Skip to main content

How to draw on Google Docs to add doodles, sketches, and more

Text box in Google Docs on a laptop.
Digital Trrends

Google Docs is a fully-functioning word processor and alternative to mainstream classics like Microsoft 365. Along with its text editing capabilities, you can also learn how to use Google Docs for specific tasks like drawing. It's not a fully-fledged graphics application, of course, but if you want to insert shapes, do some doodles, or annotate a document, it's got a range of drawing tools that you might not know about.

Recommended Videos

Difficulty

Easy

Duration

5 minutes

What You Need

  • PC, laptop, tablet, or smartphone

  • Google account

Use the Google Docs built-in drawing tool

If you plan to use the drawing only for the current Google Doc, you can create it right through the application. The sketch will not be saved to Google Drive for external use but will still be editable.

Step 1: Sign in to Google Docs, with your Google account and open your document or create a new one.

Step 2: Place your cursor in the document where you want the drawing. Navigate to Insert > Drawing in the menu and pick New.

A red box around New under the Insert drop-down in Google Docs.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 3: When the drawing tool opens in the pop-up window, use the options in the toolbar to create your drawing.

With the Actions menu, you can use tools like word art for fancy text and guides for lining up items. With the toolbar, you can pick lines, shapes, text, and images.

To draw freehand, use the Line drop-down arrow in the toolbar to choose Scribble.

Google Docs drawing tool window with Actions.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 4: When you finish, select Save and close.

Save and Close in the Google Docs drawing tool window.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 5: You’ll see the drawing appear in your document.

If you want to make changes to it later, select the drawing and pick Edit in the floating toolbar beneath it or double-click to reopen the drawing window.

Drawing tool image in Google Docs.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Use Google Drawings and insert your sketch

If you want to spend more time on the drawing or easily save it in Google Drive for use outside of your document, you can use Google Drawings. While it works similarly to Google’s drawing tool above, you can go to Google Drawings directly.

Step 1: Visit Google Drawings and log in with your Google account to begin drawing.

Step 2: Start by giving your drawing a title on the top left. By default, the name is "Untitled Drawing."

Name box in Google Drawings.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 3: Use the menu options and toolbar to create your sketch or illustration. You can include shapes, images, text, and lines like the tool above.

To draw freehand, select Insert > Line and choose Scribble or use the Line drop-down arrow in the toolbar to choose Scribble.

Line menu options in Google Drawings.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 4: As you work on your drawing, the file is saved automatically. It then appears in your Google Drive like Google Docs, Sheets, and Slides.

When you finish, return to Google Docs.

Image in Google Drawings.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 5: Place your cursor in the document where you want the drawing. Select Insert > Drawing, and this time, pick From Drive.

Drawing, From Drive in the Google Docs Insert menu.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 6: Locate your drawing and choose Select.

Step 7: You’ll see a prompt to link to the source or insert the image unlinked.

  • Link to source: If you want the ability to easily make edits to the drawing, pick this option. You can then select Open source on the top right of the image in Google Docs to make changes in Google Drawings anytime.
  • Insert unlinked: If you don’t plan to make changes, you can pick this option. If you change your mind later, you can make edits in Google Drawings and then reinsert the updated image in Google Docs.
Insert Drawings prompt in Google Docs.
screenshot / Digital Trends

Step 8: After you pick a linking option, select Insert and your image will appear in Google Docs in the spot you picked.

Google Drawings image in Google Docs.
screenshot / Digital Trends

If you’ve been wondering how to draw on Google Docs, you now have two solid options for your sketch or drawing. Want to learn more about Google Docs? Here's how to insert text boxes.

For more, take a look at how to e-sign a document or how similar applications like LibreOffice and OpenOffice work.

Sandy Writtenhouse
Sandy has been writing about technology since 2012. Her work has appeared on How-To Geek, Lifewire, MakeUseOf, iDownloadBlog…
Gemini gets image creation trick in Docs and Calendar access in Gmail
Gemini running on the Google Pixel 9 Pro Fold.

Google has announced a laundry list of feature updates for Workspace users, with a focus on using its Gemini AI across products like Gmail, Docs, and Calendar. 

For folks who rely on the side panel in Gmail, there is some good news. Gemini can now directly access the Calendar information from within the inbox side panel and perform relevant actions. 

Read more
Google expands AI Overviews to over 100 more countries
AI Overviews being shown in Google Search.

Google's AI Overview is coming to a search results page near you, whether you want it to or not. The company announced on Monday that it is expanding the AI feature to more than 100 countries around the world.

Google debuted AI Overview, which uses generative AI to summarize the key points of your search topic and display that information at the top of the results page, to mixed reviews in May before subsequently expanding the program in August. Monday's roll-out sees the feature made available in seven languages — English, Hindi, Indonesian, Japanese, Korean, Portuguese, and Spanish — to users in more than 100 nations (you can find a full list of covered countries here)

Read more
This new Google Docs feature is exactly what I’ve always wanted
Text box in Google Docs on a laptop.

As a writer of a certain age, I've lived a lot of life in Google Docs. It's where my first drafts go, but it's also where my crazy ideas, unhinged brainstorming, and research dumps go. 
There’s so many conveniences about Google Docs that make it my go-to for word processing, but let’s be honest: It’s still fairly barebones, especially when it comes to organizing and managing different files within Google Drive. But this new feature makes all of that much easier, keeping it all contained all within Docs itself.
It’s called Document Tabs, which you may have already noticed floating just to the left of your document.

The idea is simple: It lets you create multiple documents within a single Docs file. Create as many “tabs” or separate documents as a single project might need, and switch between them extremely fast. That accessibility to them is really where the gold is. No more switching between different browser tabs.
It’s even more handy on mobile, of course, where switching applications or tabs is even more cumbersome. Here, you’ll find Document Tabs hovering just at the bottom of the screen with some simple arrows to flip between your different tabs. All we need now is a simple gesture to be added to flip between them even more seamlessly.
Document Tabs takes the place of the old outlining system, which would grab headers and automatically create a table of contents around them. I used this frequently, but it was pretty finicky. More than that, it resulted in overly long documents that I still found myself scrolling through. 
Document Tabs is a really elegant solution to that problem. Whether it’s segmenting chapters in a book, multiple aspects of a project, or even just different parts of an article, it’s already become an extremely useful outlining and productivity tool for me.
It even had a pretty clean way of converting the tabs when you need to export. All the tabs do is combine down into one document, but they’re sectioned off with titles and some basic formatting. That’s not going to be ideal in every situation, of course, so it’s something to keep in mind if you need to export and share it with someone outside of Docs.
At the very least, though, it’s worth trying out. And if you’re a Google Docs fiend like I am, I have a feeling you’ll get quite a lot out of it.

Read more