How to Highlight Scanned PDF and Add Margin Notes
If you've ever tried to highlight text in a scanned PDF and watched the cursor glide over the page like it's made of glass, you already know the frustration. Scanned PDFs are essentially pictures โ every page is a flat image, not a searchable document. That means your standard highlight tool finds nothing to grab onto.
The fix is a two-step process: first run OCR (Optical Character Recognition) to convert the image layer into real, selectable text, then use your annotation tools as normal. This guide walks you through the entire workflow inside PDF Agile โ a free offline desktop app โ so you never need to upload sensitive documents to the cloud.
By the end you'll be able to highlight scanned PDF pages, add sticky margin notes, and export a clean annotated copy, all without touching the internet.
Scanned PDF vs. Text PDF: Why It Matters
Before diving into steps, it helps to understand what you're working with. The table below shows the key differences:
| Feature | Scanned PDF (image) | Text-Based PDF |
|---|---|---|
| Text selectable | โ No | โ Yes |
| Searchable | โ No | โ Yes |
| Highlight tool works | โ Not directly | โ Yes |
| Copy/paste text | โ No | โ Yes |
| File size | Larger (image data) | Smaller |
| Requires OCR first? | โ Yes | โ No |
| Works offline? | โ After OCR | โ Always |
If your PDF was created by scanning a physical document, photographing pages, or exporting from certain hardware, it's almost certainly image-based. Run OCR and it becomes fully functional.
Step 1 โ Run OCR to Make Text Selectable
OCR converts each page image into a hidden text layer that sits behind the visual. Once this layer exists, every annotation tool โ highlight, underline, strikethrough, sticky note โ works exactly as it does on any normal PDF.
๐ก Tip: If text selection still doesn't work after OCR, the original scan may be very low resolution (below 150 DPI). Try printing the document to a PDF printer first to re-rasterize it at a higher DPI, then run OCR again.
Step 2 โ Highlight PDF Pages and Passages
With the text layer in place, highlighting works just like in any word processor. Here's the full workflow:
Step 3 โ Add Margin Notes to PDF
Margin notes let you attach contextual commentary without altering the original document body. PDF Agile supports two main types: sticky notes (floating callout bubbles) and text boxes (inline positioned text).
Add Sticky Notes to PDF
๐ก Tip: Right-click a sticky note icon โ "Properties" to change the icon style (Note, Comment, Key, Help, Insert, Paragraph) and color. Different colors help you distinguish between question notes, summary notes, and action-item notes at a glance.
Add Text Box Annotations in the Margin
Troubleshooting: Highlight Tool Grayed Out or Not Working
โ ๏ธ Common Issue: The highlight tool appears grayed out or selections don't stick after OCR. Here are the most likely causes and fixes.
- Document is password-protected
- The PDF owner may have restricted annotations. Go to File โ Properties โ Security to check. You'll need the owner password to unlock editing permissions.
- OCR didn't complete successfully
- Check that the OCR process finished without errors. Low-DPI scans (under 150 DPI) can cause partial recognition. Try re-scanning at 300 DPI if possible.
- Wrong tool selected
- Make sure you're on the Comment tab, not the Edit tab. The Edit tab's text tools are for editing document content, not adding annotations.
- Flattened or certified PDF
- Some PDFs are "flattened" โ all annotations are merged into the page image and no further annotations are allowed. In this case, print to PDF first to create a fresh, unrestricted copy.
Alternative Tools for Highlighting Scanned PDFs
PDF Agile works great for offline, privacy-first workflows. But here are a few alternatives worth knowing:
Adobe Acrobat Pro Paid
Industry standard. Excellent OCR accuracy across 40+ languages. Expensive subscription model (~$24/month). Best for enterprise workflows requiring certified signatures alongside annotations.
UPDF Freemium
Modern UI with solid OCR and annotation tools. Free tier adds a watermark on export. One-time purchase option available. Good alternative if you want a fresh interface.
Okular Free / Open Source
Linux-first, also available on Windows. Excellent for basic annotations on text PDFs. OCR support is limited โ best used after you've already run OCR in another tool.
Frequently Asked Questions
Conclusion
Here's a quick recap of the three-step workflow:
- Run OCR โ Tools โ OCR โ select language โ Recognize. This unlocks the text layer on image-based scanned PDFs.
- Highlight passages โ Comment tab โ Highlight tool โ drag over text. Color-code by theme using the Properties panel.
- Add margin notes โ Use Sticky Notes for collapsible comments or Text Boxes for always-visible annotations. Save with Ctrl+S.
Once you've run OCR once, the result is saved inside the PDF permanently โ you won't need to repeat it. Future editing sessions start directly at step 2.
๐ฏ Ready to try it? Download PDF Agile free at pdfagile.com โ no account or subscription required. Then come back and read our next guide: PDF Annotation Guide for iPad and Windows Desktop.