Apple Preview review: Your Mac has a solid PDF editor hidden in this image app
With a full set of editing and markup tools, the macOS image editor can handle most PDF tasks.
Pros
- Full set of PDF markup tools
- Supports form filling
- PDFs can be protected with passwords, encryption, and permission controls
Cons
- Limited native sharing options
- Only available to Mac users
Bottom Line
Apple Preview offers Mac users a capable, full-featured PDF editor that can handle the most common business and personal use cases.
-
Price
Free (AUD)
Price when reviewed
Free - built into macOS
Mac owners don't have to look far for a free PDF editor. Apple Preview, a fixture of every version of macOS, offers a full slate of tools for working with PDFs.
Apple doesn't exactly advertise Preview's PDF capabilities. Aside from a text highlighting tool on the main toolbar, the app looks like a simple image editor. Tapping the tiny pencil-tip icon to the left of the search bar, though, reveals a full set of markup tools. These include tools for adding text and shapes, redacting content, making freehand drawings, inserting sticky notes, and capturing your signature using your trackpad, camera, or iPhone.
You open a PDF in Preview as you would any image file. Thumbnails of each page are automatically displayed in the left sidebar and the current page is presented in the main pane. From the View menu, you can toggle between thumbnail and contact sheet views, and show full-size pages one at a time, in side-by-side pairs, or in a continuous scroll. You can also jump to the table of contents (if your PDF has one), highlights and notes, and bookmarks.
Apple Preview has a full set of PDF markup tools including content redaction and sticky notes. Image: Michael Ansaldo/IDG
In addition to markup, Preview allows you to combine PDFs and reorder, add, and delete pages. To combine PDFs, just select a page thumbnail in the current PDF where you want to insert the new one, then choose Edit Insert Page from File. Find the PDF you want to add and click Open. To save the new PDF, select File Export as PDF. Adding a new page to a PDF is done similarly, while removing a page is as simple as selecting its thumbnail and pressing the delete key. To reorder pages, you just click on a thumbnail and drag it to its new spot in the sidebar.
Preview also supports form filling and signatures. You can create a signature by signing your name on your Mac's trackpad or by holding your written signature on white paper in front of your Mac's camera. To use your iPhone, you select this option from Preview's signature tool, and a signature page displays on the iPhone paired with your Mac. When you sign on the phone it's simultaneously displayed in Preview for you to review and save.
When handling sensitive documents, you can password protect and encrypt PDFs in Preview. In older macOS versions, passwords could only control whether someone in possession of the file could open it. macOS Monterey, however, added permissions to Preview's feature set that lets the PDF's owner control who can print the PDF; copy images or text; insert, rotate, or delete pages; add annotations or signatures; or fill in form fields. You can set permissions when you first save or export a PDF, or later by choosing File Edit Permissions if you possess the owner password.
You can capture your signature using your Mac's trackpad or camera or your iPhone. Image: Michael Ansaldo/IDG
Naturally, Preview integrates with Apple's iCloud, allowing you to share PDFs with other iCloud users from within Preview. You can enable sharing via Microsoft OneNote, Evernote, and other common business tools by adding extensions for these to the Share Menu in your Mac's system preferences as long as you have the appropriate app installed on that computer. Preview also lets you share PDFs via Apple Mail, Messages, AirDrop, and Notes.
Bottom line
Apple Preview's PDF capabilities are strong and should be all you need for common editing tasks. The rub, of course, is you have to be a Mac user to take advantage of them.
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