The best alternatives to Adobe Photoshop, Illustrator, InDesign, and more

Posted:
in Mac Software edited June 27

If you're not quite ready to pony up the $60 a month it takes to access Adobe's Creative Cloud All Apps bundle, there are plenty of low-cost and no-cost alternatives out there. Here are our favorites.

Five colorful software icons on a dark gradient background, arranged in a circle, with a multicolored Creative Cloud icon in the center.
The best alternatives to Adobe's big-name software



Adobe products are industry standard, and, for many people, nothing else will do. I get it.

This is complicated somewhat, by the recent Adobe terms of service. Go catch up on that if you weren't aware.

While I know that there are a plethora of alternatives to Photoshop available, I've also been using Photoshop since I was fourteen, which means I've got two more decades of experience with it. Photoshop is muscle memory for me, and that convenience is worth quite a bit.

Regardless, you should be aware of the alternatives, particularly since Adobe's Creative Cloud subscription is unaffordable for many people.

Currently, if you want to use Adobe Photoshop, you can get away with paying as little as $10 a month for Photoshop and Lightroom via Adobe's photographer bundle. But if you need access to multiple Adobe apps, you'll need to pay for the Adobe Creative Cloud All Apps bundle, which clocks in at $59.99 per month -- before taxes. That can be pretty hard to justify if you just need occasional access to something like Illustrator.

So, if you need creative software and are not beholden to Adobe for one reason or another, here are my top picks.

Adobe Photoshop Alternatives



Adobe is arguably Adobe's most well-known product, so much so that it has altered our vocabulary -- and for good reason. Photoshop pretty much sets the standard when it comes to raster-based image editing.

But, while it sets the standard, it's not the only image editor out there, and it's always worth looking at what else is available.

Affinity Photo Desktop - $69.99



Affinity Photo is my personal favorite Photoshop competitor and my go-to recommendation for anyone looking to get out of the Adobe ecosystem.

A small two-story building labeled 'The Firefly Light Club Members Only,' with bright green lights and fireflies, surrounded by foliage and digital editing menu.
Affinity Photo



It features all your favorite tools in a familiar interface that is easy to pick up. Sure, there will be some adjustment time, but YouTube is full of friendly faces who are willing to teach you how to make the switch.

Affinity Photo costs $69.99 for a one-time payment for the desktop version, $18.49 for the standalone iPad version, or you can pay $164.99 to get the Affinity V2 universal license, which gives you all three Affinity products -- Designer, Photo, and Publisher -- across macOS, iPadOS, and Windows.

GIMP - Free



I would be doing everyone a great disservice if I didn't mention the OG Photoshop alternative -- GIMP. GIMP has been around since 1995 and has been a favorite of open-source advocates since its inception.

Photo editing software window showing a desert scene with sand dunes under a cloudy sky.
GIMP



While I'm not the biggest fan of the interface, it's hard to argue with the whole free thing. Not to mention, like nearly every other piece of art and design software out there, you can use YouTube to help you figure out how to use it.

Adobe Illustrator Alternatives



While Photoshop might be Adobe's most famous app, there's an argument to be made that Illustrator is Adobe's most useful app. When it comes to designing graphics for responsive websites or imagery for print, you will need something that can create vector images. For many people, that something is Illustrator -- but plenty of alternatives exist.

Affinity Designer - $69.99



I actually adore Affinity Designer -- significantly more than I like Affinity Photo. While I'm still more well-versed in Illustrator, I find the differences between the two programs negligible.

Digital illustration of a colorful landscape with animals, plants, and trees displayed on a tablet and computer screen.
Affinity Designer



Since Designer v2 launched, Affinity users now have their own Trace Image feature, which was my biggest complaint about the first version.

Like Affinity Photo, Designer will run you $69.99 for a one-time payment for the desktop version, $$18.49 for the standalone iPad version, or you can pay $164.99 to get the Affinity V2 universal license, which gives you all three Affinity products -- Designer, Photo, and Publisher -- across macOS, iPadOS, and Windows.

Inkscape - Free



Open-source and time-tested, Inkscape is a great free alternative to Illustrator. It boasts almost everything you need to make great vector art, including an Image Trace-style feature, which, again, is one of my favorite features as someone who often likes to sketch on paper first and refine later.

A digital illustration of a sleek, yellow sports car is displayed within a vector graphic editing software interface.
Inkscape | Image Credit: Gilles Pinard



My biggest complaint about Inkscape is the UI. If you're coming from Illustrator, it feels weirdly primitive, like a program that should be running on your Windows 98 PC.

That being said, interfaces are muscle memory, and the more you use the program, the better you'll get.

Inkscape is free, and now works on both Intel and Apple Silicon, which wasn't always the case.

Alternatives to Adobe InDesign



And then there's desktop publishing. Somewhat difficult to easily describe, it broadly encompasses creating text-and-image-based media. This can be anything from laying out a flyer for the neighborhood yard sale to designing your first best-selling cookbook and just about everything in between.

Many designers use multiple pieces of software to create project content, then use a desktop publishing app like InDesign to assemble it all together.

But, you guessed it -- you've got options for desktop publishing, too.

Affinity Publisher - $69.99



I adore Publisher. It's such a solid piece of software. While my first experience with desktop publishing software was with Adobe InDesign in college, I've certainly spent more time with Affinity Publisher.

Collage with bold text and images of stylish individuals. Prominent phrases include 'NOTICE,' 'SUBJECTS OF WONDER,' 'GO SEE,' and 'PLEASED TO MEET YOU.'
Affinity Publisher



It's perfect for laying out anything you need to, and I've used it to design flyers, brochures, zines, and more -- so much so that I don't even have InDesign on my Mac. And the iPad version of Publisher is good, too, though I suggest making sure you've got a keyboard for your iPad if you're going that route.

Like Photo and Designer, Publisher is priced at $69.99 for a one-time payment for the desktop version, $18.49 for the standalone iPad version, or you can pay $164.99 to get the Affinity V2 universal license, which gives you all three Affinity products -- Designer, Photo, and Publisher -- across macOS, iPadOS, and Windows.

Scribus - Free



Another open-source, free piece of software, Scribus, has been around for nearly 20 years and is a great alternative for those with a limited budget.

Again, Scribus is another piece of software with a less-than-intuitive user interface, but you're also not paying for it.

A graphical user interface for Scribus software displaying a design document titled 'CONSULTING & TRAINING' with images, text, and various editing tools.
ScribusScribusScribusScribus



Scribus can create a wide range of materials, such as newspapers, magazines, resumes, and business cards, much like InDesign. However, it's important to note that Scribus is incompatible with other desktop publishing file types, meaning users cannot edit files created in InDesign or Affinity Publisher within Scribus.

Honorable Mention: Pages - Free



No, Pages is not desktop publishing software. However, thanks to some fantastic templates available through Apple and third-party markets like Creative Market, you can do much of your lighter design work.

Multiple devices displaying a document about succulents and cacti, with headings, images of plants, and annotations on a smartphone, tablet, and laptop screen.
PagesPages



I've personally used Pages in a pinch to design digital flyers and mockups for larger projects I would be passing off to others. While it's not a professional solution, it's perfect for at-home and small scale projects.

Not to mention, Pages is available on macOS, iOS, and iPadOS, which is pretty great.

Alternatives Adobe Premiere



Another industry standard, Premiere, has been a go-to for people looking to create content for the big screen, the small screen, YouTube, and even social media for a long time. However, its steep learning curve and the recurrent subscription cost make it less than ideal for many users.

Final Cut Pro - $299.99

Apple's Final Cut Pro is a behemoth in its own right and definitely worth a look if you've got a Mac-centric workflow. Industry professionals have used Final Cut Pro for decades.

Laptop and tablet display video editing software, showcasing clips of people playing paddle tennis with timelines and editing interfaces visible.
Final Cut Pro

Hardly cheap by any means, the macOS version of Final Cut Pro is $299.99. However -- it's a buy-once, use-forever piece of software. It also has a robust community of people who make some of the best plugins we've seen.

If you're an iPad user, you can also snag Final Cut Pro for iPad, though it does require a monthly subscription of $4.99, or a yearly subscription of $49.00.

DaVinci Resolve - Free

Another iconic editor in its own right, DaVinci Resolve, is the place you want to start if you want to create a professional-looking project on a budget.

Video editing software interface showing video clips, transition options, and audio controls. Two video frames displayed at top center, timeline with video and audio tracks below, settings on the right.
DaVinci Resolve


While it has fewer features than Premiere, Final Cut Pro, or its big brother DaVinci Resolve Studio, it is hardly what anyone would consider feature-sparse. It has a host of video editing, color correcting, visual effects, motion graphics, and audio post-production features -- and did we mention that it's completely free?

If you want to upgrade to DaVinci Resolve Studio, which gives you advanced editing capabilities, you'll have to pony up $295, which is still pretty reasonable.

Honorable mention: iMovie - Free

If you're not looking for anything particularly robust, Apple's own iMovie is still a fantastic way to edit videos for personal use. It has a bunch of basic features, such as editing video speed, adding filters, and video transitions, all in a very intuitive interface.




It's free, easy to use, and available for Mac, iPhone, and iPad.

When nothing else will do

Even with all of these great alternatives, there's still a chance that you'll need to use at least one Adobe app. But don't worry -- you do have a couple of options.

Again, as I mentioned, instead of paying for the entire Creative Cloud bundle, which costs more than $60 per month after taxes, you can always snag the Photographers bundle, which includes Lightroom and Photoshop, for $9.99 per month.

Single app subscriptions for most Adobe products, including Premiere, Photoshop (without Lightroom), Illustrator, After Effects, InDesign, Audition, Dreamweaver, and Animate, costs $29.99 per month. This might be the route to go if you just need Premiere or Illustrator.

If you're a student, Adobe offers education pricing that slashes a full 60% off of the retail price of the Creative Cloud All Apps, dropping the price from $60 to $20 a month.

And, if you've got an iPad-centric workflow, Adobe's iPad-only plan is significantly cheaper than its desktop-and-iPad plan. You'll get iPad-only versions of Photoshop, Illustrator, Fresco, and Spark, as well as 100GB of cloud storage and access to Adobe Fonts for $14.99 monthly.



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Comments

  • Reply 1 of 19
    JimPMJimPM Posts: 1member
    The photoshop alternative I use is Acorn from flyingmeat.com . It’s easy to use and has a layout similar to classic photoshop. 
  • Reply 2 of 19
    SGilbertSGilbert Posts: 8member
    How can you write a complete alternative article without mentioning Pixelmator? 
    foregoneconclusionCalvinatordavebarneslotonesnubusappleinsideruserbaconstangwilliamlondonDownUndermaasj
  • Reply 3 of 19
    Listen, I'm as disgusted with Adobe as anybody, but to say Affinity Designer is comparable is just lunacy. Designer's handling of layers is its worst bugaboo. Everything is placed on a new layer, including each letter of text. How can you find or manage anything if you've got hundreds of layers?? Designer doesn't even have a way of moving an object a specified number of pixels. That's great if you don't need precision in your designs. I could go on and on. How do I know all this? I tried Designer for over three years, hoping with each release (including v2) they would wake up and make obvious improvements. Sorry, Designer is one big turd.
    nubusMrBunsideOfer
  • Reply 4 of 19
    Pixelmator  +1

    Not a graphics professional so I've been able to avoid the Adobe tax since 1998. Pixelmator Pro is well worth the look.
    lotoneswilliamlondonOfermaasj
  • Reply 5 of 19
    lotoneslotones Posts: 93member
    Another Pixelmator fan here. I used to use GIMP way back when and always had a hard time deciphering the interface, but hey... it was free. Then I discovered the original Pixelmator over 15 years ago when it was in beta and whoa!... I could actually understand most of the interface, or figure it out on my own. Gladly updated to Pixelmator Pro for the one-time price (legacy discount was $30, regularly $40) when it became available, and haven't looked back. I'm am by no means a pro user, but neither are most of us, and when I need pro-like results Pixelmator Pro has my back.
    appleinsideruserwilliamlondonOfermaasj
  • Reply 6 of 19
    The leaving out of Pixelmator Pro seems odd to me. Affinity Suite is great, I will sing their praises from the roof top but especially if somebody doesn’t want to do design work and but just wants to do retouching Pixelmator Pro or cool effects or whatever it’s fantastic for that. Even for illustration it’s got a lot of tools.

    Also I feel like you had some screenshots for the iPad versions in the screenshots which suggests this article is for both Mac and iPad but you left out Procreate which is an indispensable app for illustration.

    Also it would be worth mentioning Procreate Dreams for people who use Adobe After Effects. It’s not a total replacement but it can handle a lot of cool animations and integrate with video. 
    williamlondonOfermaasj
  • Reply 7 of 19
    nubusnubus Posts: 575member
    Adobe applications are part of a graphic ecosystem that can't easily be split into features in single applications. Working with on a professional level with print you need Acrobat Pro. That will make the rest of the bundle is almost free. You probably also need plugins that only work with Adobe tools, some of the fonts from Adobe, and you likely need solid compatibility with Adobe file formats for collaborating.

    If you ever want a corporate job then Photoshop, Illustrator, and InDesign are the tools of the trade. FCP, Figma, and Logic are AFAIK the only widely used creative pro applications currently not controlled by Adobe.

    The bundling is killing both competition and development. There is a reason why Adobe could move all InDesign development away from HQ and decided to do as little as possible. Same goes for other products that are standing still.
  • Reply 8 of 19
    9secondkox29secondkox2 Posts: 3,026member
    Never would have considered these if Adobe hadn’t decided it owns my work. 

    Best thing Adobe should do if they want that is to make creative cloud free. Because they’re basically just Google now. 

    So these alternative apps are looking better by the minute. 

    Well… except for creepy canva buying affinity. 
    beowulfschmidtOfer
  • Reply 9 of 19
    Listen, I'm as disgusted with Adobe as anybody, but to say Affinity Designer is comparable is just lunacy. Designer's handling of layers is its worst bugaboo. Everything is placed on a new layer, including each letter of text. How can you find or manage anything if you've got hundreds of layers?? Designer doesn't even have a way of moving an object a specified number of pixels. That's great if you don't need precision in your designs. I could go on and on. How do I know all this? I tried Designer for over three years, hoping with each release (including v2) they would wake up and make obvious improvements. Sorry, Designer is one big turd.
    ???? Affinity Designer does not put each individual letter of text on a separate layer. Click the canvas with either the Artistic or Frame text tools and type away. It will all be on the same layer until you stop typing and select another tool. You can also select 'Pixels' as the measurement for your file under Document Setup and then use the X,Y coordinates in the Transform panel to place items in exact pixel positions. 
    appleinsideruserwilliamlondonOfer
  • Reply 10 of 19
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,594member

    If you're quite ready to pony up the $60 a month it takes to access Adobe's Creative Cloud All Apps bundle, there are plenty of low-cost and no-cost alternatives out there. 

    When nothing else will do

    ...instead of paying for the entire Creative Cloud bundle, which costs more than $60 per month after taxes, you can always snag the Photographers bundle, which includes Lightroom and Photoshop, for $19.99 per month.


    Read on AppleInsider
    I believe the Photographers Bundle is $120/year, or $10/month. That's what your link says. 

    The only Adobe services valuable to me are Photoshop and Lightroom, and $5/mo each is way cheap for what they can do.  Then they throw in Photoshop Beta, Adobe Bridge, Firefly, and Adobe Fonts for free, all of which I can run locally and stay off their cloud, plus several others I can choose to run "in the cloud" at no additional charge. I avoid those. 
    edited June 9
  • Reply 11 of 19
    dewmedewme Posts: 5,676member
    Affinity is having a 50% off flash sale right now. All three V2 Universal License for $82.99 USD. You can install them on any platform, including Mac, iPad, and Windows. Not sure how long the flash sale lasts, but you can’t beat the price.
    appleinsideruserOfer
  • Reply 12 of 19
    Listen, I'm as disgusted with Adobe as anybody, but to say Affinity Designer is comparable is just lunacy. Designer's handling of layers is its worst bugaboo. Everything is placed on a new layer, including each letter of text. How can you find or manage anything if you've got hundreds of layers?? Designer doesn't even have a way of moving an object a specified number of pixels. That's great if you don't need precision in your designs. I could go on and on. How do I know all this? I tried Designer for over three years, hoping with each release (including v2) they would wake up and make obvious improvements. Sorry, Designer is one big turd.
    ???? Affinity Designer does not put each individual letter of text on a separate layer. Click the canvas with either the Artistic or Frame text tools and type away. It will all be on the same layer until you stop typing and select another tool. You can also select 'Pixels' as the measurement for your file under Document Setup and then use the X,Y coordinates in the Transform panel to place items in exact pixel positions. 
    I should have clarified. When you create text and convert to curves, each character is placed on its own layer. And the reason for this would be…? As far as moving elements a specified distance (like Illustrator's Move dialog), Designer makes you take the long way around by going to Transform and calculating exact pixel position instead of simply entering something like *move or copy 100 pixels on the X axis and 30 pixels on the Y axis*. Illustrator also lets you see a preview of the transformation here, just as it does with so many other transformations. Designer is rudimentary and unsophisticated. And largely unimproved. I wish it weren't so.
    Ofer
  • Reply 13 of 19
    gatorguygatorguy Posts: 24,594member
    dewme said:
    Affinity is having a 50% off flash sale right now. All three V2 Universal License for $82.99 USD. You can install them on any platform, including Mac, iPad, and Windows. Not sure how long the flash sale lasts, but you can’t beat the price.
    I think it's only until Tuesday. 
    dewmeOfer
  • Reply 14 of 19
    bulk001bulk001 Posts: 780member
    Complaining about $60 a month for software that can generate many hundreds of thousands of dollars per year per seat is just silly. 
  • Reply 15 of 19
    Listen, I'm as disgusted with Adobe as anybody, but to say Affinity Designer is comparable is just lunacy. Designer's handling of layers is its worst bugaboo. Everything is placed on a new layer, including each letter of text. How can you find or manage anything if you've got hundreds of layers?? Designer doesn't even have a way of moving an object a specified number of pixels. That's great if you don't need precision in your designs. I could go on and on. How do I know all this? I tried Designer for over three years, hoping with each release (including v2) they would wake up and make obvious improvements. Sorry, Designer is one big turd.
    ???? Affinity Designer does not put each individual letter of text on a separate layer. Click the canvas with either the Artistic or Frame text tools and type away. It will all be on the same layer until you stop typing and select another tool. You can also select 'Pixels' as the measurement for your file under Document Setup and then use the X,Y coordinates in the Transform panel to place items in exact pixel positions. 
    I should have clarified. When you create text and convert to curves, each character is placed on its own layer. And the reason for this would be…? As far as moving elements a specified distance (like Illustrator's Move dialog), Designer makes you take the long way around by going to Transform and calculating exact pixel position instead of simply entering something like *move or copy 100 pixels on the X axis and 30 pixels on the Y axis*. Illustrator also lets you see a preview of the transformation here, just as it does with so many other transformations. Designer is rudimentary and unsophisticated. And largely unimproved. I wish it weren't so.
    Converting to curves does put each letter on a layer BUT they are all automatically part of a group as well. Not sure what the problem would be with that. Or with the pixel positioning in Transform. Select the object and you will know its current X and Y position in Transform. Want it to move another 30 pixels on X? Add or subtract 30 from the current X position and type it into Transform. 
  • Reply 16 of 19
    I'm just mystified you haven't included Pixelmator. Did you show this article to an editor? To the writing team? 

    I own Affinity Photo and Pixelmator Pro. Pixelmator Pro is hands down the best. And I love Affinity. I mean Pixelmator is BRILLIANT! 
    lotonesOfer
  • Reply 17 of 19
    markbvtmarkbvt Posts: 10member
    One has to wonder if this is going to let QuarkXPress recapture some of the pro market. Quark is still releasing new versions regularly, you can still buy a traditional perpetual license, and their license agreement has no hint of the troublesome, invasive tactics Adobe is adopting. And despite having fallen out of favor for the past 20 years, QuarkXPress is still an actual competitor for InDesign. Affinity Designer and (shudder) Canva just can't cut it for heavy production work.

    I've had to keep up with QuarkXPress over the years because of one client still using it, and while it's not as nice to use as InDesign, it is very capable.
    Ofernetling
  • Reply 18 of 19
    saareksaarek Posts: 1,563member
    SGilbert said:
    How can you write a complete alternative article without mentioning Pixelmator? 
    They weren’t paid to mention it… I concur though, downright criminal to leave Pixelmator Pro and their sister product Photomator out of this article.
  • Reply 19 of 19
    netlingnetling Posts: 76member
    I agree with that Quarkxpress should have been mentioned, as an alternative to InDesign!!

    Also believe it or not, but CorelDRAW is still around and a solid alternative to most of the creative adobe suite!
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