Softonic covered the Acrobat Studio launch this month and led with a good line: “the email attachment has gone down in history.” The line implies a shift, but the interesting part is not what Adobe is selling. It is what everyone else is now shipping around the same idea. A PDF that answers questions about itself, cites its own passages, and drafts a summary is no longer an Adobe-only feature. We tested the eight best apps for chatting with PDFs on Windows and macOS desktop to see which ones handle research documents, meeting minutes, and stacks of contracts without hallucinating and without forcing an Adobe subscription.
What to look for in a PDF chat app
An AI-powered PDF chat is only useful if the answers are correct. A good pick does at least three of these:
- Cites page numbers. Every claim should point to the paragraph it came from. Uncited AI on legal or research PDFs is a trap.
- Handles long documents. Cutting off at 50 pages is a dealbreaker for anything that matters.
- Runs locally where possible. Sensitive PDFs should not leave the machine. At least a local-runtime option should exist.
- Multi-PDF workspaces. Ask a question across the whole folder, not one file at a time.
- Exports the conversation. The Q&A becomes a working document. It should not live only inside the app.
Quick comparison
| App | Best for | Free plan | Starting price/mo | Standout feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| ChatPDF | Fastest single-doc chat | Yes | $5 | 2000-page limit on paid tier |
| Adobe Acrobat AI Assistant | Native inside Acrobat | Trial | $4.99 add-on | Passage-level citations in the PDF |
| Humata | Multi-PDF workspaces | Yes | $9.99 | Cross-document Q&A with citations |
| NotebookLM | Research vaults with source grounding | Yes | $19.99 (AI Pro) | Audio overview generation |
| PDF.ai | Simplest UI, source citations | Yes | $12 | Instant download of the answer with sources |
| AskYourPDF | ChatGPT plugin origin | Yes | $9.99 | Works with GPT store as well as standalone |
| Docalysis | Team-focused with sharing | Yes | $10 | Vault-level sharing for teams |
| PDFgear | Free full editor + AI | Yes | Free | Chat and edit in one free app |
The 8 best apps for chatting with PDFs on desktop
1. ChatPDF — best fastest single-doc chat
ChatPDF was one of the first products in this category and remains one of the fastest for single-document work. Upload a PDF, ask questions, and the answers arrive with page references you can click into. The desktop web client works on Windows and macOS through any browser and does not require an install. Response quality is competitive with the more expensive tools, and the paid tier lifts the document size to 2,000 pages.
Where it falls short: No offline mode. Data policies are cloud-only.
Pricing:
- Free: capped questions per day
- Paid: $5/month Plus
Platforms: Web, Windows, macOS (via browser or Electron client).
Where to get it: chatpdf.com.
Bottom line: The pick for “I have one PDF, I want to talk to it, right now.”
2. Adobe Acrobat AI Assistant — best native inside Acrobat
Adobe Acrobat AI Assistant is the answer if the PDF workflow already runs through Acrobat. Questions get answered inside the same window that shows the PDF, with citations that highlight the source passages. The AI works on documents saved locally or on Adobe’s cloud. For anyone paying for Acrobat already, the AI add-on is the shortest route to chat-with-PDF.
Where it falls short: Adds another subscription line to an already-paid Acrobat. AI credit metering can surprise heavy users.
Pricing:
- Free: trial with limited use
- Paid: $4.99/month add-on to Acrobat Pro DC or Studio
Platforms: Windows, macOS, mobile, web.
Where to get it: adobe.com.
Bottom line: Pick this if Acrobat is already the daily driver.
3. Humata — best multi-PDF workspaces
Humata treats PDFs as a workspace, not one file at a time. Drop a folder of documents into a Humata workspace and the AI reads across all of them for cross-document questions like “which contract has the earliest termination clause?” Citations point back to the specific PDF and page. The desktop web client handles workspaces with hundreds of documents.
Where it falls short: Team pricing gets steep. Some UI clunkiness on large workspaces.
Pricing:
- Free: 60 pages
- Paid: $9.99/month Student, $19.99/month Expert, higher for teams
Platforms: Web, works on Windows and macOS through the browser.
Where to get it: humata.ai.
Bottom line: Pick Humata when the question spans a folder, not a file.
4. NotebookLM — best research vaults
NotebookLM by Google turns a set of PDFs into a source-grounded notebook. It reads the documents, answers questions with citations, and generates the now-viral audio overview that summarises the material as a podcast episode. The desktop experience is web-only, but on Windows or macOS it works cleanly. Notebooks include not just PDFs, but web pages, Google Docs, and pasted text.
Where it falls short: Not a PDF editor. Audio overviews add up in generation credits on the paid tier.
Pricing:
- Free: yes, with generation limits
- Paid: bundled into Google AI Pro at $19.99/month
Platforms: Web on Windows, macOS, Linux.
Where to get it: notebooklm.google.com.
Bottom line: The pick when the goal is a whole research vault, not one document.
5. PDF.ai — best simplest UI
PDF.ai takes the ChatPDF approach and simplifies the interface. Upload a PDF, ask questions, get answers with source citations. The output can be exported directly as a document rather than copy-pasted. On a Windows or macOS browser, PDF.ai loads quickly and the response times are competitive.
Where it falls short: Free tier is thin. No offline mode.
Pricing:
- Free: limited pages
- Paid: $12/month Plus
Platforms: Web on Windows, macOS, Linux.
Where to get it: pdf.ai.
Bottom line: The pick when a colleague needs the simplest possible interface.
6. AskYourPDF — best ChatGPT plugin origin
AskYourPDF was one of the earliest ChatGPT plugins and now runs as both a standalone product and a plugin in the ChatGPT ecosystem. That means the same document can be queried through the ChatGPT interface or the AskYourPDF web app. On desktop, the standalone works on Windows and macOS through the browser.
Where it falls short: The dual mode confuses new users. Some feature gaps between the two front ends.
Pricing:
- Free: capped
- Paid: $9.99/month Plus, $49.99/year saves cost
Platforms: Web on Windows, macOS, Linux; also a ChatGPT plugin.
Where to get it: askyourpdf.com.
Bottom line: Pick AskYourPDF if the workflow already lives in ChatGPT.
7. Docalysis — best team-focused
Docalysis targets small teams that need to share PDF workspaces. Vault-level sharing means the same document workspace opens for every team member with the same context and history. The chat log is stored per-vault so a new team member sees prior questions and answers. Enterprise features cover SSO and audit logs.
Where it falls short: Individual pricing is not the strongest value. The team story is where it shines.
Pricing:
- Free: 50 pages
- Paid: $10/month Individual, higher for team tiers
Platforms: Web on Windows, macOS.
Where to get it: docalysis.com.
Bottom line: Pick Docalysis when the question about the PDF needs to be shared with two other people.
8. PDFgear — best free full editor plus AI
PDFgear ships a full PDF editor with AI chat built in, at no cost. Edit, sign, redact, and ask questions of the same document without changing apps. The AI chat is competitive with the paid tools on typical documents, and there is no subscription. The desktop clients on Windows and macOS install natively.
Where it falls short: AI response quality caps out on very technical documents. Cloud-side AI, so sensitive PDFs still leave the machine.
Pricing: Free.
Platforms: Windows, macOS, iOS, Android.
Where to get it: pdfgear.com.
Bottom line: Start with PDFgear because it might solve everything for free.
How to pick
Start with PDFgear if the budget is zero and the workflow is single documents. Move to ChatPDF for the fastest single-document experience at a low price. Choose Adobe Acrobat AI Assistant only if Acrobat is already in the daily stack. Pick Humata or NotebookLM when the question crosses multiple PDFs; NotebookLM if the goal is a research vault with audio overviews, Humata for cross-document Q&A. Reach for PDF.ai for the simplest UI, AskYourPDF if ChatGPT is the interface, and Docalysis when a team shares the vault. Two of these together usually covers the whole day.