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You can now use Adobe’s photo and PDF editing tools inside ChatGPT

Photoshop, Acrobat, and Adobe Express are now built into ChatGPT

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Your ChatGPT just turned into a mini editing studio. Adobe has made Photoshop Express and Acrobat tools free to use directly inside ChatGPT, allowing users to modify images or work on PDFs without opening a separate app. You can now use Photoshop Express features such as crop, background removal, retouch, filters, and adjustments to edit photos. You can also edit and organize PDFs through Acrobat, and features like merge, add comment, sign, redact sensitive details, or convert files. The best part is that now you get AI help from ChatGPT while working and ideas for design, content suggestions, or layout fixes.

How these tools work inside ChatGPT

Adobe’s tools can be launched directly inside a chat, simply by uploading a file and typing what you want done. You can say something like “Adobe Photoshop, help me blur the background of this image,” and the app activates within the same conversation. Once it is running, you can keep asking for changes.

Depending on the request, Adobe may show different versions for you to pick from or provide small interface elements you can adjust yourself. For example, Photoshop Express can surface sliders for brightness, exposure, or contrast so you can fine-tune an image right inside ChatGPT.

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The Acrobat features inside ChatGPT work the same way, but the feature requires being logged into your Adobe account to save or export files. Using the tools inside ChatGPT itself does not cost anything.

These tools easily cover everyday image edits and document tasks, but for complex editing, you’ll still be better off switching to the full Adobe apps.

Nevertheless, this update turns ChatGPT into a useful workspace for people who deal with documents or images daily. It also fits into a larger shift in how creative tools are changing. Editing is becoming quicker and more guided by AI, so the focus stays on creating rather than learning software. Adobe’s recent update to Premiere on iOS, which gives users an easier way to craft polished short videos for social media, points in the same direction. Together, these improvements point to a future where creative work becomes easier and less technical.

Manisha Priyadarshini
Manisha Priyadarshini is a tech and entertainment writer with over nine years of editorial experience.
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