About us
English
View Screenshot
Annotate WhatsApp Chat Screenshots and More
or drag and drop a file
Supports PDF and image file formats (maximum 100MB)
By using the product, you agree to our Terms of Service and have read our Privacy Policy.
Trusted by Millions Worldwide
4.4
2,100+ reviews on G2
4.4
8,200+ reviews on Capterra
4.4
73,000+ reviews on App Store
248M
Registered Users
5B
Notes Created
2M
Notes Created Daily
Frequently Asked Questions
Upload your screenshot, then use the annotation tools like the pen, text, or shapes to add your notes or highlights directly on the image.
Yes, use the highlight tool to emphasize specific text or areas within your screenshot, making it easier to draw attention to important parts.
Select the shapes tool and choose the arrow shape. Click to place and point the arrow anywhere on your screenshot for clear direction or emphasis.
Absolutely. Use the text annotation tool to insert comments or labels. Simply click on the area, type your text, and adjust its position and size as needed.
Upload your image and select the pen tool for freehand drawing or marking. Customize the stroke width and color to suit your needs.
You can annotate images in JPEG, PNG, and WEBP formats. Upload any of these to start adding your notes and highlights.
Yes, each image you upload should not exceed 100 MB. Larger files need to be reduced in size before uploading.
Multi-page support is available for PDFs. However, for images like screenshots, each file is treated singly.
No, this tool is designed for desktop use only. Access the annotation features through browser-based applications on a computer.
No, you can't edit existing text. You can only add annotations on top of your image, such as notes, highlights, or shapes.
Simply drag and drop your WhatsApp chat screenshots or use the upload button to select from your file system for easy annotation.
Yes, our tool runs entirely within your browser, so you don't need to install any applications to annotate images.
The tool processes each file individually. You'll need to complete annotations on one and download it before starting on another.
Upload your broken screen image and use shapes or text annotations to indicate damaged areas or communicate repair instructions.
Yes, logged-in users have the option to save their completed annotations to Evernote after they finish editing.