---
title: "How to convert handwriting to text on Supernote"
canonical: "https://www.handwritingocr.com/handwriting-to-text/how-to-convert-handwriting-to-text-on-supernote"
pubDate: "2024-11-15T00:00:00.000Z"
updatedDate: "2026-06-17T00:00:00.000Z"
description: "Supernote's built-in recognition struggles with cursive and messy notes. Email your notebook to Handwriting OCR from Supernote Mail and get accurate text back."
subtitle: "How to use Supernote's built-in recognition, and how to email a notebook to Handwriting OCR when you need higher accuracy on cursive or messy notes."
---

> **TL;DR:** Supernote's on-device recognition is good on neat writing but weaker on cursive and messy notes. Export the notebook as a PDF and email it from Supernote Mail to Handwriting OCR; the accurate transcription lands in your dashboard, usually within 15 to 20 seconds.

If your Supernote's handwriting recognition keeps coming back with too many mistakes to trust, there's a faster fix than selecting and cleaning up page after page: **email your notebook straight to Handwriting OCR and get accurate text back in your dashboard.** Our AI is built specifically for handwriting, including the cursive and messy notes a smaller on-device model fumbles, and because Supernote has its own Mail app, you can send the notebook from the tablet itself.

Below we cover that email route in full, plus how Supernote's built-in recognition works and where it falls short.

## When the built-in isn't enough: email your notebook to Handwriting OCR

Handwriting OCR's AI is trained specifically on handwriting, including cursive, messy, and mixed notes, so it reads the writing Supernote's on-device recognition struggles with. And because Supernote includes a Mail app that sends from your own email account, you can email a notebook straight from the device, with no computer in the loop.

It works in a few minutes:

1. **Turn on email submission.** In your Handwriting OCR settings, open the [Email tab](https://dashboard.handwritingocr.com/settings?tab=email) and enable *Email submission*. You'll get a private inbox address, like `smokey-amber-falcon@in.handwritingocr.com`.
2. **Allow your own address as a sender.** Under *Allowed senders*, add the email account you send from in Supernote Mail (your Gmail, Outlook, or Exchange address). Only senders on this list are accepted, so keep your inbox address private too.
3. **Export the notebook as a PDF.** Open the note, export it as **PDF** (you can choose which pages), and Supernote saves the file to its **EXPORT** folder. Export to PDF rather than the device's TXT/DOCX, so our OCR reads your actual handwriting instead of Supernote's own conversion.
4. **Email it from Supernote Mail.** Open **Supernote Mail**, tap **Compose**, enter your inbox address in *To*, tap the **+** icon to attach, and pick the exported PDF from the EXPORT folder. Send it. Emails are capped at **20 MB** per message (both Supernote Mail and our inbox use this limit), so split a very large notebook or upload it in the dashboard instead (up to 100 MB).
5. **Collect the text in your dashboard.** The transcription appears in your [documents dashboard](https://dashboard.handwritingocr.com/) with an *Email* badge, usually within 15 to 20 seconds. Download it as TXT, DOCX, PDF, 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 such as your own email account.](../../../assets/screenshots/remarkable-email-submission-settings.webp)

The processing action defaults to **Transcribe**, so emailed notebooks come back as text automatically, with nothing else to configure. No per-page selection, no cleanup, no USB transfer. Each page costs **1 credit**, drawn from your balance (free-trial credits work too).

A fair caveat: no OCR is perfect, and we don't claim 100%. Very faded ink, signatures, and rare scripts are genuinely hard. But for everyday cursive and messy notes, it's built for exactly the job a smaller on-device model isn't. The honest way to know is to try it on your own worst handwriting.

## How Supernote's built-in conversion works

Supernote does have on-device recognition, and for an e-ink device it's good. If you want to use it:

1. Open the notebook and switch to the **lasso/selection** tool.
2. Select the handwriting you want to convert (or select the whole page).
3. Choose **Convert to text** from the menu.
4. Review the recognised text, then keep it as a title/keyword, copy it, or export it.

It's handy for quick capture and supports a wide range of languages. Two things to know: you trigger it **manually, one page at a time**, and the accuracy depends heavily on how you write.

## How accurate is it really?

On neat, upright writing, Supernote's recognition is genuinely useful, and its language coverage is a real strength. The catch is that it runs a compact model on the device itself, with no cloud step, so it gives ground on cursive, mixed print-and-cursive, slanted, or rushed writing, exactly the notes most people actually take.

That isn't something you can fix by writing more neatly or updating firmware. It's the limit of an on-device engine. If your notes are anything other than tidy print, you'll hit it. That's the point at which emailing the notebook to Handwriting OCR saves you the per-page cleanup, and processes the whole notebook in one go.

Email submission works the same way from other note tablets and scanners. See [how it works](/blog/email-handwriting-to-text), or browse the other [handwriting-to-text guides](/handwriting-to-text).

## See it on your own notes

You get **5 free credits** to start, enough to run a few real notebook pages through and compare the result against what your Supernote gives you before deciding anything.

[Try Handwriting OCR free](https://dashboard.handwritingocr.com/register) and see how your handwriting comes out.
