I was honestly surprised at how much Omnivore can do. I needed a tool that could handle everything from signing a lease to merging a dozen scanned pages into a single PDF, and it handles it all. The interface is clean and gets out of the way, but all the tools you'd expect are thereβhighlighting, annotations, secure redaction, and even text and image editing. The batch processing has saved me hours of manual work. It's not free, but the efficiency it adds to my workflow is worth every penny.
I appreciate the clean interface and how easily I can annotate and sign PDFs for work. However, the conversion tool occasionally scrambles formatting on complex documents, and I've had the program freeze twice during larger edits. It's decent for quick tasks but I'm not confident using it for mission-critical files.
Omnivore is a solid PDF editor for basic tasks with a great interface, but the performance with heavy files can lag a bit, and the advanced features don't feel quite as polished as the core tools.
Omnivore's interface is clean and straightforward for simple edits and annotations, which is great for quick tasks like signing a document. However, I've run into performance issues when converting complex PDFs with embedded graphics, and some of the collaboration tools feel a bit clunky compared to other options.
Omnivore's interface is genuinely intuitive and makes simple edits, annotations, and e-signing a breeze. However, I've run into performance issues and crashes when working with larger, more complex PDF files, which is frustrating. For the price, it's a decent tool for light use, but power users might need something more robust.
The features are all there for a solid PDF tool - editing, annotations, and signing all work as advertised. I can sign documents quickly, highlight text, and the conversion tools are decent. But the interface feels clunky and I've had a few crashes that forced me to restart the program mid-edit. For the price, it feels like it's half a great app and half a beta test.
Omnivore's interface is genuinely easy to pick up, and I love how quickly I can annotate PDFs and add signatures. However, for any serious editing or precise formatting, the tools feel a bit basic and limited. It's a decent value for occasional users, but I wouldn't rely on it for complex, professional-grade work.
The free version is extremely limited, and constant prompts to upgrade make the 'intuitive interface' feel more like a sales trap. Basic editing tools like text correction and image insertion frequently crash or produce corrupted files, which is unacceptable for a paid PDF editor. Customer support was unresponsive when I reported these stability problems, making me regret the purchase entirely.
Omnivore has become my go-to for all things PDF. I use it daily to edit, annotate, and sign contracts and reports. The interface is clean and the tools are powerful yet intuitive, making the entire process incredibly smooth. It handles large files and complex edits without a hiccup, and the collaboration features are a huge plus for my team. The only very minor gripe would be that some of the more advanced OCR features could be slightly faster, but that's a nitpick for what is otherwise an essential tool in my productivity stack.
Omnivore has completely changed how I handle PDFs. I use it daily to edit, annotate, and share documents, and the interface is so intuitive that I never need to look up how to do somethingβit's all right where you'd expect it. The ability to sign documents electronically and the seamless conversion features have saved me hours of work. It's a robust tool that feels light and easy, not bloated and complicated like some professional editors.
Based on 12 reviews
Omnivore is a PDF editing software that allows users to easily edit, convert, annotate, sign, and collaborate on PDF documents. β¦
Back to Product