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Most NZ small businesses land on one of these two when they outgrow free e-signature tools. PandaDoc and Adobe Acrobat Sign are both solid, but they're built for different problems. Picking the wrong one costs you either money or workflow friction you didn't expect.

Here's the direct comparison.

What each tool actually does

PandaDoc is a document workflow platform. Yes, it does e-signatures, but it started as a proposal and contract builder. If you're creating documents from scratch, tracking who's read what, and moving deals through a pipeline, that's its core strength.

Adobe Acrobat Sign is a signature layer on top of Adobe's PDF ecosystem. If your documents already live as PDFs and you need them signed fast, it's a clean fit. It's not trying to replace your sales process.

That distinction matters more than any feature comparison table.

Pricing in 2026 (NZD)

Both tools price in USD. Add 15% GST on top for NZ businesses.

PandaDoc:

Plan USD/user/month (annual) Approx NZD (incl. GST)
Free $0 Free — 60 docs/year cap
Starter $19 ~NZ$35
Business $49 ~NZ$90
Enterprise Custom Custom

The free plan is usable for low-volume signing, but the 2-recipient limit per document kills it for anything involving multiple signatories. Most NZ businesses will need Starter at minimum.

Adobe Acrobat Sign:

Plan USD/month (annual) Approx NZD (incl. GST)
Acrobat Standard (individual) $12.99 ~NZ$24
Acrobat Pro (individual) $19.99 ~NZ$37
Acrobat for Teams $29.99/user ~NZ$55/user
Sign Solutions Custom Custom

Adobe's individual plans include basic e-signature on unlimited documents. That's a lower barrier than PandaDoc's free plan. But the Teams plan jumps sharply once you add seats, and you need a minimum of two licences.

InfoNZD figures assume USD/NZD at approximately 0.60. GST is calculated at 15%. Both figures will shift with exchange rates.

Feature comparison: where they diverge

Feature PandaDoc Adobe Acrobat Sign
Document creation from scratch Yes (templates, drag-and-drop) No (signs PDFs, doesn't create them)
PDF editing before signing No Yes
Proposal tracking / analytics Yes (page-level on Business+) No
CRM integrations Business plan+ (HubSpot, Salesforce, Pipedrive) Microsoft 365, Salesforce, standard connectors
Free plan Yes (60 docs/year) No
Bulk send Business plan All paid plans
Audit trail All paid plans All paid plans
NZ CCLA legal compliance Yes Yes

Both tools produce legally binding signatures in New Zealand under the Contract and Commercial Law Act 2017. That's a given for any mainstream e-signature tool.

Where PandaDoc wins

If you're a service business sending proposals, service agreements, or contracts you've built inside the tool, PandaDoc is genuinely better. The proposal builder saves time. The read-receipts (showing which sections a client read) give you useful information before a follow-up call. The CRM integrations on Business tier mean your documents sync automatically.

For a 2-5 person NZ agency, consulting firm, or trade business that sends 10-30 contracts a month, PandaDoc Starter at roughly NZ$35/user/month earns its cost.

The PartnerStack affiliate trial is worth starting with their free plan to test the template library against your actual document types.

Where Adobe Sign wins

If your documents already exist as PDFs and you just need signatures, Adobe Sign is cleaner. No template-building required. If you're already paying for Adobe Creative Cloud or Acrobat for your team, you may already have signing capability included, which changes the maths entirely.

It's also the right call if you're working with clients or counterparties who are in heavily regulated environments and prefer Adobe's enterprise-grade audit trail.

For a sole trader or accountant who signs 5-10 documents a month, the Acrobat Standard individual plan at roughly NZ$24/month is hard to beat on simplicity. See Adobe Acrobat pricing.

Tip

If you're already paying for Adobe Creative Cloud All Apps, check whether your subscription includes Acrobat with e-signatures. Many NZ creative agencies are already covered and don't know it.

The per-seat problem with PandaDoc

One thing to watch: PandaDoc's per-seat pricing compounds quickly. At Starter, two users costs NZ70/month.FiveusersatBusinesstiercostsNZ450/month. If everyone in your team needs to send documents, Adobe's Teams plan at NZ$55/user can look comparable, but Adobe doesn't build the documents for you.

The honest answer is that PandaDoc is priced for sales-focused teams who generate enough closed deals to justify the cost. If you're not using the proposal templates and analytics, you're paying for features you'll never open.

What about DocuSign?

DocuSign is the market leader in pure e-signature volume. It's a fair comparison point. For NZ businesses, it sits at a similar price point to Adobe Sign, has slightly better NZ bank and government interoperability in some workflows, but lacks PandaDoc's document creation tools.

If DocuSign is already in your industry's standard toolkit (property management, legal, insurance), stick with it. If you're choosing fresh, PandaDoc or Adobe Sign are both better value.

The clear recommendation

Pick PandaDoc if you create documents inside the platform, manage a sales pipeline, and want proposal tracking. The PandaDoc free trial is a 14-day full-feature test with no card required.

Pick Adobe Sign if you sign existing PDFs, already use Adobe products, or want the simplest standalone signing tool at the lowest individual plan cost. Adobe Acrobat pricing for NZ.

Pick neither if you're under five people and sign fewer than 20 documents a month. SignWell's free plan (10 docs/month) or BoldSign's $15/month plan covers most small NZ operations without the overhead.

The test that settles it: open PandaDoc and try building one of your actual contracts from a template. If it takes less than 15 minutes and looks better than your current version, you've found your tool. If you're just uploading a PDF and adding a signature field, Adobe Sign is faster and cheaper.

TD
Toby Downs is an independent tech writer based in New Zealand, covering SaaS, AI tools, and business software for tpdowns.com. No paid placements, no sponsored opinions — just research.