A current shortlist of seven iPhone scanner apps worth considering, ranked by use case, privacy model, PDF tooling, and ecosystem fit.
We make ScanLens. We are biased and you should keep that in mind. We have written this list the way we would want a competitor to write it about us — fairly, factually, with each app's actual strengths acknowledged. ScanLens is not the right answer for everyone. The right scanner is the one that fits your workflow, ecosystem, and trust level.
This page is updated as apps and pricing change. If you want the broader category matrix first, start with our scanner app comparison. If you already know the competitor you are evaluating, use the dedicated CamScanner, Adobe Scan, or Microsoft Lens comparisons.
We considered six factors:
Pricing and feature claims are current as of April 2026. Verify on each app's App Store listing before deciding.
Use this as the fast screen before reading the detailed reviews. It compresses the biggest buying differences into one matrix.
| App | Free download | Paid plan | Lifetime? | Offline OCR | On-device | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ScanLens | Yes | $4.99/mo or $29.99/yr | Yes ($79.99) | Yes | Yes | Privacy, offline, PDF toolkit |
| Adobe Scan | Yes | ~$9.99/mo Acrobat | No | No | No | Adobe Acrobat users |
| Microsoft Lens | Free fully | — | — | No | No | Microsoft 365 users |
| CamScanner | Yes (with ads) | ~$4.99/mo | No | No | No | Cross-platform teams |
| Genius Scan | Yes | One-time and subscription | Yes | Yes | Yes | Minimalist scanning |
| SwiftScan | Yes | Subscription and lifetime | Yes | Limited | Mostly | Power users wanting lifetime |
| Apple Notes | Free fully (built-in) | — | — | Yes (Live Text) | Yes | Occasional scanning |
Best for: Privacy-conscious users, offline scanning, full PDF toolkit, anyone who prefers a lifetime purchase to a subscription.
ScanLens runs entirely on-device using Apple's Vision framework and Neural Engine. Documents never leave your iPhone unless you explicitly choose to share them or sync to one of your own cloud accounts (iCloud, Google Drive, Dropbox, OneDrive). The app does not require an account, has no ads in any tier, and does not embed analytics or ad SDKs that could collect data behind the scenes.
Beyond capture, ScanLens includes a full PDF toolkit: merge, split, password protect (AES-256), annotate, watermark, searchable PDF export, and sign with reusable e-signatures. There are dedicated capture modes for ID cards, passports, and business cards. OCR runs in 50+ languages, fully offline.
Free to download. Plans start at $4.99/mo, $29.99/yr, or $79.99 lifetime for OCR, interactive text extraction, the PDF toolkit, cloud sync, e-signatures, app lock, and watermark removal.
Strengths: On-device processing, fully offline OCR, no ads, no app account required for basic use, lifetime purchase, full PDF toolkit, app lock with Face ID/Touch ID/passcode.
Weaknesses: iOS only — no Android, no web. Newer than the established players, so smaller user base.
Read more about ScanLens for iPhone →
Best for: Anyone already paying for Adobe Acrobat, Sign, or Creative Cloud. Teams that have standardized on Adobe Document Cloud.
Adobe Scan is a strong, polished capture tool that integrates tightly with Adobe's ecosystem. The capture quality is excellent, and OCR accuracy on printed text is among the best in the category — Adobe has decades of experience here. If your workflow already runs through Acrobat, the integration is hard to beat: scan on iPhone, edit on desktop Acrobat, sign with Adobe Sign, archive in Document Cloud.
The downside is that Adobe Scan is cloud-first by design. OCR, conversions to Word/Excel, and many features require an internet connection and an Adobe account. Most "premium" features in Adobe Scan unlock through an Adobe Acrobat Premium subscription, which is approximately $9.99/month or $99.99/year. There is no lifetime option.
Strengths: Adobe ecosystem integration, excellent OCR for printed text, free for basic use, polished interface.
Weaknesses: Subscription-only, cloud-dependent, requires Adobe ID, no offline OCR, expensive over time.
Read the full ScanLens vs Adobe Scan comparison →
Best for: Anyone who lives in Microsoft 365. Word, OneNote, PowerPoint, OneDrive, SharePoint users. People who want a completely free scanner with no upgrade prompts.
Formerly known as Office Lens, Microsoft Lens is a focused capture tool built to feed Microsoft 365. It is completely free with no paid tier and no ads. Capture quality is solid, and the integration with OneNote, Word, OneDrive, and SharePoint is uniquely tight — one tap and your scan is in the right Microsoft app. Whiteboard mode is a standout feature for capturing meeting whiteboards.
Lens is not a PDF toolkit. It is a capture tool. There is no merge, split, compress, password protect, annotate, watermark, or sign functionality. If those matter to you, Lens alone is not enough — you would pair it with another tool.
Strengths: Completely free, excellent Microsoft 365 integration, Whiteboard mode, no ads, backed by Microsoft.
Weaknesses: No PDF tools, cloud-based OCR, requires Microsoft account for most useful features, no native app lock.
Read the full ScanLens vs Microsoft Lens comparison →
Best for: Teams split across iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, and web. Users with existing CamScanner workflows.
CamScanner has been around since 2011 and has hundreds of millions of downloads across every major platform. The cross-platform reach is its biggest strength — if half your team uses Android and half iPhone, CamScanner gives you one app and one cloud. The capture quality is good, the feature set is broad, and the team workflows are mature.
The trade-offs are real. Documents are processed and stored on CamScanner's cloud, the free tier has ads and watermarked exports, and the company's ownership structure has periodically attracted privacy criticism. The 2019 Google Play malware incident — where a third-party advertising SDK in the free Android version was found to be malicious — was resolved at the time, but it underscored a broader concern about embedded SDKs in scanner apps.
Strengths: Cross-platform, established, large user community, mature team features.
Weaknesses: Cloud-dependent, ads in free tier, privacy concerns, no lifetime option, account required for sync.
Read the full ScanLens vs CamScanner comparison →
Best for: Users who want a focused, no-nonsense scanner with on-device processing and a clean interface.
Genius Scan, made by The Grizzly Labs, has a long-standing reputation for doing one thing well: capturing clean document scans with good edge detection and a minimal interface. Processing is on-device, OCR works offline on their paid tier, and there is a one-time purchase option in addition to subscriptions. It is privacy-respecting and fast.
It does fewer things than ScanLens — fewer specialized scan modes, a smaller PDF toolkit — but for users who just want clean scans without the surrounding app complexity, it is excellent.
Strengths: Clean interface, on-device processing, one-time purchase option, focused scope, well-maintained.
Weaknesses: Smaller feature set than full PDF toolkits, fewer specialized capture modes.
Best for: Long-time PDF users who want a broad feature set with a lifetime upgrade option.
SwiftScan (formerly Scanbot) is a feature-rich scanner with strong OCR, multi-page batch scanning, and a large set of export and sync options. It supports a lifetime upgrade in addition to monthly subscriptions, which is rare in the category. The interface is polished and the feature set is broad — workflows, themes, automation triggers — making it appealing to power users.
The downside is that some features rely on cloud processing, the pricing can be confusing across tiers, and the onboarding pushes upgrade prompts more than some users prefer.
Strengths: Lifetime upgrade option, broad feature set, polished interface, strong OCR.
Weaknesses: Some cloud dependencies, pricing complexity, frequent upgrade prompts.
Best for: People who scan rarely, want zero installation, and only need basic capture.
Apple Notes has a built-in document scanner accessible from the camera button inside any note. It captures, applies perspective correction, and saves as a multi-page PDF or image. Live Text (Apple's system-level OCR) makes the captured text selectable. It is completely free, on-device, and requires nothing beyond what is already on your iPhone.
It is also limited. There are no PDF tools, no specialized capture modes, no e-signatures, no batch scan optimization, no document organization beyond what Notes itself offers, and the export options are minimal. For occasional scanning — a receipt here, a form there — it is perfectly adequate. For regular document workflows, dedicated apps are dramatically better.
Strengths: Built into iOS, completely free, on-device, zero install.
Weaknesses: No PDF tools, no specialized modes, no e-signatures, basic export.
Winner: Microsoft Lens (if you use Microsoft 365) or Apple Notes (if you don't). Both are completely free with no paid tier or ads. Lens has more features for Microsoft users; Notes is built-in and zero-install. ScanLens is also free to download, and opens up more tooling when you need it.
Winner: ScanLens. Apple Notes is also fully on-device but lacks PDF tools, OCR depth, and specialized scan modes. ScanLens is the strongest combination of on-device processing and full feature set.
Winner: tie between ScanLens and Adobe Scan. Adobe has the edge for very dense or unusual document layouts thanks to cloud-side processing. ScanLens has the edge for offline OCR, language coverage breadth, and not uploading your documents anywhere. For everyday documents, both are excellent.
Winner: ScanLens or Adobe Scan, depending on existing tools. If your business already runs on Adobe, Adobe Scan plugs directly into Adobe Sign for legal workflows. If you want a self-contained solution with built-in e-signatures, password protection, and watermarking — ScanLens covers everything in one app.
Winner: CamScanner. If your team is split across iOS, Android, Windows, Mac, and web, CamScanner is the only mainstream scanner that runs on all of them with a unified cloud. Microsoft Lens covers iOS and Android only.
Winner: ScanLens. OCR makes lecture notes searchable, batch mode handles reading packets and chapter scans, and the PDF toolkit covers assignments and study guides. The lifetime option means you pay once during your studies and never again.
Winner: Adobe Scan. If you already pay for Acrobat, this is obvious. The integration is too tight to ignore.
Winner: Microsoft Lens. Same reasoning. Direct save to OneNote and Word is uniquely valuable inside the Microsoft world.
Winner: ScanLens or Genius Scan. Both offer a lifetime purchase option, which is rare in the category. ScanLens has the broader feature set; Genius Scan is more minimal.
There is no single best scanner app for iPhone in 2026. There is a best for each kind of user:
If you do not have a fixed ecosystem requirement, ScanLens is the strongest fit for people who value on-device processing, no ads, no app account required, and a broader PDF toolkit than the category average. The honest limitation is that it is iOS only and newer than the established incumbents. If cross-platform access or a large existing ecosystem matters more, the alternatives above may be the better fit.
It depends on what you need. For privacy and offline use, ScanLens. For Microsoft 365 users, Microsoft Lens. For Adobe Acrobat users, Adobe Scan. For cross-platform teams, CamScanner. For minimalists who only scan occasionally, Apple Notes (built-in, free). There is no single 'best' — there is a best for each workflow.
Microsoft Lens and Apple Notes are completely free with no paid tier or in-app purchases. Both are funded as part of larger ecosystems (Microsoft 365 and iOS itself) rather than as standalone products. They are more limited than paid scanners but cost nothing.
ScanLens and Apple Notes both perform processing on-device with no cloud upload. ScanLens has more features. Apple Notes is simpler but built into iOS. Both are good choices for sensitive documents like medical records, tax forms, or legal contracts.
Yes — ScanLens offers a $79.99 lifetime option, Genius Scan has a one-time purchase option, and SwiftScan offers a lifetime upgrade. Most other major scanner apps (CamScanner, Adobe Scan) are subscription-only. If you prefer paying once instead of forever, lifetime options are worth considering.
For fully offline scanning, ScanLens, Genius Scan, and Apple Notes are strong options. In ScanLens, scanning and OCR both run on-device — no connection required. CamScanner, Adobe Scan, and Microsoft Lens rely more heavily on online OCR and cloud-connected workflows.
The most important things to evaluate are: (1) where processing happens — on-device or in the cloud; (2) whether OCR works offline; (3) the pricing model — subscription vs one-time; (4) supported export formats and cloud destinations; (5) PDF tools beyond just capturing (merge, split, compress, sign); and (6) whether an account is required. Match these to how you actually scan documents day-to-day.
Privacy-first scanning with full PDF tools, on-device OCR, and a lifetime purchase option. Free to start.