Add Arrows & Text to PDF
Controls
Upload a PDF, add arrows or text labels to any page, change annotation size and color, move through pages, undo edits, and download the annotated PDF. No registration is required.
How to Add Arrows to a PDF
- Click "Select PDF File" and choose your document
- Use "Add Arrow" to place pointers on the current page
- Use "Add Text" to add labels next to arrows
- Navigate between pages to annotate multiple pages
- Click "Download Annotated PDF" to save your final file
Key Features
Works Across Pages
Move through your PDF page by page and place notes where they are needed without leaving the editor.
Arrows and Text
Add clear arrows for callouts and short text labels for reviews, feedback, and markups.
Private Editing
Your PDF stays in your browser while you edit, so nothing is sent away during the process.
Frequently Asked Questions
Adding arrows and text to a PDF lets you place visual callouts directly on document pages so important parts are easier to review or explain. It is commonly used for feedback, proofing, design reviews, document comments, instructions, training material, and any workflow where you need to point at specific areas in a PDF.
Yes. Use the Previous and Next buttons to move through the PDF page by page and add arrows or text wherever needed. Your annotations stay attached to the pages where you placed them, and the downloaded PDF includes all of those marked-up pages together.
No. Everything runs locally in your browser, so your PDF stays on your device during editing and export. The tool does not send the document to a remote server while you annotate it.
Yes. Use the color picker or the quick color buttons to choose a color, then adjust the size slider to control arrow thickness or text size before placing new annotations. This makes it easy to create clear callouts that stand out on the page.
Yes. Undo reverts your most recent annotation change on the current page, which is useful for fixing placement or styling mistakes without starting over. It only rolls back the latest step, so repeated clicks undo changes one step at a time.
