Christina Wood has been covering technology for 15+ years. She has contributed to Family Circle, PC World, PC Magazine, CIO, Yahoo and many other publications.
Updated on August 31, 2019 In This Article In This ArticleIf you have a scanned document and want to make changes to it, Microsoft Word offers an easy workaround that can handle this task for anyone who doesn't want to invest in Adobe Acrobat. Keep reading to learn more about how to edit a scanned document in Word.
The instructions in this article apply to Microsoft Word 2019, 2016, and Word in Microsoft 365.
You can edit scanned documents in Word as long as they're in PDF format. However, if the document was scanned as an image, you'll need to convert the image to a PDF first. Then you can use Word to edit the converted PDF.
Open Word and then locate and open the PDF. You might have to select the drop-down menu to the right of the File name field, then select PDF Files so Word looks for PDFs instead of Word files.
Word warns you it's about to convert your PDF document to an editable Word file. That's exactly what you want it to do, so select OK.
Word converts the document, making it an editable file. You can use the highlighter, add comments, change the text, add photos or tables, or change the margins. You can do anything to this file that you can do to any Word file.
Despite the warnings from Word that the file might not look like the original, it usually does a good job of converting the text and format. It understands headlines and creates tab indents.
It's also surprisingly good at converting complicated documents. It converts forms into Word Tables you can easily edit, inserts images, and makes a good guess at colors and other difficult items. As a general rule, though, the more complicated the document is, the more editing you have to do to it to get it to look the way you want.
If all you wanted was to be able to edit a scanned document, you're done, but Word can also save your document as a PDF. So, if you are trying to edit a PDF—and want to end up with a PDF—but you don't want to pay for Adobe's full-featured version of Acrobat, Word serves nicely as a stand-in, especially for simple documents.
When you're ready to create a new PDF from this edited file, select File >Save a Copy and decide where to store the file. Then select PDF from the File Type drop-down menu and choose Save.
It may take a few minutes for Word to create a PDF version of your edited file.If you have an old version of Word, this process isn't nearly as easy. You have to use OCR software to do the conversion from PDF to Text for you. However, the results won't be as beautiful, the process won't be as seamless, and your results—especially if your printout is messy or your font is unusual—won't be as crisp and easy to work with.
If you're using an older version of Microsoft Word, consider upgrading to a trial version of the newer software to see if it is better suited to your current needs.