When you create, convert, edit, protect, and sign your PDFs in Acrobat Pro DC on desktop or mobile, you can easily save them straight to your Dropbox account. Or if you’re using the free Acrobat Reader, you can highlight and annotate PDF text, with changes saved directly to Dropbox.
Dropbox with Adobe: Imagination, run wild
From photography to illustration to prototyping to document management, Dropbox works with Adobe’s creative tools to bring order and harmony to your wildly creative ideas.
Open Adobe Creative Cloud to collaborators
Let anyone view your work
Dropbox shared links generate high-fidelity previews for Photoshop, Illustrator, and XD, so no more “How do I open this file?”
Capture feedback
Reviewers can add comments and annotate specific parts of images from any browser, so feedback stays in one place.
Send all your work
Creative Cloud formats are just a few of the hundreds of image, video, audio, and other files with native previews in Dropbox.
Dropbox Replay—currently available in beta in English only—lets you consolidate comments, take action on feedback, and finalize your video projects directly from Premiere Pro. Upload videos, access frame-accurate feedback, and export new video versions to Replay.
A whole Dropbox of tricks
Storing your various Adobe files in Dropbox gives you the tools you need to stay organized. File tagging functionality helps make finding what you need easy, and support for image metadata gives you quick access to photo details. And you can have files renamed, moved, and tagged as they’re added to automated folders—without lifting a finger.
Dropbox lets you easily bring collaboration to the work you create in Adobe apps. Say goodbye to compressing large files or overnighting flash drives. With Dropbox, you can send files of any size to anyone with just a link. And if you need to work with multiple people on a project, shared folders give everyone you invite access to the same files at the same time.
Just save Adobe files to your Dropbox account, and you’ll have them available on all your devices. And in Dropbox, they’re safe. Your files will be protected by 256-bit encryption, and features like file version history let you roll back to the last round—for those times the client changes their mind. Sharing from Dropbox is safe, too. You can add password protection, expiration dates, and file locking to shared files to keep the right people in the right files at the right time.