Acrobat Standard for business customers effective April 1, 2026. Individual Acrobat Pro pricing currently runs $19.99/month on an annual plan ($239.88/year) or $29.99 on a month-to-month basis. Adobe also launched Acrobat Studio in late 2025 — a new tier that bundles AI tools and Adobe Express Premium — which is now the main upsell path.
First, Let’s Get Clear on What We’re Actually Comparing
The phrase ‘Microsoft PDF editor’ covers a few different things that often get lumped together, so let’s separate them before going further.
Microsoft Word (Microsoft 365): Can open PDFs and convert them to editable Word format. Good for text edits on simple documents. Struggles with complex layouts, scanned files, and anything requiring native PDF editing without format conversion.
Microsoft Edge browser: Built-in PDF viewer with annotation tools — highlights, comments, freehand drawing, fill-and-sign. Genuinely useful for reading and basic markup. Not an editor.
Microsoft Print to PDF: Creates PDFs from any app. No editing capability at all.
Adobe Acrobat Reader (free): View, annotate, fill forms, basic e-sign. No editing.
Adobe Acrobat Standard ($12.99/mo individual): Edit, convert, create, organize PDFs. E-signature. Share for Review collaboration.
Adobe Acrobat Pro ($19.99/mo individual): Everything in Standard, plus redaction, advanced forms, accessibility tools, Liquid Mode, compare PDFs, and the full AI Assistant. Also available as Acrobat Studio with AI and Express Premium bundled.
When people say Microsoft has a free PDF editor, they usually mean Word or Edge. And when they wonder if Adobe is worth it, they’re usually comparing against one of those — or against a dedicated alternative like Foxit or Nitro.
Head-to-Head: Adobe Acrobat Pro vs Microsoft 365 PDF Tools
Here is a direct feature comparison across the tasks that actually matter in day-to-day PDF work. No marketing fluff — just what each platform can and cannot do.
| Feature | Adobe Acrobat Pro | Microsoft 365 (Word + Edge) |
| View & annotate PDFs | ✓ Full — including comments, stamps, drawing | ✓ Edge: highlights, comments, drawing |
| Edit text in a PDF natively | ✓ Yes — edits within the PDF format | ✗ No — converts to Word first (layout breaks) |
| Edit images in a PDF | ✓ Yes — crop, replace, resize in-document | ✗ Basic only via Word conversion |
| OCR (scan-to-searchable text) | ✓ Yes — full OCR with editing | ✗ No dedicated OCR tool |
| Merge/split PDFs | ✓ Yes — drag-and-drop organizer | ✗ No native merge/split in Word |
| Create fillable PDF forms | ✓ Yes — form field creator (Pro) | ✗ No — not supported |
| Redact sensitive information | ✓ Yes — permanent redaction (Pro) | ✗ Not available |
| E-signature | ✓ Yes — Acrobat Sign included | Microsoft 365 apps have basic e-sign via Entra |
| Password-protect / encrypt | ✓ Yes — full permissions control | Basic password via Word Save As |
| Compare two PDF versions | ✓ Yes — side-by-side diff highlighting | ✗ Word Compare exists but not for true PDF |
| Convert PDF to Word/Excel/PPT | ✓ Yes — high-quality conversion | Word opens PDFs but loses complex layouts |
| AI Assistant (Q&A, summary) | ✓ Yes — Acrobat AI Assistant (Pro/Studio) | Copilot in M365, but not PDF-native |
| Accessibility checker / tagging | ✓ Full accessibility tools (Pro) | ✗ Not available in native Microsoft tools |
| Integration with Microsoft Office | ✓ Add-in available for Word, Excel, PPT | ✓ Native — built into the Office suite |
| Cloud collaboration / review sharing | ✓ Share for Review, Document Cloud | ✓ SharePoint, OneDrive, Teams integration |
| Mobile app | ✓ iOS and Android — full-featured | Edge mobile for viewing/annotating |
| Cost (individual) | $19.99/mo (Pro, annual plan) | Included with Microsoft 365 ($6.99-$9.99/mo) |
The honest summary: Microsoft 365 covers basic annotation, viewing, and simple text edits through the conversion-to-Word route. For anything more — OCR, native PDF editing, forms, redaction, or serious e-signature workflows — you are outside what Microsoft’s included tools can do reliably.
Pricing Breakdown: What You Actually Pay in 2026
Let’s lay out the full cost landscape, because the numbers matter a lot to this decision.
Adobe Acrobat — Current Pricing Tiers
| Plan | Monthly (M-to-M) | Annual (billed yearly) | Best for |
| Acrobat Reader | Free | Free | View, annotate, basic sign only |
| Acrobat Standard (Individual) | $22.99/mo | $12.99/mo | Individuals needing edit + convert + e-sign |
| Acrobat Pro (Individual) | $29.99/mo | $19.99/mo ($239.88/yr) | Power users — redaction, forms, OCR, AI |
| Acrobat Standard (Teams) | N/A | $14.99/user/mo | Small teams — note: price rise April 2026 |
| Acrobat Pro (Teams) | N/A | $23.99/user/mo | Teams needing full feature parity |
| Acrobat Studio (new 2025/26) | N/A | Upgrade pricing from Pro/Standard (varies) | Pro features + AI Assistant + Adobe Express Premium |
2026 pricing alert: Adobe is increasing Acrobat Standard prices for business (Teams/Enterprise) customers on April 1, 2026. If your organization uses VIP/VIP Marketplace licensing, check your renewal date now. Adobe is offering up to 15% off Acrobat Studio upgrades for affected customers through October 31, 2026.
Microsoft 365 — What PDF Features Cost
| Plan | Monthly Cost | PDF capabilities included |
| Microsoft Edge (built into Windows) | Free | View, annotate, highlight, fill forms, basic sign |
| Microsoft 365 Personal | $6.99/mo | Word PDF open/edit (via conversion), Print to PDF, OneDrive sharing |
| Microsoft 365 Family | $9.99/mo | Same as Personal, up to 6 users |
| Microsoft 365 Business Standard | $12.50/user/mo | Word, Edge, SharePoint integration, Teams file sharing — no dedicated PDF editor |
The math here is stark. If you already pay for Microsoft 365, you are getting PDF annotation and basic editing at no additional cost. Adobe Acrobat Pro on top of that is an additional $20/month per user. For a team of five, that’s $1,200/year in Acrobat Pro costs sitting on top of an existing Microsoft subscription.
The question is always whether those additional features are worth $1,200. For many teams, they genuinely are. For many others, they are not.
When Microsoft’s Built-In PDF Tools Are Actually Enough
Let’s be specific, because this is where generic guides tend to be vague. Here are the scenarios where you genuinely do not need Acrobat or any paid PDF tool:
You Mostly Read, Annotate, and Sign
If your PDF workflow is primarily reading documents, leaving comments or highlights, filling out existing form fields, and signing things — Microsoft Edge and Acrobat Reader (free) handle all of this without a subscription. Edge in particular has matured into a surprisingly capable annotation tool.
You Need to Make Simple Text Edits on Reasonably Simple Documents
If the PDF you want to edit was originally a Word document and does not have complex multi-column layouts, tables, or text flowing around images, opening it in Word works fine. The conversion is imperfect but usually good enough for straightforward edits. You then save it back to PDF when done.
Where this breaks down: PDFs with complex layouts, forms, images embedded in text flow, or fonts that Word doesn’t have installed. The converted document often looks scrambled, and fixing the layout takes more time than it saves.
Your PDF Output Needs Are Just Saving Documents as PDF
Every Microsoft 365 app can save directly to PDF. If that is all you need — generating PDF output from your Word, Excel, or PowerPoint files — you already have it. No additional tools required.
Your Team Works Primarily Within Microsoft 365
If your collaboration happens in SharePoint and Teams, and your review process involves comments and annotations rather than structural document edits, Edge and Word together get you most of the way there. The Share for Review feature in Acrobat is genuinely better for PDF-centric review workflows, but Teams + Edge is a functional substitute for many teams.
Bottom line: If your PDF tasks are annotation-heavy rather than edit-heavy, and the documents you work with have simple layouts, Microsoft’s included tools can cover your needs. The moment you need OCR, redaction, native editing of complex layouts, fillable form creation, or serious e-signature workflows — you need something more.
When Adobe Acrobat Is Actually Worth Paying For
Acrobat’s premium features are not just nicer versions of things you can do elsewhere. For some workflows, they are genuinely irreplaceable — or at least significantly better than any alternative at scale.
You Regularly Edit Complex PDF Layouts
If you receive PDFs — contracts, reports, scanned forms, files from clients — that need real editing without going through Word conversion, Acrobat is the cleanest option. Native PDF text editing keeps the layout intact in ways that Word conversion simply cannot guarantee.
You Handle Scanned Documents (OCR is Non-Negotiable)
Scanned PDFs are images of text, not searchable or editable text. Turning them into something you can search, copy from, or edit requires OCR. Acrobat’s OCR is the industry benchmark for accuracy, particularly on complex layouts, tables, and non-English text. Microsoft has no OCR tool in its native stack.
Your Work Involves Sensitive Information Requiring Redaction
Redaction is not just blacking out text visually — it is permanently removing the underlying data so it cannot be uncovered. Acrobat’s redaction tool does this properly. No Microsoft 365 tool provides this, and getting redaction wrong in a legal or compliance context has real consequences.
You Create or Manage Fillable PDF Forms
Acrobat’s form creation tools let you build interactive forms with text fields, dropdowns, checkboxes, radio buttons, and digital signature fields that recipients can fill out and submit. This is a fundamentally different capability from form filling — it is form creation. Microsoft has nothing comparable natively.
You Work in Regulated Industries (Legal, Healthcare, Government)
PDF/A compliance for archiving, accessibility tagging for ADA compliance, advanced encryption, certificate-based digital signatures, and audit trails for document workflows — these are Acrobat specialties. Competitors handle some of these, but Acrobat’s depth here is hard to match.
Your E-Signature Volume Is High
Acrobat Sign is embedded in Acrobat Pro and handles complex signature workflows — multi-party signing, routing, automated reminders, audit trails — at a level that Microsoft’s basic e-sign capabilities cannot match. If signatures are a meaningful part of your workflow, this is worth real consideration.
The honest calculus: Adobe Acrobat Pro is worth its price if you do at least three or four of the following regularly: native PDF editing, OCR on scanned docs, redaction, fillable form creation, PDF comparison, or advanced e-signature workflows. If you do one or two of these occasionally, an alternative is likely more cost-effective.
Best PDF Alternatives in 2026: Where the Real Value Lives
The gap between Acrobat and ‘free’ is not as wide as Adobe would like you to believe. Here is an honest breakdown of the best alternatives for different use cases.
Foxit PDF Editor — Best Overall Adobe Acrobat Alternative
Pricing: $10.99/month (PDF Editor) or $13.99/month (PDF Editor+) billed annually. Perpetual license available.
Foxit is the most complete Acrobat alternative for professionals. It matches Acrobat on OCR, redaction, form creation, annotation, and conversion. The interface uses a Microsoft Office-style ribbon that makes it immediately familiar to anyone who lives in Word and Excel. PCWorld named it its top recommendation for businesses needing an Acrobat alternative.
Where it pulls ahead of Acrobat: lighter system footprint, faster launch times, and better pricing on perpetual licenses for those who hate subscriptions. Where it trails: brand recognition in legal and government contexts where Acrobat certification matters, and some advanced accessibility features.
The PDF Editor+ plan ($159.99/year for individuals, $129.99 personal) adds AI-assisted Smart Redaction, eSign, and 150GB of cloud storage. That is a lot of capability for the price.
Nitro PDF Pro — Best for Microsoft 365-Integrated Teams
Pricing: Contact Nitro for business pricing. Individual plans available — typically competitive with Foxit.
Nitro is built with enterprise Microsoft 365 integration front of mind. It integrates deeply with SharePoint and connects naturally to Office workflows, making it a particularly strong choice for organizations already invested in the Microsoft ecosystem who need real PDF editing capability without jumping to Adobe.
Its editing tools are strong, though PCWorld notes that direct content editing of existing PDFs is not as polished as Acrobat or Foxit. Conversion, collaboration, and organizational tools are excellent.
PDF24 Creator — Best Free Option (Windows)
Pricing: Free. No usage caps, no watermarks, no subscriptions.
PDF24 is the most consistently recommended free PDF tool by independent reviewers. TechRadar named it their top free PDF editor overall. It handles merging, splitting, compressing, page management, basic editing, and even OCR — all at no cost.
The limitations are real: Windows only for the desktop app (web version works cross-platform), no advanced redaction, no fillable form creation, and the interface is less polished than paid options. But for students, home users, and small businesses that need the basics reliably, PDF24 is genuinely hard to beat.
Smallpdf — Best for Quick, Occasional Web-Based Work
Pricing: Free (limited tasks per day). Pro: $12/month. Teams: $10/user/month.
Smallpdf is the right tool when you need to do one thing fast — compress a PDF, convert a document, merge files — and you do not want to install software. The browser-based interface is clean and intuitive, the mobile experience is particularly good, and the free tier covers occasional use well.
TechRadar’s free tier caveat: you are limited to two tasks per day on the free plan. For anything more regular, the Pro plan or a desktop tool makes more sense.
DocHub — Best Free Option for Business Workflows
Pricing: Free (generous limits). Pro: $10/user/month.
DocHub sits in an interesting middle ground. The free plan allows 2,000 documents, five e-signatures, three sign requests, and three email attachments per day — which is enough for many small business workflows at zero cost. The interface covers PDF editing, form filling, signing, and collaboration tools.
TechRadar describes DocHub as ‘a true gem’ for comprehensive free functionality. It integrates with Google Drive and Dropbox, which makes it particularly appealing for teams working outside the Microsoft ecosystem.
Wondershare PDFelement — Best Budget Paid Option
Pricing: Approximately $29.99/month, $49.95/year, or $79.95 for a lifetime license.
PDFelement targets users who need genuine PDF editing capability but cannot justify Acrobat’s price tag. The lifetime license option is its standout value proposition — pay once, own it. Feature coverage includes OCR, form creation, redaction, conversion, and annotation. The interface is clean and approachable for users new to dedicated PDF editors.
PDF Software Comparison at a Glance
| Tool | Native Edit | OCR | Redact | Forms | E-Sign | Cost/yr (1 user) |
| Adobe Acrobat Pro | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | $239.88 |
| Adobe Acrobat Standard | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✗ No | Basic | ✓ Yes | $155.88 |
| Microsoft 365 (Word+Edge) | Via conversion | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ No | Basic only | From $83.88 |
| Foxit PDF Editor+ | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ AI-assisted | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | $159.99 |
| PDFelement (lifetime) | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | ✓ Yes | Basic | $79.95 (once) |
| DocHub Pro | Moderate | ✗ No | ✗ No | Fill only | ✓ Yes | $120/yr |
| Smallpdf Pro | Basic | ✗ No | ✗ No | Fill only | ✓ Yes | $108/yr |
| PDF24 Creator | Basic | Basic OCR | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ No | Free |
| Microsoft Edge (built-in) | ✗ No | ✗ No | ✗ No | Fill only | Basic | Free (Windows) |
Which PDF Tool Is Right for You: A Scenario-Based Guide
Forget the feature lists for a moment. Here is a direct recommendation based on your actual situation.
You are an individual who occasionally needs to edit or sign PDFs
Start with Edge for annotation and sign needs. Use Word if you need text edits on simple documents. If you hit a wall with a complex layout or need OCR, try PDF24 Creator first (free) before spending anything. If you find yourself hitting PDF24’s limits regularly, PDFelement’s lifetime license at $79.95 is the best value step up.
You are a freelancer or small business owner
Foxit PDF Editor at $10.99/month (or $129.99/year) is the sweet spot. It covers everything you are likely to need — editing, OCR, forms, e-sign, redaction — at roughly half Adobe’s price. The perpetual license option is worth considering if subscription fatigue is a factor.
You work in a Microsoft 365 organization and mostly do document review
Stick with Edge and Word. Use the Teams-integrated SharePoint review workflow for shared feedback rounds. If your team starts creating fillable forms or handling scanned documents regularly, add Foxit or Nitro as a dedicated PDF tool rather than Acrobat.
You work in legal, healthcare, compliance, or government
Adobe Acrobat Pro is the safe choice. Not because alternatives cannot technically do the job, but because Acrobat certification, audit trail reliability, and its standing in regulated industries reduces friction with clients, courts, and compliance teams. The $240/year is likely justifiable against that context.
Your team needs enterprise-scale PDF workflows
Talk to both Adobe (Acrobat Pro Teams or Studio) and Nitro. Nitro’s Microsoft 365 depth and volume licensing often wins for large organizations already invested in the Microsoft stack. Adobe wins if advanced AI features, accessibility compliance, or Acrobat’s established brand in regulated contexts are priorities.
You just need to read and annotate PDFs — no editing
Adobe Acrobat Reader (free) or Microsoft Edge. You do not need to spend a penny.
How Adobe Acrobat Integrates With Microsoft 365
One point worth addressing directly: Adobe and Microsoft are not a zero-sum choice. Acrobat has a Microsoft 365 add-in that embeds PDF tools directly into Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Teams, and SharePoint. When installed, you can create PDFs, merge documents, request signatures, and trigger Acrobat workflows without leaving your Microsoft 365 apps.
For organizations where people live in Teams and Office, this integration means Acrobat’s power is available in context rather than requiring a separate application switch. SharePoint document libraries can trigger PDF workflows. Teams channels can surface PDF review requests.
The integration works the other direction too: Acrobat can open and save directly to OneDrive and SharePoint, meaning the cloud storage you already use becomes Acrobat’s file home. Co-authoring on PDFs through the Acrobat Document Cloud and SharePoint is genuinely functional, not just a marketing bullet point.
Practical tip: If your organization is evaluating Acrobat for Microsoft 365, ask Adobe specifically about the Teams integration and the SharePoint connector. These have improved significantly in the past two years and can change the ROI calculation if your team is already deeply invested in Teams for collaboration.
The Subscription Fatigue Factor: When a One-Time Purchase Makes More Sense
There is a real and growing market segment of people who are simply done with subscription software. If you pay Microsoft 365 ($83-$100/year), Adobe Acrobat Pro ($240/year), maybe Creative Cloud, maybe Dropbox — the monthly costs add up faster than people realize.
For those users, the perpetual license options are worth knowing:
- Foxit PDF Editor offers a perpetual license — you pay once and own that version permanently. Pricing varies but is typically in the $100-200 range for individuals.
- PDFelement has a $79.95 lifetime license that covers the full feature set for one-time purchase.
- PDF-XChange Editor is another Windows option with a strong perpetual license available at roughly $50-80 for a single user.
- PDF24 Creator is simply free, with no license to buy at all.
Adobe no longer sells a true perpetual license. The last was Acrobat Pro 2020. What Adobe now sells as a ‘one-time purchase’ is a 3-year non-renewing desktop license — it expires after three years and requires repurchase. This is not the same as the permanent licenses Adobe sold before.
If you are philosophically opposed to subscription software for PDF tools, Foxit or PDFelement are the strongest alternatives with comparable capabilities and genuine one-time pricing.
The Bottom Line
Adobe Acrobat Pro is genuinely excellent software. It has earned its position as the industry standard through decades of reliability and feature leadership. But in 2026, it is no longer the only answer to the question ‘how do I work with PDFs professionally?’
Microsoft’s built-in PDF tools — Edge for annotation, Word for basic editing — have improved enough to handle a real portion of everyday PDF needs at no extra cost. Free tools like PDF24 and DocHub fill in significant gaps. And paid alternatives like Foxit deliver Acrobat-level capability at meaningfully lower prices, including perpetual license options for those done with subscriptions.
The right answer depends on what you actually do with PDFs:
- If you read, annotate, and occasionally sign: Microsoft’s included tools or Adobe Reader (both free).
- If you edit, convert, and manage PDFs regularly: Foxit or PDFelement deliver 90% of Acrobat’s capability at 50-70% of the price.
- If your work involves OCR, redaction, fillable forms, or compliance requirements: Adobe Acrobat Pro or Foxit PDF Editor+ are the tools for the job.
- If you work in a regulated industry where Acrobat is the default expectation: Acrobat Pro at $240/year is probably the right call.
Whatever you choose, the era of paying for Acrobat out of inertia is over. The alternatives have caught up enough that every dollar of that subscription should earn its place in your workflow.

