Create a Digital Signature for Free: Type, Draw, or Scan (Add to PDFs, Word, and Google Docs)

By Abdulbatin Anaza • Last updated: May 2026 • Estimated reading time: 16–22 minutes

Need to sign a document without printing anything? With free tools, you can create a digital signature in minutes—then drop it into PDFs, Word files, and Google Docs on desktop or mobile. This guide shows fast, free methods to create a digital signature by typing, drawing, or scanning your signature, place it precisely, and save/share the document safely. We’ll also cover privacy, “flattening” a signature so it’s harder to remove, and when you might need a cryptographic (certificate) signature instead.

Editing a PDF after signing? See: Convert PDF to Word Without Losing Formatting.

Quick clarity: e‑signature vs. digital certificate (what’s the difference?)

  • Electronic signature (e‑signature): Your intent to sign shown by typing your name, drawing with a mouse/finger, or inserting a scanned signature image. Accepted for most everyday agreements—exactly what we’ll use to create a digital signature in this guide.
  • Digital signature (certificate): A cryptographically signed PDF using a digital ID/certificate. Often required by governments, regulated industries, or strict corporate policies.

This article focuses on practical, everyday e‑signing. For certificate‑based digital signatures, see Adobe’s guide: Sign PDFs. This is general info, not legal advice—check requirements in your region or organization.

Method 1: Make a clean, reusable signature image (best all‑around)

Create a high‑quality, transparent PNG of your handwritten signature. It’s the most flexible way to create a digital signature you can place in any doc without ugly boxes or backgrounds.

Step A — Capture a crisp signature

  • Use a black pen on plain white paper. Sign a few times to pick the best version. To create a digital signature that looks great, start with the neatest sample.
  • Scan with your phone for a clean, high‑contrast image:
    • iPhone/iPad (Notes app): Notes → new note → camera icon → Scan Documents → capture → auto‑crop. Apple help: Use Markup on iPhone/iPad
    • Android (Google Drive): Drive app → + → Scan → capture → adjust corners → Save. Help: Scan documents with Drive

Step B — Remove the white background (make it transparent)

Goal: keep only the black ink strokes on a transparent canvas so the file you use to create a digital signature blends into any page.

  • Photopea (free, in browser): photopea.com
    1. File → Open your scan (JPG/PNG).
    2. Layer → Rasterize (if needed).
    3. Select the Magic Wand → click the white background → press Delete. Repeat for leftover white.
    4. If ink looks gray: Image → Adjustments → Levels → boost contrast.
    5. File → Export as → PNG (Transparency on). Name it Signature_YourName.png.
  • macOS Preview (basic cleanup): Tools → Adjust Color (increase Contrast/reduce Exposure), crop tight, export to PNG.
  • GIMP (free desktop): Colors → Threshold to isolate ink → Color to Alpha (white) → export PNG. gimp.org

Step C — Store it safely

  • Keep your PNG in a secure folder (not public/shared). Name clearly so you don’t mix up versions, and reuse it whenever you need to create a digital signature in any app.
  • Optional: make a smaller “initials” PNG for forms that need initialing every page.

Method 2: Sign a PDF on Mac (Preview — free, offline)

Preview’s built‑in Markup → Sign tool lets you create a digital signature once and reuse it forever.

  1. Open the PDF in Preview.
  2. Click the Markup toolbar icon (pen tip) → Sign (signature icon).
  3. Create a signature:
    • Trackpad: sign with your finger/stylus.
    • Camera: sign on paper, hold it to your camera to capture.
  4. Click your saved signature → place and resize.
  5. File → Save (or Export as PDF to make a new file).

Apple guide: Annotate PDFs in Preview

Method 3: Sign a PDF on Windows or Mac (Adobe Acrobat Reader — free)

Adobe’s free Reader app has Fill & Sign—quickly create a digital signature by typing, drawing, or inserting your PNG.

  1. Install Adobe Acrobat Reader (free). Windows/macOS.
  2. Open PDF → right pane Fill & Sign.
  3. Click the Sign icon → Add Signature → choose Type, Draw, or Image (upload your PNG).
  4. Place, resize, and save.

Adobe help: Fill and sign PDF forms

Method 4: Sign PDFs online (trusted, fast — avoid sensitive docs)

Great on a borrowed computer. For privacy, don’t upload confidential files. The fastest way to create a digital signature online is with a vendor‑operated tool, then delete uploads.

  1. Open a trusted tool above.
  2. Upload the PDF → choose Sign → type/draw/upload your signature → place it.
  3. Download the signed PDF. If offered, click Delete to remove files from their server.

Method 5: Add a signature to Microsoft Word (and export to PDF)

For .docx files, Word makes it easy to create a digital signature with your PNG or a signature line.

  • Insert a signature image: Insert → Pictures → your PNG → place/resize. Right‑click → Wrap Text → In Front of Text. Then File → Save as PDF.
  • Signature Line (formal look): Insert → Signature Line for signer details. Pair it with your PNG above the line if needed.

Microsoft help: Insert a signature in Word

Method 6: Add a signature to Google Docs (no add‑ons required)

Docs has two quick ways to create a digital signature: insert your PNG or scribble in a Drawing.

  • Insert a saved PNG: Insert → Image → Upload from computer → select your transparent PNG → position/resize. Right‑click → Image options for fine alignment.
  • Draw it: Insert → Drawing → + New → Line → Scribble → sign → Save and Close (inserts as an image).

When done, File → Download → PDF to share a final signed copy.

Method 7: Sign on iPhone/iPad (built‑in Markup)

iOS/iPadOS Markup lets you create a digital signature right from Files or Mail and reuse it later.

  • Files app (PDF): Open the PDF → Markup (pen tip) → + → Signature → create or pick your saved signature → place → Done.
  • Mail app (attachments): Preview → Markup → Signature → place → Done → Reply with Signed or Save to Files.

Apple guide: Use Markup on iPhone/iPad

Method 8: Sign on Android (free apps)

Two solid free options make it easy to create a digital signature on Android.

  • Adobe Acrobat Reader (Android): Open PDF → Fill & Sign → Signature → create/place → save. App: Google Play
  • Xodo PDF Reader & Editor: Open PDF → Tools → Signature → draw or insert → save. App: xodo.com

Add dates, initials, and checkboxes (free)

  • Adobe Fill & Sign (desktop/mobile): Add initials, date fields, and checkmarks alongside your signature. See: Fill and sign
  • macOS Preview: Use Text tool to type dates/names; use Shapes for checkmarks.
  • Google Docs/Word: Type dates or insert a small “initials” PNG where required.

Make it stick: flatten the signature (so it’s harder to remove)

After you create a digital signature and place it, “flatten” the PDF so the signature becomes part of the page artwork (not a movable annotation).

  • macOS Preview: File → Export as PDF (saves markup as page content).
  • Adobe Acrobat (paid): Tools → Print Production → Flatten. Or Print → Microsoft Print to PDF/Save as PDF (converts annotations to page content).

Note: Flattening removes interactive fields. Do it only after everything is filled and correct.

Privacy and security tips (important)

  • Prefer offline tools for sensitive documents: Use Preview or Acrobat Reader when you create a digital signature for confidential paperwork.
  • Guard your PNG: Treat your signature image like a password. Store it securely; don’t email it casually.
  • Send as PDF, not editable: Export Word/Docs to PDF before sharing.
  • Optional password: Protect the final PDF with a password if allowed when sharing externally.
  • Know the rules: Some institutions require certificate‑based digital signatures. See EU eIDAS overview: eIDAS regulation

Quality tips (so your signature looks professional)

  • Use black ink. Blue can look muddy after scanning; starting this way helps you create a digital signature that stays crisp.
  • Scan at 300 dpi or use a document scanner app (not the camera app alone).
  • Export to PNG (transparent) instead of JPG to avoid white boxes.
  • Resize proportionally; don’t stretch tall/wide.
  • Keep a small “initials” version for multi‑page forms.

When you need a certificate‑based digital signature

For high‑assurance workflows (government filings, some legal/financial forms), you’ll be asked to apply a certificate (digital ID) to the PDF.

  • Adobe Acrobat (paid): Tools → Certificates → Digitally Sign. You’ll need a digital ID from a trusted provider.
  • Check your organization’s policy for approved providers and required signature levels (e.g., EU advanced/qualified signatures).

More background: Adobe: Sign PDFs • Country‑by‑country legality (DocuSign): Electronic signatures legality

Troubleshooting

The signature background is a white box.
Re‑export your image as a transparent PNG. In Photopea, delete the white background (Magic Wand) and export with transparency enabled so you create a digital signature without a visible box.

The PDF won’t let me place a signature.
It may be locked or a scanned image. Try Adobe Reader’s Fill & Sign, or open it in macOS Preview. If it’s a photo of a page, consider running OCR or converting it to Word first: see our PDF → Word guide.

My signature looks blurry.
Start from a higher‑quality scan (300 dpi). Avoid resizing too large. PNG usually stays crisp; JPG can blur fine lines.

The recipient says they can move/delete the signature.
Flatten the PDF (Export as PDF in Preview, or Print to PDF) before sending. Or use a certificate‑based digital signature if they require tamper evidence.

I need multiple signatures or signer fields.
Use Adobe Reader’s Fill & Sign to add additional signatures/initials and fields. For multi‑party workflows with audit trails, consider a dedicated e‑sign platform (often requires an account).

I can’t sign on my phone.
Install Adobe Acrobat Reader mobile or use iOS Markup (Files/Mail). On Android, Xodo is a solid free option.

Helpful resources

Summary: Fast picks by device

  • Mac: Preview → Markup → Sign → Export as PDF to flatten and create a digital signature you can reuse.
  • Windows: Adobe Acrobat Reader → Fill & Sign → Save.
  • Web (non‑sensitive docs): Adobe Online Sign PDF or Sejda → download → delete uploads.
  • iPhone/iPad: Files/Mail → Markup → Signature → Done.
  • Android: Adobe Reader mobile or Xodo → Signature → Save.
  • Word/Google Docs: Insert your transparent PNG → export to PDF.

Next steps: Organize your signed files so you can find them later—try this: Simple Google Drive Folder Structure. And if you need to edit the PDF text first, use: Convert PDF to Word Without Losing Formatting.

More helpful guides:
Clear Cache and Cookies Safely
Use Google Docs Offline
Simple Google Drive Folder Structure

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