Comparison · Adobe Acrobat Online
ScanToExcel vs Adobe Acrobat Online
The original PDF inventor's universal converter against a purpose-built financial extractor. Honest breakdown of where Adobe's generic heuristic engine misaligns rows on bank statements, receipts and paystubs — and where the broader Acrobat suite still legitimately wins.
Verified: May 18, 2026
Side-by-side comparison
| ScanToExcel | Adobe Acrobat Online | |
|---|---|---|
| Pricing & commitment | ||
| Cheapest paid plan | $4.99/mo | $14.99/mo (Standard) |
| Per-user or flat? | Flat rate | Per-user |
| Monthly document cap | Unlimited daily conversions | Free tier ~1–2 files/mo; paid tiers unmetered |
| Annual discount | No | Yes (~40% off, but locks 12-mo with 50% ETF) |
| Contract length | Month-to-month, cancel anytime | Annual default; true monthly costs +$10/mo |
| Documents supported | ||
| Receipts | ✓ | ~ |
| Invoices | ✓ | ~ |
| Bank statements | ✓ | ~ |
| Credit card statements | ✓ | ~ |
| Paystubs | ✓ | ✕ |
| Image of tables (screenshots, photos) | ✓ | ~ |
| Multi-page PDFs | ✓ | ✓ |
| Scanned PDFs (image-based) | ✓ | ~ |
| Output & integrations | ||
| Native Excel export (.xlsx) | ✓ | ✓ |
| CSV export | ✓ | ✓ |
| Xero / QuickBooks CSV templates | ✓ | ✕ |
| Bulk upload (parallel processing) | yes (up to 50 files) | partial (Pro desktop Action Wizard only, separate files) |
| Practical & UX | ||
| Can test without account? | yes (10/day free) | yes (~1–2 files/mo, advanced OCR Pro-only) |
| Data residency / GDPR | EU processing, zero retention | Adobe Document Cloud, optional 100 GB persistent storage |
| Time to first export | Under 60 seconds, no install | Seconds for clean digital tables; minutes-plus for messy scans |
The verdict
Pick Adobe Acrobat if:
you already pay for an Acrobat subscription for general PDF work — editing text layers, applying digital signatures, redacting sensitive content, merging contracts — and your source PDFs are clean digital tables, not scanned bank statements or photographed receipts. For occasional, text-native conversions a couple of times a month, Acrobat does the job well and you have already paid for the engine.
Pick ScanToExcel if:
your inputs are scanned, photographed or native-PDF bank statements, receipts, credit-card statements or paystubs, and you need the resulting Excel to land with proper column structure ready for Xero or QuickBooks — not a misaligned grid where a multi-line transaction description shoves all subsequent rows out of sync. ScanToExcel classifies the document first, then enforces a schema (date, description, debit, credit, balance) so wrapped descriptions stay glued to their row, OCR is included free on every tier, and batches of up to 50 files merge into a single sheet instead of a ZIP of separate workbooks.
Neither if:
you only need to convert one PDF, one time. Use a free online utility for that single job — neither a $4.99/month subscription nor a $14.99–$29.99/month Acrobat tier is justified for a single conversion you will never repeat.
Frequently asked questions
I already pay for Acrobat for editing and signing — is a separate ScanToExcel subscription really worth it?
If converting financial PDFs to Excel is incidental — once or twice a quarter, clean digital tables, no scanned statements — probably not. You've already paid for the engine, Acrobat does the job acceptably on clean tables, and adding $4.99/month for a couple of conversions doesn't pencil out. The break-even tilts when (a) your inputs include scanned or photographed statements and receipts, (b) you're running 10+ files a month, or (c) wrapped transaction descriptions in your statements force you into manual cleanup every time. At that point ScanToExcel's $4.99/month buys back enough hours to outweigh the cost of an extra subscription.
What's the actual difference between Acrobat's Export PDF, Standard and Pro for getting a spreadsheet?
Export PDF ($1.99/mo on $23.88-annual-upfront) is the cheapest tier and does PDF-to-Excel conversion, but no OCR for scans, no editing, no batch tooling. Acrobat Standard ($14.99/mo annual, $24.99/mo true-monthly) adds editing, basic conversions and form filling — still no production-grade OCR. Acrobat Pro ($19.99/mo annual, $29.99/mo true-monthly) is the only tier with the full OCR engine, Action Wizard batch automation and advanced scan handling. If your goal is just 'convert this digital PDF table to xlsx', Export PDF is enough; if you have scans, you're forced up to Pro.
Why is Acrobat's advanced OCR locked behind the Pro desktop app and not the online converter?
Adobe positions advanced OCR as a desktop power-user feature: batch scan processing, manual recognition correction, scan-quality enhancement (deskew, despeckle, contrast), and the Recognize Text in Multiple Files action all live in Acrobat Pro on Windows or macOS — not in the browser tool. The online converter does run a baseline text-recognition pass on scans, but the heavier-duty pipeline that actually rescues a low-quality photographed receipt sits behind the desktop install. ScanToExcel's vision-language model runs the equivalent rescue pipeline in the browser, on every tier, with no desktop install.
What's the 'true monthly' trap on Adobe's pricing, and how much more does it cost to skip the annual contract?
Adobe displays month-to-month prices on subscriptions that require a 12-month commitment; the actual no-commitment monthly option is around $10/month more. Acrobat Standard: $14.99/mo on annual, $24.99/mo true-monthly. Acrobat Pro: $19.99/mo on annual, $29.99/mo true-monthly. Breaking the annual contract early triggers a 50% early-termination fee on the remaining months. ScanToExcel Premium is $4.99/month, billed monthly, cancel any time with no recovery clause — for a workflow that might end after tax season, that flexibility itself has a value.
Does Acrobat's Action Wizard let me batch-extract a folder of bank statements in one go?
Yes — Action Wizard in Acrobat Pro can chain 'Export to Excel' across a folder of PDFs and is genuinely capable when the inputs are uniform. The constraints: it's Pro-only (so $19.99/mo annual minimum), it produces one xlsx per source PDF rather than a single merged workbook, and the underlying conversion remains the generic Acrobat spatial engine that misaligns wrapped transaction rows. ScanToExcel Premium accepts up to 50 files in a single upload and merges them into one workbook with consistent columns — different model, single output, ready for accounting import.
Adobe Document Cloud stores my converted files by default — is that a problem for client financials?
It depends on your professional context. As a guest user, Adobe deletes the files after the session. Once you sign in (which is required to lift the ~1–2 free conversions per month cap), files are saved to your Adobe Document Cloud account with up to 100 GB of persistent storage — searchable, downloadable, recoverable. For personal use that's a feature; for an accountant handling client bank statements under a confidentiality agreement, it's a 100 GB persistent record of client data on a third-party cloud. ScanToExcel processes files entirely in EU memory and discards them on delivery — nothing to retain, nothing to leak, nothing to disclose.
Will Acrobat's heuristic engine handle a rotated or skewed photograph of a receipt?
Marginal. The online converter's text recognition expects a roughly axis-aligned scan; significant rotation, perspective distortion (photo taken at an angle) or paper curl tends to produce garbled or empty extractions, with the user expected to pre-process the image elsewhere first. Acrobat Pro on desktop has deskew and image-enhancement options that help, but it's a manual step per file. ScanToExcel's vision-language model is trained on phone-photographed receipts as part of the input distribution — rotation, glare, partial fold and uneven lighting are inside the training set, so the same upload works without pre-processing.
Still unsure?
Try us free, no account, no strings attached.
Try free