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How to Add a Table in Adobe Acrobat

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Why Adding Tables to PDFs Is Harder Than It Looks

You’ve got a PDF. You need a table. You open Adobe Acrobat — and suddenly you’re clicking through menus wondering why something this basic feels so complicated.

You’re not alone. Millions of people work in Adobe Acrobat every day, and the table feature consistently trips people up. According to Adobe’s own data, PDFs are the most widely used document format in business, with over 2.5 trillion PDF documents existing worldwide and more than 400 billion PDFs opened in Adobe tools each year.

Despite that scale, adding a table inside a PDF is still one of the most searched-for tasks in the Acrobat ecosystem.

This guide walks you through every method — step by step — so you can get it done and move on.

What You Actually Need Before You Start

Before diving into steps, understand one critical thing: Adobe Acrobat does not have a native “Insert Table” button the way Microsoft Word does.

Instead, you create tables through one of these approaches:

  • The Add Table feature in Acrobat’s Edit PDF toolbar (available in Acrobat Pro and Standard DC)
  • Converting your PDF to Word, adding a table, then converting back
  • Embedding a table from another application using copy-paste
  • Using the Prepare Form tool to create table-like grid structures

Knowing this upfront saves you 20 minutes of frustration. Now let’s get into the actual steps.

How to Add a Table Using the Edit PDF Tool (Acrobat Pro DC)

This is the most direct method if you have Adobe Acrobat Pro DC.

Step 1: Open Your PDF

Launch Adobe Acrobat Pro DC and open the PDF where you want to insert a table. Go to File > Open and select your document.

Step 2: Click “Edit PDF” in the Right Panel

On the right-hand Tools panel, click Edit PDF. This activates the editing toolbar at the top of the screen.

Step 3: Click “Add Table” in the Top Toolbar

In the Edit PDF toolbar, look for the Add Table option. Click it. A dialog box will appear asking you to set:

  • Number of rows
  • Number of columns
  • Table width and alignment

Enter your values and click OK.

Step 4: Position the Table on the Page

Acrobat will drop a table frame onto your PDF. Click and drag it to the exact position where you need it. Use the blue handles to resize.

Step 5: Type Into Each Cell

Double-click any cell to enter edit mode. Type your content. Use Tab to move between cells — just like in Word.

Step 6: Format the Table

With a cell selected, you can adjust:

  • Font size and style
  • Cell background color
  • Border thickness and color

Right-click any cell for additional formatting options including Insert Row, Delete Row, Merge Cells, and Split Cell.

Step 7: Save Your Document

Press Ctrl + S (Windows) or Cmd + S (Mac) to save. Your table is now embedded in the PDF.

How to Add a Table by Converting PDF to Word

If you don’t have Acrobat Pro, or if you need a complex table with formulas, this method is more practical.

Step 1: Export PDF to Word

In Acrobat, go to File > Export To > Microsoft Word > Word Document. Choose your save location and click Export.

Step 2: Open the Word Document

Open the exported .docx file in Microsoft Word.

Step 3: Insert Your Table in Word

Go to Insert > Table in Word. Select your row and column count. Build out your full table with all data, formatting, borders, and colors.

Step 4: Convert Back to PDF

In Word, go to File > Save As > PDF or File > Export > Create PDF/XPS. Save the file as a PDF.

Step 5: Reopen in Acrobat if Needed

If you need to continue editing in Acrobat, simply open the newly saved PDF. Your table will be fully preserved.

This method gives you the most control and works even without an Acrobat Pro subscription.

How to Add a Table Using Acrobat’s Prepare Form Tool

This method works when you want a structured table-like layout that users can fill in — think data entry forms, invoices, or intake sheets.

Step 1: Open Prepare Form

Go to Tools > Prepare Form. Acrobat will scan your document and let you add interactive fields.

Step 2: Use Text Fields as Table Cells

Manually add Text Field elements arranged in rows and columns. Align them using Acrobat’s alignment tools (View > Tools > Edit PDF > Align) to create an even grid.

Step 3: Add Borders to Mimic Table Cells

In the Text Field Properties dialog (double-click any field), go to the Appearance tab. Set a border color and width to make each field look like a table cell.

Step 4: Label Each Field

Give each field a clear name in the General tab (e.g., Row1Col1, Row1Col2). This keeps data organized when forms are submitted.

Step 5: Distribute and Save

Once your form-table is complete, save the document. If distributing, use File > Distribute Form for tracking responses.

How to Copy-Paste a Table Into a PDF

Sometimes the fastest approach is simply pasting a table from another program.

Step 1: Create Your Table in Word, Excel, or Google Docs

Build the table exactly as you want it — with all data, styles, and formatting — in your preferred application.

Step 2: Select and Copy the Table

Highlight the entire table. Press Ctrl + C (Windows) or Cmd + C (Mac).

Step 3: Open the PDF in Acrobat and Enter Edit Mode

In Acrobat, click Edit PDF in the Tools panel to activate editing.

Step 4: Paste Into the PDF

Press Ctrl + V (Windows) or Cmd + V (Mac). Acrobat will insert the table as an editable object on the page.

Step 5: Resize and Reposition

Use the handles to fit the table to your layout. Double-click to edit cell content directly.

Note: Complex Excel tables with formulas won’t retain their formula functionality — they’ll paste as static text. For formula-driven tables, the Word export method is more reliable.

How to Edit an Existing Table in Adobe Acrobat

If there’s already a table in your PDF and you need to update it, follow these steps.

Step 1: Enter Edit PDF Mode

Click Edit PDF in the Tools panel.

Step 2: Click on the Table

A blue selection box will appear around the table element.

Step 3: Double-Click to Edit Content

Double-click any cell to type directly into it. The cursor will activate inside the cell.

Step 4: Add or Delete Rows and Columns

Right-click inside a cell to access Insert Row Above, Insert Row Below, Insert Column Left, Insert Column Right, Delete Row, or Delete Column.

Step 5: Format Borders and Shading

Select multiple cells by holding Shift and clicking. Then use the formatting toolbar to change border color, fill color, and font properties.

Step 6: Save Changes

Save the document when done. If this is a shared file, use File > Save As to create a new version.

How to Format a Table in Adobe Acrobat

Once your table is in place, formatting it makes the difference between something that looks thrown together and something that looks polished.

Changing Font in a Table

Select the text in a cell. Use the font options in the Edit PDF toolbar to change the typeface, size, weight, and color.

Adjusting Column Width

Click on a column border line and drag it left or right to resize. Acrobat doesn’t have an “AutoFit” feature like Word, so you’ll need to do this manually.

Adding Background Color to Cells

Select one or more cells. In the formatting panel, look for the Fill Color option. Choose a color to shade the selected cells.

Merging Cells

Select two or more adjacent cells by clicking and holding Shift. Right-click and choose Merge Cells.

Changing Border Styles

Right-click a cell, open Cell Properties, and adjust the border weight, color, and style (solid, dashed, etc.).

Common Problems (And How to Fix Them)

The “Add Table” option is greyed out

This usually means you’re in Acrobat Reader (the free version) instead of Acrobat Standard or Pro. The Add Table feature requires a paid subscription. Upgrade your plan or use the Word export method instead.

Your table shifts position when you save

This happens when tables are placed over existing text layers. Try anchoring the table by selecting it, right-clicking, and choosing Arrange > Lock Position.

Pasted table looks distorted

This typically occurs when copying from Excel. Copy the table as an image (Paste Special > Picture) from Word instead, which preserves visual formatting without compatibility issues.

Text overflows outside cells

Each cell in Acrobat behaves like a text box. If your content is too long, you’ll need to either reduce font size, expand the column width, or split the content across multiple rows.

Table doesn’t appear in the right layer

Go to View > Show/Hide > Navigation Panes > Layers to check your document layers. Move the table to the correct layer if needed.

Adobe Acrobat Statistics Worth Knowing

Understanding the scale of PDF usage helps put this workflow in context:

  • Adobe Acrobat has over 500 million installs across desktop and mobile globally
  • 85% of Fortune 500 companies use Adobe Acrobat for document workflows
  • PDFs account for 73% of all business documents shared digitally, according to industry research
  • Acrobat Pro DC costs around $19.99/month for individuals, which is relevant when deciding whether to upgrade just for the table feature
  • According to Statista, the global PDF software market was valued at over $1.5 billion in 2023 and is expected to grow at a CAGR of approximately 7.2% through 2028
  • Over 400 million people use free or paid Adobe Acrobat products every month
  • The PDF format has been the ISO standard (ISO 32000) since 2008, cementing its dominance in document sharing

These numbers reinforce why mastering Acrobat is a practical, career-relevant skill — not just a technical curiosity.

Conclusion

Adding a table in Adobe Acrobat is entirely doable — you just need to know which method fits your situation.

If you have Acrobat Pro DC, use the built-in Add Table tool for the cleanest workflow. If you’re on the free version or need complex formatting, the Word export method gives you the most flexibility. For fillable forms, the Prepare Form tool creates structured table-like layouts that users can interact with directly.

The key is matching your method to your goal: static display tables are best done in Acrobat directly; dynamic or formula-based tables belong in Excel or Word first.

Now that you know exactly how each approach works, you can stop guessing and start building.

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