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Pricing provided by Illustrator.

Creative Cloud Pro for teams

Starting at $99.99
1 License Per Month

Illustrator for teams

Starting at $37.99
1 License Per Month
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Adobe Illustrator Reviews (5,971)

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Reviews

Adobe Illustrator Reviews (5,971)

View 8 Video Reviews
4.6
5,972 reviews

Review Summary

Generated using AI from real user reviews
Users consistently praise Adobe Illustrator for its precision and flexibility in creating scalable vector graphics, making it ideal for logos and illustrations. The seamless integration with other Adobe apps enhances workflow efficiency, allowing for easy editing and collaboration. However, many note a common limitation: the steep learning curve can be challenging for beginners.

Pros & Cons

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Sanjith T.
ST
Graphic Designer
Design
Mid-Market (51-1000 emp.)
"Flexible Workspace and Precise, Professional Design with Adobe Illustrator"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

The best thing about Adobe Illustrator is the flexible workspace. I really like that we can work not only inside the artboard but also outside the artboard area, which makes designing and organizing elements much easier. The export options are also very convenient and efficient. It is especially powerful for typography creation and illustration work. For my daily design tasks, Illustrator helps me create clean, professional visuals with great precision and control. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

I don’t have any major dislikes about Adobe Illustrator because it is an essential part of my daily workflow. I use it regularly for design projects, and it consistently meets my expectations. Overall, it has been a reliable and powerful tool for my work. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Nicolo G.
NG
Graphic Designer
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
"Versatile Design Tool with Robust Vector Capabilities"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

I use Adobe Illustrator for every graphic design project, whether it's flyers, infographics, logos, or illustrations. I appreciate how it solves my clients' needs by providing vectors, especially for brand logos, with crisp quality even when zoomed in 1000%. The pen tool is top-tier, smooth, and versatile for creating logos and illustrations. I love the ability to have multiple artboards, which is essential for big projects like branding and prints. The pen tool and multiple artboards are particularly helpful when handling multiple pages for projects like brochures or brand guides, allowing me to save them as PDFs with amazing compression settings without sacrificing quality. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

It's a complex tool for advanced users. I think being able to explore their features without digging deep onto settings. The community around it like TikTok/YouTubers help to explore features. I think giving more drop features in YouTube like what Figma is doing in their promotional ads. It is a niche and industry-loved platform but it needs to catch up with other company's marketing and innovation. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Troy B.
TB
Animator and Instructional Designer
Enterprise (> 1000 emp.)
"The best vector drawing tool out there"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

You cannot beat vector drawing formats like Illustrator provides. The crisp edges and zoomability make printing very smooth and professional. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

The only downside is working with too many control points when you upload a bitmapped image. You can adjust how many it does, but for a really good representation it brings in a lot of points. It takes a bit to learn how to manipulate them properly and reduce the amount without loosing too much quality. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Ashish  K.
AK
Content Creator
Computer Software
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
"The Essential Industry Standard for Aspiring Graphic Designers"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

I’m still learning about its features and functions as part of the Adobe creative skills batch, which is a short-term certification program at my college, Ambedkar DSEU. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

The steep learning curve can feel pretty intimidating at first. With so many tools and deeply nested menus, it’s easy for a beginner to get overwhelmed and not know where to start. On top of that, it’s fairly resource-heavy; I’ve noticed that when I’m working on complex files with lots of artboards, performance can lag on my laptop unless I close other background applications. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Verified User in Design
UD
Enterprise (> 1000 emp.)
"Adobe Illustrator: The Gold Standard for Designers"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

Adobe Illustrator is the best application. I used Adobe Illustrator almost on a daily use—It is the crème de la crème of the design world. I’ve always felt that if you’re serious about your craft, Adobe Illustrator is the gold standard. Nothing else! Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

In this case, I actually have nothing bad to say about Adobe Illustrator. As an avid user for over 30 years, Adobe Illustrator is easy to use and implement in my workflow. The ease of integration on my computer, Mac and PC was simply the easiest. Customer Support is by way of the Adobe Community Forum where staff members to community members who will help answer the issues on hand, this was one of the features that I loved about Adobe! Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Mayur G.
MG
Software Engineer
Information Technology and Services
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
"Precision Vector Powerhouse, Scaling Brand Identities from Icons to Billboards"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

The sheer precision of the vector engine remains unmatched, especially for high-end brand identity projects. I particularly love the 2026 performance upgrades that make working with hundreds of complex artboards feel almost instantaneous compared to earlier versions. The new "Text to Pattern AI" features has also fundamentally changed my workflow, allowing for rapid exploration of intricate textures and motif variations that used to take hours to build manually. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

Despite the recent speed improvements, the software can still be quite resource - heavy when dealing with advanced 3D rendering or complex gradient meshes on anything but high-end hardware. Additionally, the subscription only model remains a point of friction for small scale projects where the full creative cloud suite might be overkill. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Ishan S.
IS
Manager and Dietician at Chaitanya Homoeo Clinic, Medical Store Owner, Content Creator
Hospital & Health Care
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
"Powerful tool for Diet, Clinic, and Educational Content Creation"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

I work as a Dietician and Nutritionist, manage a homeopathy clinic, and also create health education and teaching content. My daily work includes preparing short classes, educational videos, patient guidance material, and online teaching sessions.

. I use it to design diet charts, patient education posts, and health related visuals for different conditions, which I use regularly in clinic guidance, educational posts, and online teaching sessions.

Illustrator offers many useful features, but I mainly use the ones needed for my work, such as layout design, vector visuals, and text organization. Once I got familiar with the basics, it became easier to use and fit well into my daily workflow. Setting it up and starting work did not take much effort, and it integrates smoothly with other tools I use for videos, presentations, and educational content.

As a content creator and educator, I find it very helpful for organizing information visually. I can clearly show foods to eat, foods to avoid, daily meal timing, and basic nutrition rules in one clean layout, which is easier for patients and students to understand than plain text. The vector format keeps the quality clear whether the content is used in videos, presentations, or shared digitally, and landscape layouts help me fit complete diet charts on a single page.

The AI-based vector features save time by helping me create basic visuals quickly, after which I manually edit the text to keep the information simple and correct. I use Adobe Illustrator frequently for my diet, clinic, and education related work, and whenever I needed help, customer support was quick to respond and resolve issues. Overall, it supports my work by helping me create reusable, professional health education visuals for daily practical use. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

What I dislike about Adobe Illustrator is that it is not very quick for small edits. If I just want to change text or update a simple diet chart, it still takes a few extra steps. The interface has many tools, so sometimes finding the right option slows me down during busy clinic or content work. It also feels heavy on the system when files become large, which can affect workflow. Overall, it is powerful, but not the fastest option for quick, everyday tasks. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Dharamveer p.
DP
Application Security Engineer
Information Technology and Services
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
Business partner of the seller or seller's competitor, not included in G2 scores.
"Unmatched Precision and Quality for Professional Design"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

The vector-based approach means designs stay sharp at any size, which is crucial for logos and professional graphics. The precision tools, flexibility, and reliability make it a go-to choice when quality really matters. Once you’re comfortable with it, it lets you turn ideas into clean, polished designs. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

What I dislike about Adobe Illustrator is the learning curve. For new users, even simple tasks can feel unnecessarily complex, and the interface isn’t very beginner-friendly.

It can also be resource-heavy. On larger files, performance sometimes slows down, which breaks focus. The subscription cost is another downside, especially if you don’t use it daily. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Luca P.
LP
Chief Operations Officer DEQUA Studio | Formerly CTO in MarTech
Marketing and Advertising
Small-Business (50 or fewer emp.)
"A professional vector graphics powerhouse that defined industry standards"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

Adobe Illustrator stands as the definitive vector graphics application that I rely on daily for creating scalable artwork, logos, illustrations, and complex design compositions. The precision and control I experience when working with vectors in this application is unmatched. When I manipulate anchor points and bezier curves using the Pen tool, I achieve pixel-perfect results that remain crisp at any scale, from business card size to billboard dimensions. This scalability is fundamental to my workflow because I often need to repurpose designs across multiple formats without quality degradation

The 2025 and 2026 updates brought performance enhancements that transformed my daily experience. The application now launches up to three times faster than previous versions, which eliminates the frustration of waiting several minutes just to start working. File saving operations are approximately six times quicker, saving me substantial time when working on complex projects with multiple artboards and hundreds of vector paths. These speed improvements are not marginal tweaks but meaningful changes that directly impact my productivity throughout the workday.

The enhanced gradient capabilities with dithering functionality solve a persistent problem I encountered with color banding in smooth transitions. Previously, gradients would display visible stepping between color values, particularly noticeable in large format prints or when working with subtle tonal shifts. The new dithering applies controlled noise patterns that break up these bands, creating genuinely smooth transitions that appear natural to the human eye. The Perceptual blending mode for gradients mimics how our visual system processes color shifts, producing results that feel organic rather than computationally generated.

The artboard management system received substantial improvements that streamline multi-design workflows. I can now apply colors directly to artboards without creating background rectangles, a small change that saves dozens of clicks across a typical project. The ability to lock artboards prevents accidental movement when selecting nearby objects, addressing a frustration that plagued earlier versions. On-canvas renaming lets me organize my workspace without opening separate dialogs, and the enhanced snapping options including Snap to Tangent and Snap to Perpendicular provide geometric precision when aligning elements. Right-click contextual menus for rearranging or exporting selected artboards make batch operations straightforward when delivering multiple logo variations or social media asset sets to clients.

The Snapping Quick Access panel represents thoughtful interface design that reduces workflow interruption. Instead of navigating through nested menus to toggle Snap to Grid, Snap to Pixel, Snap to Point, or Smart Guides, I access these controls directly from the Control bar. This immediate access means I can switch snapping modes mid-task without losing focus or breaking my creative flow. The panel also provides instant access to fine-tuning options like Alignment Guides and Snap to Glyph, which are critical when working on typography-heavy compositions or precise icon sets.

The redesigned font browser addresses longstanding usability issues with typeface selection. The previous implementation felt clunky and made hunting for specific fonts tedious, particularly when working with large type libraries. The new browser provides better search functionality, improved preview rendering, and organizational features that help me locate and apply fonts efficiently. When working on branding projects that require evaluating dozens of typeface options, this enhancement saves considerable time and reduces the friction of typography exploration.

The Pencil tool now provides live preview as I draw, allowing me to see the path before committing it to the artboard. This real-time feedback helps me create more accurate freehand shapes on the first attempt rather than relying heavily on post-drawing adjustments. Combined with the enhanced snapping tools, I can create organic shapes that still align precisely with existing geometry when needed.

The Color panel improvements include the ability to instantly copy Hex values from multiple locations including the Color Picker, New Swatches, and Swatch Options dialogs. This seemingly minor feature actually streamlines collaboration and asset management. When working with brand guidelines or sharing color specifications with developers, I can extract and distribute exact color values with a single click rather than manually transcribing hexadecimal codes or taking screenshots.

Snap to Pixel enhancements eliminate half-pixel shifts and misleading visual cues that previously caused alignment issues in screen-based design work. When creating user interface elements, icons, or web graphics, maintaining pixel-perfect alignment is non-negotiable. The improved implementation shows alignment guides only between truly pixel-aligned objects, ensuring my designs render sharply on screens without antialiasing artifacts that blur edges.

Integration with Adobe Firefly brings practical AI capabilities directly into my vector workflow. The Place from Adobe Cloud feature lets me pull Firefly-generated images straight into projects without downloading files and manually importing them. This direct pipeline from generative AI to vector composition accelerates concepting phases when I need placeholder imagery or want to explore visual directions quickly. The Generative Shape Fill allows me to create design elements that follow an established visual style, maintaining consistency across complex illustrations without manually recreating similar elements.

Text to Pattern functionality transforms written descriptions into repeating pattern fills. Instead of spending hours manually creating background textures or decorative elements, I can generate pattern options from prompts and refine the results. While I maintain creative control over the final output, this feature handles the repetitive technical work of pattern creation. Generative Recolor analyzes illustrations and applies new color combinations based on text prompts, which accelerates the process of exploring different color schemes for client presentations.

The Turntable feature in beta provides multi-angle views of vector artwork, creating pseudo-3D presentations of flat designs. This is particularly valuable when creating product mockups or preparing pitch materials that need to show how a logo or graphic element would appear from different perspectives. While not true 3D modeling, it provides sufficient dimensional representation for many commercial applications without requiring separate 3D software.

Enhanced 3D and material tools provide more sophisticated texture and lighting options than previous implementations. When creating product packaging mockups or realistic illustrations, these capabilities allow me to add depth and material qualities directly within Illustrator rather than exporting to dedicated 3D applications. The improved controls for lighting and surface properties give me adequate control for most vector-based dimensional work.

The extensive tool ecosystem covers nearly every vector manipulation scenario I encounter. The Pathfinder panel provides boolean operations to combine, subtract, intersect, and exclude shapes, which is fundamental for creating complex forms from simple geometric primitives. The Appearance panel allows me to apply multiple strokes, fills, and effects to single objects with precise control over stacking order and blending modes. Brushes including calligraphic, scatter, art, and pattern brushes extend the creative possibilities beyond simple strokes, enabling painterly effects and decorative elements within the vector environment.

Typography controls in Illustrator exceed what most dedicated type applications offer. Character and paragraph styling, advanced OpenType feature access, text on path functionality, area type options, and precise kerning and tracking controls give me complete authority over typographic compositions. The ability to convert text to outlines provides flexibility for logo work and situations where font licensing or embedding becomes complicated.

Symbols and libraries streamline repetitive element usage across documents. When working on icon sets, pattern libraries, or brand identity systems with recurring graphic elements, symbols let me place instances that all update when I modify the master. The CC Libraries integration extends this capability across the entire Creative Cloud ecosystem, allowing me to maintain consistent assets across Illustrator, Photoshop, InDesign, and other Adobe applications.

The Actions panel enables automation of repetitive task sequences. When I need to apply the same series of transformations, effects, or export settings to multiple objects or files, recording an action eliminates manual repetition. While not as powerful as scripting languages, actions provide accessible automation for common batch operations without requiring programming knowledge.

Cross-application workflows with other Adobe products create a cohesive ecosystem that justifies the Creative Cloud subscription model. Copying vector artwork from Illustrator and pasting it into Photoshop as smart objects maintains editability while allowing raster effects and photo integration. Placing Illustrator files into InDesign preserves vectors at full resolution regardless of scaling, which is essential for print production workflows. After Effects imports Illustrator layers as separate elements, enabling motion graphics based on vector compositions without manual reconstruction.

The multi-canvas workspace improvement allows me to work on multiple artboards simultaneously in a unified view. When creating design systems or comparing variations, this capability reduces the constant switching between artboards that previously disrupted visual comparison and design decision making.

Export options cover every format requirement I encounter across print, web, and application design contexts. SVG export for web implementation, EPS for legacy print workflows, PDF for compatibility, PNG and JPEG for raster requirements, and specialized formats for various production scenarios are all available with extensive parameter control. Asset Export functionality lets me define multiple export specifications for individual objects or artboards, automating the generation of various file formats and sizes from a single source document.

The Layers panel provides organizational structure that scales from simple compositions to complex illustrations with hundreds of discrete elements. Hierarchical nesting, layer naming, visibility toggles, lock controls, and appearance indicators help me maintain navigable document structures even in projects with substantial complexity. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

Resource consumption on my system is substantial, particularly when working with complex documents. While the 2025 updates improved launch times and save speeds, the application still demands significant RAM and processing power during active work. With 16 GB of RAM, I occasionally encounter slowdowns when working on illustrations with numerous gradient mesh objects, complex brushes, or hundreds of transparency-enabled elements. The system requirements specify 8 GB minimum but recommend 16 GB or more, and my experience confirms that the minimum specification provides a marginal experience at best. Anyone with older hardware or budget systems will likely struggle with acceptable performance.

The GPU requirements add another hardware consideration. Illustrator recommends at least 1 GB of VRAM with OpenGL 4.x support for optimal performance features. While the application functions without dedicated graphics hardware, GPU acceleration makes a noticeable difference in pan and zoom responsiveness, preview rendering, and certain effect calculations. This means users need relatively recent and capable systems to experience the application as intended, which creates an accessibility barrier for freelancers or students with limited budgets.

File size can balloon unexpectedly in ways that are not always obvious from the visual complexity of the artwork. Embedded raster images, complex effects, transparency flattening requirements, and extensive text content all contribute to larger files. I have encountered situations where relatively simple-looking compositions result in files that are slow to open, save, or share because of underlying structural complexity. The application does not always provide clear feedback about which elements are causing file size issues, making optimization a process of educated guessing and selective deletion. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

MB
UX Research and Design Specialist
Education Management
Enterprise (> 1000 emp.)
"Adobe Illustrator: Every Tool You Need for Perfect Vector Icons"
What do you like best about Adobe Illustrator?

I mainly use Adobe Illustrator for vector artwork, and I’ve been creating icons for our websites in Illustrator. It really has all the tools and features I need to get the icons looking right. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

What do you dislike about Adobe Illustrator?

It feels too heavy. Sometimes it takes forever just to move around or draw pixels. I really wish it were lighter, or at least that there were an option to turn off certain features so it could run and respond faster. Review collected by and hosted on G2.com.

Pricing Options

Pricing provided by Illustrator.

Creative Cloud Pro for teams

Starting at $99.99
1 License Per Month

Illustrator for teams

Starting at $37.99
1 License Per Month
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