QuickBooks Online has never had a real signature workflow — no remote signing, no proof of delivery — and Intuit’s newer invoice layout dropped even the limited in-person option for affected users. As a result, dozens of articles have appeared listing “the 10 best e-signature apps for QuickBooks.” Most are written by affiliate marketers who’ve never actually used any of them. This is a more honest take. Five apps, what each is genuinely good at, and which one to pick based on how your business actually runs.
The shortlist
These are the five signature apps with a real QuickBooks Online integration that’s still working in 2026:
- DocuSign
- PandaDoc
- HelloSign (Dropbox Sign)
- Adobe Acrobat Sign
- Billet
Anything else you see ranked online either has no QB integration, has a broken one, or costs five figures a year.
Quick comparison
| App | Starts at | QB sync direction | Built for the field? | Send limit |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| DocuSign | $35/user/mo | One-way (QB → DocuSign) | No | 100/yr at base tier |
| PandaDoc | $19/user/mo | Native + Zapier | No | Unlimited |
| HelloSign | $25/user/mo | Native | No | Unlimited |
| Adobe Acrobat Sign | $30/user/mo | Native | No | Unlimited |
| Billet | $5/user/mo | Two-way native | Yes | Unlimited |
Which one to pick
If you’re a desk-based service business (consultants, agencies, lawyers)
DocuSign or Adobe Acrobat Sign. Both are built for someone sitting at a computer, sending a 12-page contract, and waiting two days for the customer to read it and sign on their laptop. Overkill for a quick proof-of-delivery on a $400 invoice. Excellent for closing a signed scope of work on a six-figure engagement.
The downside is pricing scales fast. Five users at DocuSign Standard runs $175 per month before you’ve collected a single signature.
If you want low-friction sends without the DocuSign price
PandaDoc Essentials. Cheaper than DocuSign, native QB integration, unlimited sends. You’re still managing a separate dashboard and the workflow assumes the customer is online and has time to read a doc, but the price is reasonable for a small ops team.
If you deliver goods, do field service, or need signatures in person
Billet. It’s the only one of the five built around the field workflow rather than the office workflow. Drivers and reps capture signatures on an iPad, in person, with GPS coordinates stamped on the signed PDF. The QB invoice updates automatically, two-way, no manual reconciliation. $5 per active user per month, unlimited sends, works offline.
This isn’t a knock on the other four. DocuSign is the right tool when you’re closing a SaaS contract over Zoom. It’s the wrong tool when a delivery driver is standing on a job site with one bar of cell signal and a customer waiting for him to leave.
If you only need a handful of signatures a month
Adobe Acrobat Sign, if you already pay for Adobe Creative Cloud. The integration is included on most CC plans, so you’re not adding a new line item to your stack. Outside that, it’s not the cheapest option.
How to actually decide
Three questions:
- Are signatures captured in person or remotely? If in person, you want a field-first app (Billet). If remote, a desk-first app (DocuSign, PandaDoc) is fine.
- How many users will be sending or capturing? At small headcount the per-user cost doesn’t matter much. At ten or more users the gap between $5 and $35 is real money.
- How important is the QB sync round-trip? If you want the signed status, signature image, and timestamp pushed back into QB automatically, you need a two-way integration. Most desk-first apps are one-way (QB invoice goes to the signature app, signed copy doesn’t come back without manual work).
Try Billet free for 14 days
Most signature apps don’t offer a free trial. Billet does. 14 days, no credit card, full access. Connect QuickBooks during signup and your first signed invoice can go out the same afternoon.