Adobe Sign alternative

The Adobe Acrobat Sign alternative that's actually simple.

Adobe Acrobat Sign is powerful and dated — a multi-step flow, confusing tiers, and upsells mid-task. sign.pink is $3/month flat and signs in a couple of taps, with nothing to figure out.

At a glance

sign.pinkAdobe Acrobat Sign
Price (entry tier)$3/mo$14.99/mo
Free planForever-free tierTrial only
Plan choices to navigateOne planMany overlapping tiers
Mid-task upsells
Modern, fast signing flow
Overage charges
No account needed for signers
Core: templates, signing order, audit trail, API

Adobe Acrobat Sign figures reflect its individual/standard tiers as of June 2026 and may require annual billing. Verify current pricing on adobe.com before purchase.

Why people switch from Adobe Acrobat Sign

Adobe Acrobat Sign can do nearly anything — and that's its problem. It grew out of decades of Acrobat, and it shows. The signing flow is multi-step, the interface is dense, and the whole thing is bundled inside Adobe's larger document empire. Sending a single contract for signature involves more clicks, more screens, and more decisions than it should.

Then there's the tier maze. Adobe sells e-signatures across standalone plans, Acrobat Pro bundles, and various Creative Cloud and enterprise packages — most starting around $14.99/month. Just choosing the right one is a project. And once you're in, the upsell promptsarrive mid-task, nudging you toward a higher tier while you're only trying to finish.

What sign.pink does instead

One plan, $3/month, nothing to choose. Upload a document, drop your fields, send — a couple of taps and you're done, on your phone if you like. No learning curve, no nudges to upgrade, because there's only the one plan to be on. Unlimited documents, no overages. The legal weight is identical: ESIGN and UETA binding in all 50 states, eIDAS-aligned, tamper-evident audit trail.

Who should switch — and who shouldn't

If you already pay for Adobe mostly to sign things, or you find Acrobat Sign heavier than your needs, the switch is easy and cheaper. If you live in Acrobat all day for heavy PDF editing and your signing is tightly woven into that — and you genuinely use those advanced PDF tools — staying bundled may make sense. That's the honest call. For the simple stuff, simple wins.

Comparing the whole field? See the full alternatives breakdown.

sign.pink vs Adobe Acrobat Sign — FAQ

Adobe Acrobat Sign carries a lot of legacy. The signing flow is multi-step, the interface is dense, and it's wrapped in Acrobat's broader product, so simple tasks take more clicks than they should. There's a real learning curve for something that should be one or two taps.

No tier maze. No upsells. Just sign.

$3/month flat, unlimited — or free, forever, for the occasional sign.