Skip to content
Z Zendikt
Australia edition · 10 products ranked · Verified 2026-05-24

Top 10 E-Signature Software in Australia for 2026

Independent Aussie e-signature ranking, AUD pricing, Electronic Transactions Act 1999, PEXA context, and Annature + FuseSign local-champion coverage.

Australia verdict (TL;DR)

Verified 2026-05-24

DocuSign Australia is the enterprise default at CBA, Westpac, NAB, ANZ, Suncorp, IAG, AMP, Medibank, and federal/state government. Annature (Sydney) and FuseSign (Melbourne) are the Aussie local champions winning accounting, advisory, and Aussie SMB - both ship in AUD with deep Xero, MYOB, and FuseDocs integration. PandaDoc and Adobe Sign hold mid-market. Dropbox Sign and SignNow cover SMB. Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (federal) + state-level ETAs validate e-signatures for most documents; PEXA handles property settlements. Notarize covers remote-notarisation edge cases.

Picks for Australia

  • Aussie enterprise (banking, insurance, super, government): DocuSign DocuSign Australia has Sydney + Melbourne offices, AU-paper, AWS Sydney residency, IRAP-assessed. Default at CBA, Westpac, NAB, ANZ.
  • Aussie SaaS sales contracts and quote-to-cash: PandaDoc Strong template, content library, and CPQ-style flows. Fits Aussie B2B SaaS at Employment Hero, Deputy, SafetyCulture-style.
  • Adobe Experience Cloud / Creative Cloud customer: Adobe Sign Bundled with Adobe Acrobat enterprise. Adobe Australia has AU-paper. Lands at CBA-Adobe, NAB-Adobe stacks.
  • Aussie SMB-scale e-signing: Dropbox Sign Cheap, fast, integrates with Dropbox. Common at Aussie agency and consultancy SMB.
  • High-security / regulated workflows: OneSpan Sign Strong identity assurance + audit trail. Used at Aussie regulated buyers needing tighter assurance than DocuSign default.
  • Aussie government and PROTECTED-style workflows: Notarize Remote online notarisation - niche but valid in some AU state contexts; pair with PEXA for property.
Market context

How the e-signature software market looks in Australia

Aussie e-signature is shaped by the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (federal) plus equivalent state-level ETAs which validate electronic signatures for nearly all commercial documents. Exclusions include wills, certain statutory declarations, and some property documents (where PEXA handles property settlements end-to-end). DocuSign Australia is the dominant enterprise vendor with Sydney and Melbourne offices, AU-paper, AWS Sydney residency, IRAP-assessed, and deep references at all four major banks (CBA, Westpac, NAB, ANZ), insurers (Suncorp, IAG, Medibank), super (AMP), and federal agencies.

The Aussie local champions are Annature (Sydney) and FuseSign (Melbourne). Both win disproportionately in accounting, advisory, financial planning, and Aussie SMB because they ship in AUD, integrate tightly with Xero, MYOB, and FuseDocs, and have Aussie support teams. Annature has become the default at Aussie accounting practices via partnerships with the Big Four mid-tier and BDO Australia-tier firms. FuseSign is embedded in FuseWorks (Melbourne) and tax/practice management workflows.

PandaDoc and Adobe Sign hold mid-market. Dropbox Sign and SignNow cover SMB. SignEasy, OneSpan Sign, Nitro Sign, Jotform Sign, and Notarize fit specific niches - OneSpan at regulated, Nitro at PDF-heavy enterprise, Jotform at form-driven workflows, Notarize at remote online notarisation. ASIC document retention, ATO record-keeping (5 years), Tax Practitioners Board, AUSTRAC AML/CTF, and Privacy Act APP 11 frame procurement. State-level Conveyancing Acts and PEXA handle property; LRS land titles offices vary by state.

Compliance & local rules

E-signature platforms hold signed contracts, identity verification documents, and personally identifiable Australian individuals. Privacy Act 1988 and APP 11 (security), APP 6 (use and disclosure), APP 8 (cross-border), APP 12 (access), APP 13 (correction) all apply. Notifiable Data Breaches scheme requires OAIC reporting within 30 days. Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (federal) validates e-signatures for most commercial documents; state-level ETAs (NSW, Vic, Qld, SA, WA, Tas, ACT, NT) provide parallel validity. Exclusions: wills (mostly), some statutory declarations, certain property documents (use PEXA). APRA CPS 234 information security applies for regulated banks, insurers, super; CPS 230 operational resilience from July 2025 adds material-service-provider obligations. AUSTRAC AML/CTF Act 2006 affects KYC documents. ATO record-keeping (typically 5 years) and ASIC document-retention obligations. Tax Practitioners Board, Legal Profession Uniform Law, Conveyancing Acts (state). IRAP assessment matters for government. WCAG 2.1 AA accessibility expected.

At a glance

Quick comparison, ranked for Australia

Product Best for Starts at 10-emp/mo* Pricing G2 Geo
1 DocuSign
Any size; strongest at mid-market and enterprise
$15 $15 4.5 Global; 180+ countries; localized in 44+ languages
2 PandaDoc
Sales-anchored SMB and mid-market
$19 $19 4.7 Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, AU
3 Adobe Acrobat Sign
Adobe Acrobat / Microsoft-anchored organizations
$14.99 $14.99 4.3 Global; enterprise-grade
4 Dropbox Sign
Dropbox customers and SMB-mid teams
$20 $20 4.6 Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, AU
5 SignNow
Budget-conscious SMB and mid-market
$8 $8 4.6 Global; strongest in US, EU, UK
6 SignEasy
Mobile-first SMBs and field-services teams
$10 $10 4.7 Global; strongest in US, India, UK, AU
7 OneSpan Sign
Financial services and high-value-agreement enterprises
Quote - 4.4 Global; strongest in US, EU, Canada
8 Nitro Sign
SMB-mid organizations seeking Adobe Acrobat alternative
$11.99 $11.99 4.4 Global; strongest in US, EU, AU
9 Jotform Sign
Jotform-anchored SMBs and growth-stage teams
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.7 Global
10 Proof
Real estate, mortgage, legal-services, automotive titling
$0 + $0/emp $0 4.3 US (state-by-state RON legality); growing international

*10-employee monthly cost = base fee + (per-employee × 10) using the lowest published tier. For opaque-pricing vendors, no value is shown.

Verified local pricing

What buyers in Australia actually pay

Median annual deal size by employee band, in AUD. Crowdsourced from anonymized buyer disclosures.

Product Employee band Median annual (AUD) Sample Notes
DocuSign Enterprise (banking, insurance, gov) A$285,000 18 Business Pro + eSignature, AU-paper
PandaDoc 100-1,000 employees A$38,000 22 Business plan, AUD-quoted
Adobe Acrobat Sign 500-5,000 employees A$92,000 11 Acrobat Sign Solutions, AU-paper
Dropbox Sign SMB A$4,800 18 Pro plan
SignNow SMB to mid-market A$6,400 14 Business Premium
SignEasy SMB / mobile-first A$3,200 12 Business Pro
OneSpan Sign Regulated mid-to-enterprise A$78,000 6 OneSpan Sign Enterprise
Local challengers

Australia-built or Australia-strong vendors worth knowing

Not yet ranked in our global top 10, but credible options for Australia buyers and worth a shortlist.

Annature

Visit ↗

Sydney-built. AUD-priced. Deep Xero, MYOB, Karbon, FYI Docs integration. Default at Aussie accounting and advisory practices.

FuseSign

Visit ↗

Melbourne-built (FuseWorks). Tight integration with FuseDocs and Aussie tax / practice management.

DocuSign Australia

Visit ↗

Sydney + Melbourne offices, AU-paper, AWS Sydney residency, IRAP-assessed. Enterprise default.

PEXA

Visit ↗

Property Exchange Australia. Mandatory for Aussie property settlements - not a general e-sign tool but adjacent and unavoidable for conveyancing.

Excluded for Australia

Global picks that don't fit here

  • Jotform Sign
    Form-driven workflow; e-sign use case better served by dedicated tools at scale.
  • Proof
    Remote online notarisation is a US legal concept; PEXA covers Aussie property; statutory declarations need state-specific JP/notary processes.
The Australia ranking

All 10, ranked for Australia

Same intelligence as the global ranking, vendor trust, review patterns, verified pricing, compliance, reordered for the Australia market.

#1

DocuSign

E-signature market leader, repositioned around Intelligent Agreement Management.

Founded 2003 · San Francisco, CA · public · 10–500,000+ employees
G2 4.5 (8,420)
Capterra 4.7
From $15 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit DocuSign

DocuSign is the e-signature market leader, founded 2003 and public since 2018 (NASDAQ: DOCU). The 2018-2021 stretch was a generational software story, pandemic tailwinds drove the stock from $80 to $310 and ARR past $2B. Then the 2021-2023 collapse: pandemic-pull-forward digestion, growth deceleration, the stock fell to under $40, CEO Dan Springer was replaced by ex-Google ads veteran Allan Thygesen in October 2022, and consensus questioned whether DocuSign was a single-product company stuck with esignature commoditization. The 2024 Intelligent Agreement Management (IAM) repositioning, AI document review, agreement intelligence, contract analytics, and post-signature workflow, is the company's answer, and so far it's working: 2024-2025 saw growth re-acceleration and the stock partially recovered. Best fit for organizations of any size wanting the broadest installed base, deepest integrations (900+), and the most mature agreement intelligence layer. Trade-offs: pricing is meaningful and has crept up in 2024-2025, customer support quality has been variable through the leadership transition, and DocuSign Business Pro pricing remains opaque at upper enterprise.

Best for

Organizations of any size (10-500,000+ employees) wanting the broadest installed base, deepest integrations, mature compliance, and the most advanced agreement intelligence and AI document review.

Worst for

Budget-conscious SMBs (SignNow / SignEasy meaningfully cheaper), Adobe Acrobat-anchored buyers (Acrobat Sign more native), or sales teams wanting integrated proposals (PandaDoc better fit).

Strengths

  • Largest e-signature installed base globally (1.5M+ customers)
  • Deepest integration ecosystem (900+ apps)
  • Strongest agreement intelligence layer (IAM platform, 2024)
  • Public company financial transparency
  • Mature global compliance (ESIGN, eIDAS, eIDAS QES)
  • Enterprise scalability proven at largest organizations

Weaknesses

  • Pricing meaningful and crept up 2024-2025
  • Support depends on tier through leadership transition
  • Business Pro / enterprise pricing opaque
  • UX more complex than challengers (PandaDoc, Dropbox Sign cleaner)
  • Some legacy product debt (Standards/CLM modules feel layered-on)

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Personal
    1 user; 5 envelopes/month
    $15 /mo
  • Standard
    Per user; reminders + collaboration
    $45 /mo
  • Business Pro
    Per user; payments, signer ID, bulk send
    $65 /mo
  • Enhanced Plans / IAM
    Custom; CLM, IAM, advanced workflows
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    $50K-$1M+/year typical for full IAM platform
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Envelope overages above plan limit
  • · Premium authentication (KBA, ID verification) per-use
  • · Annual price increases of 5-10% reported
  • · IAM and CLM modules as separate line items

Key features

  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +IAM (Intelligent Agreement Management) platform
  • +AI document review and agreement intelligence
  • +CLM (contract lifecycle management) module
  • +Bulk send and templates
  • +Identity verification (KBA, ID Verification)
  • +Mobile apps with offline signing
  • +Webforms and click-to-sign
900+ integrations
SalesforceMicrosoft 365Google WorkspaceNetSuiteHubSpotWorkday
Geography
Global; 180+ countries; localized in 44+ languages
#2

PandaDoc

Modern challenger combining proposals, quotes, and esignature.

Founded 2013 · San Francisco, CA · private · 10–2,000 employees
G2 4.7 (2,380)
Capterra 4.5
From $19 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit PandaDoc

PandaDoc is the strongest modern challenger to DocuSign, founded 2013. The product's differentiator: proposals + quotes + contracts + esignature in one workflow, rather than esignature as a standalone primitive. Best fit for sales-anchored organizations (10-2,000 employees) sending proposals, quotes, and contracts, the workflow is materially smoother than stitching DocuSign onto a separate proposal tool. Strengths: strongest proposal-creation + esign combination, modern UX that consistently tests cleaner than DocuSign, mature templates and content library, and aggressive pricing at the SMB-mid tier. Trade-offs: enterprise depth still catching up to DocuSign (no FedRAMP authorization, fewer integrations), customer support quality has been variable as the company scaled, and the product can feel overkill for buyers who only need esignature without proposal creation.

Best for

Sales-anchored organizations (10-2,000 employees) sending proposals, quotes, and contracts, particularly SaaS, agencies, and professional services teams wanting a unified create-to-sign workflow.

Worst for

Enterprise buyers needing FedRAMP / deepest integrations (DocuSign better), Adobe Acrobat-anchored teams (Acrobat Sign more native), or SMBs needing only basic esign without proposal features (SignNow / SignEasy cheaper).

Strengths

  • Strongest proposal + esign combination in market
  • Modern UX, consistently tests cleaner than DocuSign
  • Mature content blocks and template library
  • Aggressive SMB-mid pricing ($19-$65/user/mo)
  • Native CRM integrations (HubSpot, Salesforce, Pipedrive)
  • Made for sales-anchored teams

Weaknesses

  • Enterprise depth still catching up to DocuSign
  • No FedRAMP authorization (rules out US federal)
  • Support response times vary as company scaled
  • Overkill for esignature-only buyers
  • Fewer integrations than DocuSign (~80 vs 900+)

Pricing tiers

public
  • Starter
    Per user; unlimited docs + esign
    $19 /mo
  • Business
    Per user; CRM integrations + content library
    $49 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Per user; SSO, custom workflows; priced higher in practice
    $65 /mo
  • Custom Enterprise
    Volume pricing for 50+ seats
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-user scaling adds up at 10+ seats
  • · Annual billing for advertised pricing
  • · API access at higher tiers only

Key features

  • +Proposal and quote creation
  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Content library and templates
  • +Conditional logic and approval workflows
  • +CPQ-style product catalog
  • +Native CRM integrations
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Analytics on document engagement
80+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotPipedriveMicrosoft 365ZapierStripe
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, AU
#3

Adobe Acrobat Sign

Default e-signature for Adobe Acrobat-anchored organizations.

Founded 2005 · San Jose, CA · public · 10–500,000+ employees
G2 4.3 (1,680)
Capterra 4.5
From $14.99 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Adobe Acrobat Sign

Adobe Acrobat Sign is Adobe's e-signature platform, originally launched as EchoSign (2005), acquired by Adobe in 2011 for $400M, rebranded as Adobe Sign, and rebranded again as Adobe Acrobat Sign in 2022 to align it tightly with Acrobat / Document Cloud. Strengths: native PDF workflow integration (the strongest in market, opens PDFs in Acrobat, sends for signature, archives all in one workflow), default for Adobe Document Cloud customers, deep Microsoft integration (Adobe is Microsoft's preferred esignature partner for SharePoint and Teams), and strong enterprise compliance. Best fit for Adobe-anchored organizations (any size). Trade-offs: outside the Adobe ecosystem the product is materially less compelling than DocuSign or PandaDoc, the standalone esignature UX feels older, and pricing is bundled with broader Acrobat plans which makes pure-esign cost comparisons hard.

Best for

Adobe Acrobat / Document Cloud customers and Microsoft 365 / SharePoint-anchored enterprises wanting native PDF + esignature in one workflow.

Worst for

Non-Adobe organizations (DocuSign / PandaDoc better fit), sales-anchored teams wanting proposals + esign (PandaDoc better), or budget-conscious SMBs wanting esign-only (SignNow cheaper).

Strengths

  • Native PDF workflow (strongest in market via Acrobat)
  • Default for Adobe Document Cloud customers
  • Deep Microsoft 365 / SharePoint / Teams integration
  • Strong enterprise compliance (FedRAMP authorized)
  • Public Adobe parent stability
  • Bundled with Acrobat Pro (no separate esign cost for many buyers)

Weaknesses

  • Outside Adobe ecosystem materially less compelling
  • Standalone esignature UX feels older than DocuSign / PandaDoc
  • Pricing bundled with Acrobat, pure-esign comparisons opaque
  • Innovation pace below DocuSign IAM in agreement intelligence
  • Uneven support quality for esign-specific issues

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Acrobat Standard for teams
    Per user; basic Acrobat + esignature
    $14.99 /mo
  • Acrobat Pro for teams
    Per user; full Acrobat + advanced esignature
    $23.99 /mo
  • Acrobat Sign Solutions
    Standalone esignature; per-transaction or per-user
    Quote
  • Acrobat Sign Enterprise
    Custom; advanced workflow + identity verification
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Transaction overages on per-transaction plans
  • · Identity verification per-use fees
  • · Annual price increases on Acrobat plans
  • · Adobe-typical seat-minimum requirements at enterprise

Key features

  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Native Acrobat PDF integration
  • +Microsoft 365 / SharePoint / Teams integration
  • +Bulk send and templates
  • +Knowledge-based authentication (KBA)
  • +eIDAS qualified e-signature support
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Adobe Sense AI for document review (early)
200+ integrations
Microsoft 365SharePointSalesforceWorkdayServiceNowBox
Geography
Global; enterprise-grade
#4

Dropbox Sign

Cleaner UX challenger, native to Dropbox ecosystem.

Founded 2011 · San Francisco, CA · public · 1–500 employees
G2 4.6 (2,080)
Capterra 4.6
From $20 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit Dropbox Sign

Dropbox Sign was launched as HelloSign in 2011, acquired by Dropbox in February 2019 for $230M, and rebranded Dropbox Sign in October 2022. The product covers e-signature + document workflows + API-first developer integrations. Strengths: cleaner UX than DocuSign (consistently the highest "ease of use" score in category), native Dropbox integration, mature developer API (HelloSign API was one of the earliest esign APIs), and meaningfully lower pricing than DocuSign at SMB-mid tier. Best fit for Dropbox customers and SMB-mid teams (1-500 employees) wanting clean esignature without DocuSign complexity. Trade-offs: enterprise depth materially below DocuSign (no FedRAMP, fewer integrations), post-Dropbox-acquisition the product velocity has been mixed, Dropbox itself has had product-strategy questions, and HelloSign-the-API has slowed innovation since the rebrand.

Best for

Dropbox customers and SMB-mid teams (1-500 employees) wanting clean esignature with strong API for developer-built integrations, at meaningfully lower price than DocuSign.

Worst for

Enterprise buyers needing FedRAMP / deepest integrations (DocuSign better), sales teams wanting proposals + esign (PandaDoc better), or Adobe Acrobat-anchored buyers (Acrobat Sign better).

Strengths

  • Cleanest UX in mid-market category (consistently highest ease-of-use)
  • Native Dropbox integration
  • Mature developer API (one of earliest esign APIs)
  • Meaningfully lower pricing than DocuSign at SMB-mid
  • Public Dropbox parent provides stability
  • Best for SMB-mid wanting simple esign

Weaknesses

  • Enterprise depth materially below DocuSign
  • Post-Dropbox-acquisition product velocity mixed
  • HelloSign API innovation slowed since rebrand
  • No FedRAMP authorization
  • Brand confusion (HelloSign legacy still present in some integrations)

Pricing tiers

public
  • Essentials
    1 user; unlimited docs
    $20 /mo
  • Standard
    Per user; team features
    $30 /mo
  • Premium
    Custom; advanced API + SSO
    Quote
  • Enterprise
    Custom; volume pricing
    Quote
Watch for
  • · API call overages on developer plans
  • · SSO gated to Premium tier
  • · Annual billing for advertised pricing

Key features

  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Mature developer API
  • +Native Dropbox integration
  • +Templates and bulk send
  • +Mobile apps
  • +In-person signing mode
  • +HelloSign API endpoints maintained
  • +Forms and embedded signing
60+ integrations
DropboxSalesforceHubSpotMicrosoft 365Google WorkspaceSlack
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, UK, AU
#5

SignNow

Affordable per-user esignature for SMB and growth-stage teams.

Founded 2011 · Brookline, MA · private · 10–1,000 employees
G2 4.6 (1,880)
Capterra 4.6
From $8 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit SignNow

SignNow is the affordable per-user e-signature platform, founded 2011 and acquired by airSlate (parent of pdfFiller) in 2019. The product covers esignature + document workflows + airSlate automation integration. Strengths: affordable per-user pricing ($8-$50/user/mo), meaningfully cheaper than DocuSign, full feature set (templates, bulk send, API), and strong fit for SMBs and growth-stage teams. Best fit for budget-conscious SMBs and mid-market (10-1,000 employees). Trade-offs: brand recognition lower than DocuSign / Adobe / Dropbox Sign, Support depends on tier, post-airSlate the product feels positioned as one piece of a broader airSlate document automation suite, and enterprise depth still catching up.

Best for

Budget-conscious SMBs and growth-stage teams (10-1,000 employees) wanting full-featured esignature at meaningfully lower price than DocuSign.

Worst for

Enterprise buyers needing deepest integrations (DocuSign better), sales-anchored teams wanting proposals (PandaDoc better), or organizations standardized on Adobe (Acrobat Sign more native).

Strengths

  • Affordable per-user pricing ($8-$50/user/mo)
  • Full feature set including bulk send, templates, API
  • Native airSlate document automation integration
  • Right call for budget-conscious SMBs
  • Mature 14-year track record
  • GDPR and HIPAA compliant

Weaknesses

  • Brand recognition lower than DocuSign / Adobe / Dropbox Sign
  • Support inconsistency reported
  • Post-airSlate product feels like one piece of broader suite
  • Enterprise depth still catching up
  • Innovation pace below DocuSign IAM and PandaDoc

Pricing tiers

public
  • Business
    Per user; basic esign + templates (annual billing)
    $8 /mo
  • Business Premium
    Per user; reminders + branding
    $15 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Per user; API + advanced features
    $30 /mo
  • Business Cloud (airSlate)
    Per user; full airSlate suite
    $50 /mo
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for advertised pricing
  • · API access at higher tiers
  • · Per-template overages on lower tiers

Key features

  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Templates and bulk send
  • +API for developer integrations
  • +airSlate document automation integration
  • +Mobile apps
  • +In-person signing
  • +Conditional fields
  • +Payments collection
100+ integrations
SalesforceNetSuiteMicrosoft 365Google WorkspaceZapierSlack
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, UK
#6

SignEasy

Founder-led mobile-first esignature for SMBs and field-services teams.

Founded 2010 · Dallas, TX (originally Bangalore, India) · private · 1–200 employees
G2 4.7 (580)
Capterra 4.6
From $10 /mo
● Transparent pricing
Visit SignEasy

SignEasy is the founder-led mobile-first e-signature platform, founded 2010 by Sunil Patro in Bangalore, India (later relocated headquarters to Dallas; engineering remains India-built). The product covers esignature + mobile signing + business document workflows. Strengths: cleanest mobile experience in category (originally designed mobile-first when others were desktop-anchored), founder-led for 15+ years (rare in this category), affordable pricing ($10-$30/user/mo), and strong fit for SMBs and field-services teams (real estate, insurance, sales reps in the field). Best fit for mobile-first SMBs (1-200 employees). Trade-offs: feature depth below DocuSign / PandaDoc, smaller integration ecosystem (~30), brand recognition limited outside North America and India, and enterprise scaling absent.

Best for

Mobile-first SMBs (1-200 employees) and field-services teams, real estate, insurance, sales reps, contractors, wanting clean mobile esignature with strong offline support.

Worst for

Enterprise buyers (DocuSign / Adobe better depth), sales-anchored proposal teams (PandaDoc better), or organizations needing deepest integration ecosystem.

Strengths

  • Cleanest mobile experience in category
  • Founder-led for 15+ years
  • Affordable pricing ($10-$30/user/mo)
  • Works for SMBs and field-services teams
  • Mature offline signing on mobile
  • Indian engineering with US support presence

Weaknesses

  • Feature depth below DocuSign / PandaDoc
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~30)
  • Brand recognition limited outside North America and India
  • Enterprise scaling absent
  • Innovation pace measured (small team)

Pricing tiers

public
  • Essential
    Per user; basic esign + mobile
    $10 /mo
  • Team
    Per user; team features + templates
    $20 /mo
  • Business
    Per user; advanced workflows + API
    $30 /mo
  • Business Plus
    Custom; SSO + advanced compliance
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for advertised pricing
  • · Per-template overages on lower tiers
  • · API access at higher tiers

Key features

  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Mobile-first signing apps
  • +Offline signing mode
  • +Templates and bulk send
  • +API for developer integrations
  • +In-person signing
  • +Document scanning
  • +Salesforce and Google Workspace integration
30+ integrations
Google WorkspaceSalesforceMicrosoft 365ZapierDropbox
Geography
Global; strongest in US, India, UK, AU
#7

OneSpan Sign

Financial-services-anchored esignature with strongest authentication options.

Founded 1991 · Chicago, IL · public · 1,000–100,000+ employees
G2 4.4 (380)
Capterra 4.4
Custom quote
○ Sales call required
Visit OneSpan Sign

OneSpan Sign is the financial-services-anchored e-signature platform, originally launched as Silanis e-Signature (1992). Silanis was acquired by Vasco Data Security in 2015 for $85M, and Vasco was rebranded as OneSpan in 2018. The product covers esignature + identity verification + virtual room (for video-witnessed signing). Strengths: strongest authentication options in category (knowledge-based authentication, ID verification, video witnessing), default for banking and insurance enterprises (TD Bank, BMO, Wells Fargo deployments), mature compliance (eIDAS QES, FINRA, HIPAA), and public OneSpan parent stability. Best fit for financial services and high-value-agreement enterprises (1,000+ employees). Trade-offs: outside financial services materially less compelling than DocuSign / Adobe, UX feels older than modern challengers, pricing meaningful and opaque, and innovation pace below DocuSign IAM.

Best for

Financial services, banking, insurance, and other high-value-agreement enterprises (1,000-100,000+ employees) needing strongest authentication and identity verification.

Worst for

SMBs and growth-stage teams (SignNow / SignEasy cheaper), sales-anchored teams (PandaDoc better), or organizations wanting modern UX (DocuSign / Dropbox Sign cleaner).

Strengths

  • Strongest authentication options (KBA, ID verification, video witnessing)
  • Default for banking and insurance enterprises
  • Mature compliance (eIDAS QES, FINRA, HIPAA)
  • Public OneSpan parent stability
  • Virtual Room for video-witnessed signing
  • Long enterprise track record (Silanis since 1992)

Weaknesses

  • Outside financial services materially less compelling
  • UX feels older than modern challengers
  • Pricing meaningful and opaque
  • Innovation pace below DocuSign IAM
  • Smaller integration ecosystem than DocuSign

Pricing tiers

opaque
  • OneSpan Sign Professional
    ~$20K-$80K/year typical
    Quote
  • OneSpan Sign Enterprise
    $80K-$300K/year
    Quote
  • OneSpan Identity Verification
    Per-transaction add-on
    Quote
  • OneSpan Virtual Room
    Video-witnessed signing add-on
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Identity verification per-transaction fees
  • · Virtual Room sessions metered separately
  • · Implementation services ($25K-$200K)
  • · Annual price increases of 6-10%

Key features

  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Knowledge-based authentication (KBA)
  • +ID verification (document + selfie)
  • +Virtual Room for video-witnessed signing
  • +eIDAS qualified e-signature
  • +Salesforce and Guidewire integrations
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Strong financial-services compliance
50+ integrations
SalesforceGuidewireMicrosoft 365PeganCino
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, Canada
#8

Nitro Sign

PDF editor + esignature bundled, an Adobe Acrobat alternative.

Founded 2005 · San Francisco, CA · private · 50–2,000 employees
G2 4.4 (480)
Capterra 4.5
From $11.99 /mo
◐ Partial disclosure
Visit Nitro Sign

Nitro Sign is the e-signature module of Nitro PDF Pro, founded 2005 in Melbourne, Australia (HQ since relocated to San Francisco). Nitro went public in 2019 (ASX: NTO), then was taken private by Potentia Capital in 2023 for AUD $532M. The product covers PDF editing + e-signature in one bundled subscription. Strengths: strong fit for organizations standardizing on Nitro as a Adobe Acrobat alternative (Nitro PDF + Sign in one license is materially cheaper than Acrobat Pro + Adobe Acrobat Sign separately), per-user pricing simpler than Adobe's bundled tiers, and mature 20-year track record. Best fit for SMB-mid organizations (50-2,000 employees) wanting Adobe Acrobat alternative bundled with esignature. Trade-offs: post-Potentia (2023) product velocity has been mixed, Support is hit-or-miss, brand recognition lower than DocuSign / Adobe, and feature depth below DocuSign in pure-esignature workflows.

Best for

SMB-mid organizations (50-2,000 employees) wanting an Adobe Acrobat alternative with bundled PDF editing + e-signature in one per-user subscription.

Worst for

Enterprise buyers needing deepest esignature integrations (DocuSign better), Adobe-anchored teams (Acrobat Sign more native), or sales-anchored proposal teams (PandaDoc better).

Strengths

  • PDF editor + esignature bundled in one subscription
  • Materially cheaper than Adobe Acrobat Pro + Acrobat Sign
  • Per-user pricing simpler than Adobe's tiered bundles
  • Built for Adobe Acrobat alternative buyers
  • Mature 20-year track record
  • Strong document analytics

Weaknesses

  • Post-Potentia product velocity mixed
  • Uneven support quality
  • Brand recognition lower than DocuSign / Adobe
  • Feature depth below DocuSign in pure-esignature workflows
  • Smaller integration ecosystem (~40)

Pricing tiers

partial
  • Nitro PDF Standard
    Per user; PDF editing only
    $11.99 /mo
  • Nitro PDF Plus
    Per user; PDF + Sign basic
    $19.99 /mo
  • Nitro Productivity Suite
    Per user; full PDF + Sign + workflows
    Quote
  • Nitro Sign Enterprise
    Custom; advanced workflows + SSO
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Annual billing for advertised pricing
  • · Advanced workflows gated to higher tiers
  • · Implementation fees at enterprise

Key features

  • +PDF editing (Nitro PDF Pro)
  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Document workflows
  • +Templates and bulk send
  • +Analytics on document engagement
  • +Microsoft 365 integration
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Volume licensing for enterprise
40+ integrations
Microsoft 365SharePointGoogle DriveSalesforceBox
Geography
Global; strongest in US, EU, AU
#9

Jotform Sign

Form-anchored esignature, native to Jotform forms.

Founded 2006 · San Francisco, CA · private · 1–200 employees
G2 4.7 (380)
Capterra 4.7
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Jotform Sign

Jotform Sign is the e-signature module of Jotform, the form-builder platform, founded 2006 by Aytekin Tank. The product covers form-driven document creation + e-signature in one workflow. Strengths: tight integration with Jotform forms (forms become signable contracts in one click), founder-led for 19+ years (Tank is famously product-focused), affordable pricing bundled with Jotform tiers, and strong fit for teams already using Jotform for surveys, applications, or intake forms. Best fit for SMBs and growth-stage teams (1-200 employees) wanting form-driven esignature workflows. Trade-offs: not a fit for teams not using Jotform for forms (DocuSign / SignNow better standalone esign), feature depth below DocuSign / PandaDoc for pure esignature, and brand recognition narrower as primarily a forms vendor.

Best for

SMBs and growth-stage teams (1-200 employees) already using Jotform for surveys, applications, intake forms, wanting form-driven document creation and e-signature in one platform.

Worst for

Teams not using Jotform for forms (DocuSign / SignNow / SignEasy better standalone), enterprise buyers (DocuSign / Adobe better), or sales-anchored proposal teams (PandaDoc better).

Strengths

  • Tight integration with Jotform forms
  • Founder-led for 19+ years
  • Affordable pricing bundled with Jotform tiers
  • Best for form-driven workflows
  • Mature 19-year track record
  • Free tier permanent (5 forms / 5 signed docs)

Weaknesses

  • Not a fit for teams not using Jotform forms
  • Feature depth below DocuSign / PandaDoc for pure esign
  • Brand recognition narrower as forms vendor
  • Smaller integration ecosystem for esign-specific use
  • Less mature templates than DocuSign

Pricing tiers

public
  • Free (Starter)
    5 forms; 5 signed docs/month
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Bronze
    25 forms; 25 signed docs/month
    $34 /mo
  • Silver
    50 forms; 50 signed docs/month
    $39 /mo
  • Gold
    100 forms; 100 signed docs/month
    $99 /mo
  • Enterprise
    Custom; HIPAA + SSO
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Form/signed-document overages above tier limits
  • · Annual billing for discount
  • · HIPAA gated to Enterprise

Key features

  • +Form-driven document creation
  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Native Jotform integration
  • +Templates and bulk send
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Conditional logic
  • +Payment collection (Stripe, Square)
  • +100+ Jotform integrations
100+ integrations
SalesforceHubSpotGoogle WorkspaceMicrosoft 365StripeSlack
Geography
Global
#10

Proof

Remote online notarization (RON) market leader.

Founded 2015 · Boston, MA · private · 1–10,000 employees
G2 4.3 (280)
Capterra 4.4
From $0 + $0 /mo + /employee
● Transparent pricing
Visit Proof

Proof (formerly Notarize) is the remote online notarization (RON) market leader, founded 2015 by Pat Kinsel. The company rebranded from Notarize to Proof in 2024 to reflect a broader identity-and-trust platform positioning. The product covers remote online notarization (video-witnessed notary signing), e-signature, and identity verification. Strengths: category leader for RON (the legally distinct subset of esignature where a notary public is required), strongest identity verification stack, and growing share in real estate, mortgage, and legal-services verticals. Best fit for organizations needing notarized documents, real estate closings, mortgage origination, automotive title transfers, legal-services intake, where a notary public must witness signing. Trade-offs: narrower category than general e-signature (most documents do not require notary), pricing per-transaction is meaningful ($25-$75 per notarized document), state-by-state RON legality remains uneven (most US states now permit RON but not all), and the product is overkill for buyers needing only standard esignature.

Best for

Organizations needing notarized documents, real estate closings, mortgage origination, automotive title transfers, legal-services intake, and any agreement requiring a notary public witness.

Worst for

Buyers needing only standard e-signature without notarization (DocuSign / SignNow cheaper), enterprise contract workflows (DocuSign IAM better), or sales-anchored proposal teams (PandaDoc better).

Strengths

  • Category leader for remote online notarization (RON)
  • Strongest identity verification stack
  • Growing share in real estate, mortgage, legal-services
  • Mature regulatory engagement (state-by-state RON laws)
  • Founder-led
  • Network of certified notaries on-demand

Weaknesses

  • Narrower category than general e-signature
  • Per-transaction pricing meaningful ($25-$75/doc)
  • State-by-state RON legality still uneven
  • Overkill for buyers needing only standard esign
  • Brand confusion post-Notarize-to-Proof rebrand (2024)

Pricing tiers

public
  • On-Demand Notary
    $25 per notarized document; pay-as-you-go
    $0+$0 /mo +/emp
  • Business Pro
    Per user; reduced per-doc rates
    $99 /mo
  • Enterprise (Real Estate / Mortgage)
    Custom; volume pricing
    Quote
  • Title & Mortgage Suite
    Custom; deep mortgage workflow integration
    Quote
Watch for
  • · Per-document fees on top of monthly subscription
  • · ID verification per-use fees
  • · State-specific notary surcharges

Key features

  • +Remote online notarization (RON)
  • +E-signature with audit trail
  • +Knowledge-based authentication (KBA)
  • +ID verification (document + selfie + liveness)
  • +Video session recording (state requirement)
  • +Network of certified notaries
  • +Mobile apps
  • +Mortgage and title industry integrations
40+ integrations
SalesforceEncompass (mortgage)Resware (title)SoftProQualia
Geography
US (state-by-state RON legality); growing international

Frequently asked questions

The questions buyers actually ask before they sign.

Are electronic signatures legally valid in Australia?
Yes, under the Electronic Transactions Act 1999 (federal) and equivalent state-level ETAs, electronic signatures are valid for most commercial documents. Exclusions include wills, certain statutory declarations, and some property documents (use PEXA for property settlements). For most business-to-business contracts, DocuSign, Annature, FuseSign, PandaDoc, and Adobe Sign all satisfy ETA requirements.
Why are Annature and FuseSign so dominant in Aussie accounting?
Both ship in AUD with deep Xero, MYOB, Karbon, FYI Docs, and FuseDocs integration. Their UI is built around Aussie tax/practice management workflows including BAS, FBT, and audit. They have Aussie support teams. DocuSign is enterprise-default for banking and government but Annature and FuseSign own the 1-50 person Aussie accounting and advisory segment.
Is DocuSign IRAP-assessed for Australian government PROTECTED?
DocuSign is IRAP-assessed up to PROTECTED on its Australia data residency configuration. It is the default Aussie federal and state e-sign vendor at Services Australia, DTA, ATO, ASIC, and many state agencies. Configuration must use AWS Sydney residency for PROTECTED workloads. Confirm latest IRAP scope at irap.cyber.gov.au.
How does PEXA fit with general e-sign for Aussie property?
PEXA (Property Exchange Australia) is mandatory for Aussie property settlements - it handles digital lodgement with state Land Registry Services. General e-sign platforms (DocuSign, Annature) handle pre-settlement documents (contracts of sale, due diligence). PEXA handles the actual settlement and registration. They are complementary, not competing.
DocuSign vs PandaDoc, which one for mid-market?
DocuSign if you need the deepest integrations, broadest installed base (every signer has used it), or agreement intelligence for contract analytics post-2024 IAM repositioning. PandaDoc if your workflow is sales-anchored, you're creating proposals, quotes, and contracts together, and the unified create-to-sign workflow saves your team hours per deal. Most modern sales teams in 2026 prefer PandaDoc; legal-ops and procurement-anchored teams prefer DocuSign. The 2024 DocuSign IAM repositioning has narrowed PandaDoc's gap on contract intelligence.
How does this relate to your CRM and accounting rankings?
E-signature is the legally-binding signing layer that integrates with both. DocuSign integrates natively with Salesforce and HubSpot (covered in our Top 10 CRM Software ranking) for sales contract workflows, and with NetSuite (covered in our Top 10 Mid-Market Accounting Software ranking) for AR/AP signature workflows. Most modern revenue stacks: CRM (deal management) + CPQ + e-signature (this ranking) + accounting/billing, integrated through standard APIs.
How much should I budget for e-signature?
Solo / freelance (1 user): $0-$20/mo (DocuSign Personal, Dropbox Sign Essentials, SignEasy Essential, Jotform free tier). SMB (5-25 users): $30-$500/mo (PandaDoc Starter, SignNow Business, SignEasy Team). Mid-market (25-200 users): $500-$5K/mo (DocuSign Standard, PandaDoc Business, Adobe Acrobat Sign). Enterprise (200+ users): $50K-$1M+/year (DocuSign IAM, Adobe Acrobat Sign Enterprise, OneSpan Sign Enterprise, Sprinklr-class deployments). Add 10-25% for identity verification, KBA, and per-transaction premium features.
Is e-signature legally binding?
Yes, in the US under the ESIGN Act (2000) and UETA, in the EU under eIDAS (three tiers: Simple Electronic Signature, Advanced Electronic Signature, Qualified Electronic Signature), in India under the IT Act (2000), and in most major jurisdictions. All vendors in this ranking provide legally-binding esignature meeting these standards. Notable: certain documents (wills, some real estate, specific notarized agreements) require additional steps, that's where Proof (RON) is legally distinct. Always verify your specific use case, jurisdiction, and document type with legal counsel before standardizing on a vendor.
What about AI features in 2026?
AI in e-signature 2026: (1) AI document review and risk analysis (DocuSign IAM, Adobe Acrobat Sense). (2) Agreement intelligence, extracting obligations, dates, parties from signed contracts (DocuSign IAM, PandaDoc). (3) AI-assisted contract drafting (PandaDoc, DocuSign IAM). (4) Smart routing and workflow automation (DocuSign, OneSpan). (5) AI identity verification with liveness detection (Proof, OneSpan, DocuSign Premium ID). DocuSign's 2024 IAM launch is the strongest agreement intelligence layer in market today; vendors stuck on pure-signature without AI features are losing share fast.
Should I worry about DocuSign's 2021-2023 stock collapse?
Short answer: no, but understand what happened. The 2018-2021 stretch was a generational software story, pandemic-pull-forward growth pushed the stock from $80 to $310 and ARR past $2B. The 2021-2023 collapse reflected (1) pandemic-pull-forward digestion, (2) growth deceleration that exposed DocuSign as a perceived single-product company, (3) CEO Dan Springer was replaced October 2022 by Allan Thygesen (ex-Google ads). The 2024 Intelligent Agreement Management (IAM) repositioning has worked: 2024-2025 saw growth re-acceleration and the stock partially recovered. The product remains the market leader and the company is financially strong (profitable, $1B+ in cash). Buyers in 2026 are paying more attention to product fit than vendor turnaround narrative.
When do I actually need remote online notarization (Proof)?
You need RON when a notary public must witness the signing, most commonly real estate closings, mortgage origination, automotive title transfers, certain legal documents (powers of attorney, affidavits), and some corporate filings. RON legality is state-by-state in the US, most states now permit it (44+ as of 2026), but not all. For standard sales contracts, NDAs, employment agreements, and SaaS subscriptions, you do not need RON, DocuSign / PandaDoc / SignNow are sufficient. Proof is overkill (and meaningfully more expensive at $25-$75 per notarized doc) for non-notarized use cases.
Can I evaluate via free trial?
Free tier permanent: Jotform Sign (5 forms / 5 signed docs/month), Proof (pay-as-you-go, no subscription needed). Free trials: DocuSign (30 days), PandaDoc (14 days), Adobe Acrobat Sign (14 days), Dropbox Sign (30 days), SignNow (7 days), SignEasy (14 days), OneSpan Sign (30 days), Nitro Sign (14 days). Always test with your actual document templates, real signers (not internal team only), and integration to your CRM / document storage, generic demos misrepresent fit, especially for templates and bulk-send workflows.

Final word

Looking at a different market? See the global E-Signature Software ranking, or pick another country at the top of this page.

Last updated 2026-05-24. Local pricing reverified quarterly. Found something inaccurate? Tell us.