How to Sign a PDF Online (Step by Step)
Published June 23, 2026
Quick answer
To sign a PDF online: upload it to an e-signature tool, add a signature field where you need to sign, draw or type your signature, and download the completed file. To get someone else to sign, upload the PDF, add their email as a signer, place the fields they need to fill, and send it — they sign from a link in their browser, no account required.
There are two situations people mean by “signing a PDF online”: signing a document yourself, and sending a document to someone else to sign. Both take a couple of minutes in any modern e-signature tool. Here’s how each one works, and how to make sure the result actually holds up.
Option 1: Sign a PDF yourself
- Choose an e-signature tool and upload your PDF. Most tools accept PDF, and many accept DOCX and images too.
- Place a signature field where you need to sign. Some tools, including Signatura, can auto-detect where fields belong so you don’t have to place them by hand.
- Add your signature — draw it with a mouse or finger, type it in a signature font, or upload an image of your signature.
- Fill any other fields — date, initials, text, checkboxes.
- Finish and download the completed PDF. A good tool seals the file so any later change is detectable.
Option 2: Send a PDF for someone else to sign
- Upload the PDF you want signed.
- Add signers by email. If more than one person needs to sign, choose whether they sign in order (sequential) or at the same time (parallel).
- Place fields for each signer — assign each signature, initial, date, or text field to the person who should fill it.
- Send. Each signer gets an email with a secure link and signs in their browser. They don’t need an account with the tool.
- Track and receive the completed document. When everyone has signed, all parties get the finished PDF, ideally with a certificate of completion and an audit trail.
Make sure the signed PDF is legally binding
Signing a PDF is only useful if it holds up later. Three things make the difference:
- Intent and consent. The signer takes a deliberate action to sign and agrees to do so electronically. This is a requirement under the ESIGN Act and eIDAS.
- An audit trail. The tool records who signed, when, and from where (timestamps and IP), for every action.
- A tamper-evident seal. The completed document is sealed — for example with a SHA-256 hash — so any modification after signing can be detected. Signatura seals every completed document and lets anyone re-verify it; see how we secure documents.
A photographed or scanned signature has none of this, which is why a dedicated e-signature tool is far stronger evidence than emailing a picture of your signature.
Frequently asked questions
Can I sign a PDF online for free?
Many tools offer a free trial or a limited free tier for signing a small number of documents. Signatura includes a 14-day free trial with no credit card. For ongoing or team use, you’ll typically need a paid plan.
Does the other person need an account to sign?
No. With most e-signature tools, signers receive a link by email and sign in their browser without creating an account. Only the person sending documents needs an account.
What file types can I sign?
PDF is universal. Many tools, including Signatura, also accept DOCX and image files (PNG, JPG) and convert them to a signing-ready format, then deliver a sealed PDF at the end.
Is a signature I draw with a mouse legally valid?
Yes. A drawn, typed, or uploaded signature can all be valid electronic signatures, as long as there’s intent to sign and the signature is associated with the document. See Are electronic signatures legally binding?
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Start your 14-day free trialThis article is general information, not legal advice. For how a specific document or jurisdiction applies to you, consult a qualified professional.