Skip to main content

How to scan documents with your iPhone (2 easy ways)

A screenshot showing a recently scanned image on an iPhone.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

Your iPhone can do many things. It's great for watching YouTube videos, messaging friends on iMessage, playing games, browsing the web, etc. You name it, your iPhone can probably do it.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • An iPhone

  • The Notes and Files apps

Something else your iPhone can do is function as a digital scanner. Ideally, you can do so using the phone’s built-in Notes and Files app. The steps are the same whether you're using an iPhone 15 Pro or other iPhone.

A screenshot showing a recently scanned image on an iPhone.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

How to scan files on your iPhone in the Notes app

Within the Notes app, you can utilize the iPhone’s built-in scanner to capture images of documents and save them as PDFs. You can also add signatures to those PDFs, as needed.

Step 1: First, tap on the Notes app on your iPhone. If you don’t have the Notes app installed, download the free app from the App Store.

Step 2: Open the Notes app, then choose an existing note or create a new one.

Step 3: Tap on the Camera icon at the bottom of the Notes app, then choose Scan Documents.

Screenshot showing how to scan a document with an iPhone using the Notes app.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

Step 4: Place the document you wish to scan in front of your iPhone. The camera should scan the document automatically if it's in Auto mode. Otherwise, select the Shutter button to snap a photo. You can also adjust the size of the image by dragging its corners, then tapping Keep Scan.

Step 5: Choose Save.

Screenshot showing how to scan a document using the iPhone Notes app.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

Step 6: To add a signature to a document in Notes, you must first tap on it.

Step 7: Next, choose the Camera icon at the bottom, then select Scan Documents.

Step 8: Choose the "+" button, then choose Signature. You can select a saved signature or create a new one using your fingers.

Step 9: Tap Done.

Screenshot showing how to sign a scanned document via the Files app on iPhone.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

How to scan files on your iPhone in the Files app

You can also scan a document within the Files app. Once you complete the first two steps, the subsequent steps are the same as the ones mentioned above.

Step 1: Open the Files app on your iPhone. Tap the ellipsis button (three dots) in the top-right corner.

Step 2: Select Scan Documents.

Screenshot showing the steps to scan a document in the Files app on iPhone.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

Step 3: Choose Scan Documents.

Step 4: Place the document you wish to scan in front of your iPhone. The camera should scan the document automatically if it's in Auto mode. Otherwise, tap the Shutter button to snap a photo. You can also adjust the size of the image by dragging its corners, then tapping Keep Scan.

Step 5: Choose Save.

Screenshot showing how to scan a document using the iPhone Notes app.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends

Step 6: To add a signature to a document in Notes, you must first tap on it.

Step 7: Next, choose the Camera icon at the bottom, then select Scan Documents.

Step 8: Choose the "+" button, then choose Signature. You can select a saved signature or create a new one.

Step 9: Tap Done.

Screenshot showing how to sign a scanned document via the Files app on iPhone.
Bryan M. Wolfe / Digital Trends
Bryan M. Wolfe
Former Mobile and A/V Freelancer
Bryan M. Wolfe has over a decade of experience as a technology writer. He writes about mobile.
5 rumored iOS 26 features we could see at WWDC 2025
An iPhone 16 laying on a shelf with its screen on.

Apple’s upcoming WWDC 2025 showcase is going to be a busy one, even though the expected AI-powered software rebirth may not land until next year. In the meantime, reliable sources have spilled the beans on what we might expect for the next major iOS overhaul. 

Starting with the name, Apple could skip iOS 19 and could go straight from v18 to v26. We are also expecting a design overhaul, something that could draw inspiration from Vision OS. On the functional side, an AI health coach would be a huge draw for fitness enthusiasts. 

Read more
Why you shouldn’t care what number Apple puts on your iPhone’s software
The Apple iPhone 16 Pro Max's screen.

One number may change to another number at an important industry event on June 9, and despite some of the headlines that have been circulating around the news, this succinct explanation of what may happen allows you to guage its real importance. Apparently, Apple may use the WWDC 2025 keynote presentation to announce a change from the expected iOS 19 software’s name to iOS 26, and here’s why you shouldn’t worry about it. 

Many people won’t even know

Read more
20 iPhones elevate Danny Boyle’s 28 Years Later scene
A camera rig with 20 iPhones being used to shoot part of 28 Years Later.

We already know that the iPhone is a versatile piece of kit with a powerful camera capable of capturing highly impressive video.

That quality, coupled with the phone’s small size compared to conventional movie cameras, has been inspiring a growing number of filmmakers to use Apple’s handset for at least some of the shots in their grand productions.

Read more