---
title: "How to Convert Handwriting to Text in OneNote"
canonical: "https://www.handwritingocr.com/handwriting-to-text/how-to-convert-handwriting-to-text-in-onenote-on-android"
pubDate: "2024-11-15T00:00:00.000Z"
updatedDate: "2026-07-01T00:00:00.000Z"
description: "Step-by-step OneNote handwriting-to-text on Android, iPad, and Windows, plus the honest limits and the faster route for cursive or multi-page documents."
subtitle: "How OneNote's Ink to Text works on Android, iPad, and Windows, where it does well, where it falls short, and the faster route when you have more than a clean page or two."
---

Microsoft OneNote can turn handwriting into editable text through its **Ink to Text** feature, and it is genuinely useful for tidy notes. But there is an important catch that most guides skip: Ink to Text only works on ink you *drew inside OneNote*. Point your camera at a handwritten letter, a page of meeting notes, or an old journal, and OneNote will not reliably read it.

This guide covers the exact steps on Android, iPad, and Windows, then the part that matters if you have real handwriting to deal with: where OneNote's recognition holds up, where it doesn't, and the faster route we see people take every day.

## Quick answer

- **Ink to Text converts live ink**, not photos. Select handwriting with **Lasso Select** on the **Draw** tab, then tap **Ink to Text**.
- It does **well on clear, block-printed handwriting, one page at a time**.
- It **struggles with cursive, mixed writing, hurried notes, faded ink, and photos or scans** of paper documents.
- For those, **email your PDF straight to [Handwriting OCR](/)** and the transcription lands in your dashboard in about 15 to 20 seconds.

## Convert handwriting to text in OneNote, step by step

The Ink to Text tool is the same across platforms. Only the pen input differs.

1. **Open the page** in OneNote that contains your handwritten ink.
2. Go to the **Draw** tab in the ribbon or toolbar.
3. Choose the **Lasso Select** tool (the dotted circle icon) and draw a loop around the handwriting you want to convert.
4. With the ink selected, tap **Ink to Text**.
5. OneNote replaces the ink with editable typed text. Review it and fix any misreads.

### Platform notes

- **Android** (phone or tablet): the Draw tab and Lasso Select sit in the toolbar. Finger input works, but a stylus gives cleaner strokes and better recognition.
- **iPad**: write with an Apple Pencil for the best results, then use Lasso Select and Ink to Text exactly as above. Palm rejection lets you rest your hand while writing.
- **Windows / Surface**: a Surface Pen or any active pen works well, and the desktop app is the most reliable place to convert longer stretches of ink.

The one thing none of these do is read a **photo** of handwriting on paper. Inserting an image into OneNote lets you *store* it and search some printed text, but it will not convert handwritten ink from a picture into editable text.

## Where OneNote does well, and where it doesn't

We process thousands of real handwritten documents every week, so we see the full range of what these built-in tools can and can't do. Here is the honest picture.

**OneNote does well when:**

- You wrote the notes **inside OneNote** with a stylus.
- Your handwriting is **neat and printed-style**, with clear letter spacing.
- You are converting **one page, or one selection, at a time**.

**OneNote falls short when:**

- The handwriting is **cursive**, joined, or a mix of print and cursive.
- The notes are **hurried, cramped, or faded**.
- You have a **photo, scan, or PDF** of handwriting on paper rather than live ink.
- You have **many pages** and don't want to lasso and convert each one by hand.

That last group is exactly where people come to us. If you have more than a clean page or two, and the accuracy just isn't good enough, a specialist handwriting OCR tool will save you far more time than it costs.

## The faster route: email your PDF to Handwriting OCR

[Handwriting OCR](/) is built specifically for real-world handwriting, including cursive, mixed styles, faded ink, and multi-page documents. It is **materially more accurate on handwriting than general-purpose tools**, and it reads over 300 languages.

The part people like most is that you don't have to change how you work. Once **email submission** is switched on in your settings, you get a private inbox address of your own. From there:

1. **Get your handwriting into a PDF.** Export or print your OneNote pages to PDF, or scan the paper document with your phone.
2. **Email the PDF** to your private Handwriting OCR inbox address as an attachment.
3. **Open your dashboard.** The finished transcription appears there, tagged with an *Email* badge, usually within **15 to 20 seconds** of the email arriving.
4. **Export** the result to Word (DOCX), PDF, plain text, or JSON.

![The Submit by email settings in Handwriting OCR: enable email submission, copy your private @in.handwritingocr.com inbox address, choose the processing action, and add allowed senders.](../../../assets/screenshots/remarkable-email-submission-settings.webp)

It is the same one-credit-per-page cost as any upload, and **free-trial credits work too**, so you can test it on your own worst handwriting before committing to anything. (Results appear in your dashboard rather than as an email reply.)

For automated or high-volume work, the same jobs can go through the [API](https://www.handwritingocr.com/api/docs) on any plan.

## When to use which

| You have… | Best tool |
|---|---|
| A page of neat notes you wrote in OneNote | OneNote Ink to Text |
| Cursive or messy handwriting | Handwriting OCR |
| A photo or scan of a paper document | Handwriting OCR |
| A whole notebook or many pages | Handwriting OCR (email the PDF) |
| A quick word or two to digitise | OneNote Ink to Text |

OneNote is a fine first stop for tidy, self-written notes. When the writing gets harder or the pile gets bigger, [try Handwriting OCR free](https://dashboard.handwritingocr.com/register) and email your first document straight in.
