Quick Answer
Last month I inherited a folder of 60 scanned invoices from a supplier and needed to pull every reference number that contained "2026-Q2." I opened the first PDF, hit Ctrl + F, typed the number — and got nothing. The pages were just pictures. That is the whole problem with a scanned PDF: the text you can see is not text your computer can read. Making the PDF searchable means running OCR (Optical Character Recognition), which reads the picture and lays an invisible, selectable text layer underneath it. Below are the methods that fit different situations, with the exact UPDF steps for each — no Adobe subscription required.
One thing worth knowing before you start: a "searchable" PDF and an "editable" PDF are not the same output. If your real goal is to rewrite the text, not just find it, skip to the make a PDF editable guide instead — it covers the editable layout, which this article deliberately does not.
Part 1: Which Searchable-PDF Method Fits Your File?
| What you're dealing with | Method | Real example | Best for |
|---|---|---|---|
| One scanned PDF, want it searchable but visually unchanged | Searchable PDF Only | Counsel finding a clause in a scanned contract without altering it | Contracts, invoices, archived records you must keep looking original |
| A whole folder of scans | Batch OCR on Desktop | Accountant searching a year of scanned invoices for a reference number | Bulk invoice/receipt sets, scanned record archives |
| Need searchable and a Word/Excel copy in one pass | Convert + OCR together | HR turning a scanned form into an editable Word file | Reports you'll reuse in Office |
| Just need the text out of one page | Extract text with UPDF AI | Student grabbing a paragraph or a handwritten note | Quoting a paragraph, copying a table cell, handwriting |
| Phone-only, scanning on the spot | UPDF Mobile OCR | Field staff making a receipt searchable right after capture | Receipts, book pages, whiteboards captured by phone |
| Don't want to install anything | UPDF AI Online | One-off job on a shared or work-locked computer | Restricted machines where you can't install software |
Each row below is a self-contained method. Match your situation, jump to it, skip the rest.
Part 2: Make One PDF Searchable on Desktop (Searchable PDF Only)
This is the core method — it keeps the page looking exactly like the scan and quietly adds the text layer beneath the image.
Best for:
- contracts, invoices, and archived records where the page must stay visually identical to the original.
Cons:
- anyone who'll need to edit the text — "Searchable PDF Only" locks the words in an invisible layer under the image, so you can find and copy them but clicking to retype does nothing. If you discover you actually need to change the text, re-run OCR with Editable PDF instead (see make a PDF editable).
Step 1. Download and install UPDF on your Windows or Mac computer, then launch it.
Step 2. Open your scanned file in UPDF (drag the PDF onto the window, or click Open File).
Step 3. Click Tools at the top, then choose OCR. The first time, UPDF installs the OCR component — let it finish, then reopen Tools > OCR.
Step 4. Under Document Type, select Searchable PDF Only. This preserves the page image and places the recognized text in an invisible layer underneath, so the file looks the same but becomes fully searchable.
Step 5. Set the Document Language to match the scan, and choose the Page Range. Then click Convert and pick a save location.
Press Ctrl + F (Windows) or Cmd + F (Mac) and your scan is now searchable.
If you'd like a more detailed walkthrough on how to make a PDF searchable using UPDF, check out the following video for a guide with visuals.
Part 3: Make a Whole Folder Searchable (Batch OCR)
If you have a stack of scans, run them together instead of one at a time.
Best for:
- bulk invoice, receipt, or record sets where every file needs the same treatment.
Cons:
- A folder where the scans are in different languages — batch OCR applies the same language setting to every file, so a Thai invoice processed under "English" may come back as garbled text. Split mixed-language scans into separate batches, each with the same language.
Step 1. Click Tools, then in the Batch PDFs panel choose OCR.
Step 2. Add every file you want to make searchable (drag them in or browse).
Step 3. Select Searchable PDF Only as the document type and set the correct language.
Step 4. Click Apply to process the whole batch in one go.
Part 4: Get a Searchable PDF and a Word Copy in One Pass
Sometimes "searchable" isn't enough — you also need an editable Office file. UPDF can OCR and convert in a single step, so you skip the separate OCR stage.
Best for:
- reports or tables you'll edit in Word or Excel after recognition.
Cons:
- if the table is the point, convert to Excel rather than Word for cleaner cell mapping.
For a single scanned document
Step 1. Open the scanned document in UPDF, then go to Tools > PDF Converter panel and pick a format such as Word.
Step 2. In the pop-up, toggle OCR Text Recognition to on and select the document's language.
Step 3. Click Apply and choose where to save.
Drag-and-drop shortcut:
For a folder of scanned documents
Step 1. Launch UPDF, click Tools, then choose Convert under the Batch PDFs panel.
Step 2. Drag and drop your scanned files to upload. In the Convert To dropdown, pick the output format (e.g. Word), toggle OCR Text Recognition to on, and select the correct document language. Click the purple Apply button at the bottom-right to start the batch.
The output keeps the original layout closely while giving you fully editable, searchable text.
Part 5: Pull Text Out of a Single Page with UPDF AI
When you only need the words from one page — including handwriting that standard OCR struggles with — UPDF AI is faster than running a full OCR pass.
Best for:
- copying one paragraph, a table cell, or handwritten notes.
Cons:
- a long document — this method extracts one screenshot at a time and draws on the free plan's 100 AI prompts, so running it page by page across a 40-page file is slow and burns through your quota fast. For a whole document, the page-OCR methods in Parts 2–3 are the right tool.
Step 1. Open the scanned PDF in UPDF and click UPDF AI in the bottom-right corner.
Step 2. Go to Chat, click the Screenshot icon, and drag to select the area you need.
Step 3. Type a prompt like "Extract the text from this image" and press Enter.
Step 4. Copy the returned text wherever you need it.
The free plan includes 100 AI prompts, enough to test this on real pages before deciding.
Part 6: Make a PDF Searchable on Your Phone (iOS & Android)
The OCR engine is built into the UPDF mobile app, so you can turn a phone-captured scan into searchable text without a computer. The steps are the same on iOS and Android.
Step 1. Install UPDF from the App Store or Google Play.
Step 2. Open your scanned document and tap OCR in the bottom menu.
Step 3. Choose Searchable PDF Only and set the correct document language, then tap Continue.
Step 4. Tap Done to save the searchable file.
Searchable vs Editable vs Image-Only: What's the Difference?
A searchable PDF works like a sheet of clear glass laid over the scan: the picture you see is untouched, but a layer of selectable text sits invisibly beneath it, so Ctrl + F can read what your eyes can. That's the mental model that explains why UPDF's three OCR modes behave so differently — and picking the wrong one wastes a free conversion:
- Searchable PDF Only (Dual-layer OCR) — text goes under the page image. The scan looks identical to the original; you can find and copy, but not rewrite.
- Editable PDF (Dual-layer OCR) — text goes over the page image, so you can change the words; the file may look slightly different and is larger because it keeps both layers.
- Text and Pictures Only — text and images sit on the same single layer, dropping the original page image. The smallest output, best when you don't need the scan's exact look preserved.
Part 7: Make a PDF Searchable Online (No Install)
On a locked-down work machine where you can't install software, UPDF AI Online recognizes and extracts text from scanned PDFs and images in the browser.
Best for:
- one-off jobs on a shared or restricted computer.
Cons:
- It returns extracted text, not a saved searchable PDF that looks like the original. For private documents or a proper searchable file, use the local desktop/mobile methods.
Step 1. Open UPDF AI Online in your browser.
Step 2. Upload the scanned PDF or image.
Step 3. Enter a prompt to recognize and extract the text inside.
The free plan covers 100 prompts, and handwriting extraction is supported.
Part 8: How UPDF Compares for Making PDFs Searchable
| UPDF | Adobe Acrobat Pro | Free online OCR sites | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Searchable-only layer (look unchanged) | ✓ | ✓ | Often editable-only output |
| Languages recognized | 38+ | 42 | Usually limited |
| Batch OCR a folder | ✓ | ✓ | Rarely, or capped |
| Works offline | ✓ | ✓ | ✗ — files uploaded to a server |
| Privacy of sensitive scans | Local processing on desktop | Local processing on desktop | Files leave your device |
| Price | $49.99/yr or $79.99 one-time | ~$239.88/yr | Free, with limits |
UPDF's own limits to know: the free version includes 5 OCR uses, and OCR'd files can still be exported — they just carry a trial watermark until you upgrade to Pro, which removes the watermark and lifts the OCR cap. So the free plan is enough to OCR a few documents and confirm the result before deciding. Adobe matches the feature set but at roughly five times the annual price; free web tools win on cost but upload your documents to their servers, which is a real problem for contracts or anything with personal data.
Download UPDF for free to try making a scan searchable on your own file — installation is free, and Pro features unlock when you need watermark-free export.
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Part 9: Edge Cases: When OCR Doesn't Behave
"OCR ran but Ctrl + F still finds nothing." The scan resolution is likely too low for recognition. Re-run OCR and set Image Resolution to 300 dpi in Layout Settings instead of a lower value or Automatic.
"Some words come out as gibberish." The wrong Document Language was selected, or the page mixes languages. Set the language that matches the bulk of the text; UPDF can recognize multilingual pages, so a mixed contract is fine if you pick the dominant language.
"OCR is greyed out or won't run on this PDF." The PDF likely has a permission password (owner password) that blocks editing and copying — this stops OCR from running at all, since OCR needs to write a text layer into the file. Remove the restriction first: click the arrow next to Save, choose Remove Password > Remove, then run OCR. If you don't know the permission password, UPDF's sister tool Ajoysoft (bundled with UPDF Pro plans) can strip permission restrictions without it. Once unlocked, OCR runs normally.
Part 10: FAQs
1. Can I make a password-protected PDF searchable?
Open it first. A PDF with an open password must be unlocked with the password before OCR can read the pages — there's no way around the open password itself. (A different issue, a permission password blocking OCR, is covered in Edge Cases above.)
2. How many pages can UPDF OCR at once?
UPDF's OCR processes up to 300 pages per file. For a document longer than that, split it into sections, OCR each, then merge them back. To OCR several files in one run, use Batch OCR, which handles a whole folder.
3. Will OCR work on handwritten notes?
Standard OCR targets printed text. For handwriting, the UPDF AI screenshot-and-extract method in Part 5 handles it better than the page-OCR engine.
Conclusion
A scanned PDF that won't search is just a picture of text — OCR is what turns it back into words your computer can read. Match the method to the file: Searchable PDF Only when the page must stay identical, Batch OCR for a folder, Convert + OCR when you also need an Office copy, UPDF AI for a quick text grab, and mobile or online when you're away from your desktop. The free version gives you 5 OCR uses to try these on real files; Pro removes the trial watermark and the OCR cap when you're ready.
Download UPDF for free and make your first scan searchable.
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