Most of you reading this have probably used or are currently using Adobe Illustrator and Adobe Photoshop. The software is great, but the most frustrating part is the cost!

As someone who works from home, there is no way I am paying $40 a month for Adobe Creative Cloud. If I was a full-time designer perhaps, but I am a blogger. I have finally found some good alternatives though and left Adobe altogether. Check out these top 6 cheap Adobe Illustrator alternatives.

The problem with Adobe Creative Cloud

As a blogger, I have a few different sites. Here on woorkup I primarily use vectors. On one of my other sites, I primarily use photos. It really depends on the niche you are in and the type of audience you are marketing towards. But because of that, I bounce between Adobe Illustrator and Adobe Photoshop a lot. They each have their own little tricks that I have used over the years.

I have a 4-year degree in web and graphic design, although to be honest, I spent the majority of my time in the computer support department working my butt off. However, I did have one teacher which was really great. He taught photography and Adobe classes. He forced us to memorize shortcut keys, where things were located, go through tutorials, etc. Thankfully, what I learned in those classes stuck with me today. I still use all the shortcut keys and it speeds up my work.

I have used Adobe Photoshop and Illustrator now since around 2006. However, this year I finally got fed up paying $40 a month for it. And that is if you pay annually, if you go monthly it is $60 a month for both pieces of software. That is a little bit ridiculous, especially when you compare it to other tools I use more which I pay less for. However, they are a necessity for me, paint just doesn’t cut it.

Image src: Meme Generator

Yes, I know you can torrent these, but there are a couple of problems and pet peeves associated with that:

I truly believe in supporting developers if they created good products. While Adobe is a huge corporation, I still don’t mind paying them a little for tools that are beneficial for me. The problem is, they have no entrepreneur/single plan that works. They pretty much have left out all bloggers in their pricing. If you torrent this software (which I never recommend doing), you are almost always a couple of versions behind. I am working on a 4k monitor, due to the fact that I needed to create retina images for one of my sites. Adobe pushed out a retina patch, but you can’t download it with the torrented copy. Also, I work so much right now I don’t have time to deal with that stuff anymore, I just need something that works all the time.

Many of us have to pay for our own tools and the team at @Adobe has forgotten that. 🎨

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6 options for a cheap Adobe Illustrator alternative

This year I finally got to my breaking point and figured there had to be something better out there. And to my surprise, there was! Check out the following Adobe Illustrator alternatives I recommend. Note: I am using a Mac.

1. Affinity Designer

The first amazing option, and the one I am currently using every single day is Affinity Designer. This is by far the best Adobe Illustrator alternative I have ever found. These guys have been around for a while, but just recently have been making huge updates to their product lines.

They also have Affinity Photo, which is their Adobe Photoshop alternative. I also use this every day.

Affinity Designer

The most amazing part about it is there is no subscription fee, it is a one-time purchase of $49.99. Yes, you heard me right. A one-time purchase! And they have both a Windows and Mac version.

I have yet to find anything I did in Adobe Illustrator that I can’t do in Affinity Designer. And one of the best things is that the Affinity software all uses way less RAM over time. I had horrible times with Adobe Illustrator crashing all the time (and I have 24GB of RAM), and this works beautifully all the time.

Also, Photoshop had a recovery mode, Illustrator didn’t. Both Affinity Designer and Affinity Photo have recovery modes so you never lose anything.

Affinity Designer document

Oh, and the migration away from Adobe is super simple! Because all the Affinity software lets you open up Adobe Illustrator files and Adobe Photoshop files. You can then save them into their respective .afdesign and .afphoto formats. Most shortcut keys are exactly the same as Adobe, only a few are slightly different, but for the better. You can even open .webp files.

One little feature I use all the time, that Illustrator doesn’t even have, is the “File → New From Clipboard.” I love this!

Visit Affinity Designer

2. Sketch

Sketch is the second Adobe Illustrator alternative I suggest you check out. They were founded in 2008 and based in the Hague, NL. I personally have not used it, since it is only available for MAC, however I have heard nothing but great things. I have many friends and colleagues who migrated from Adobe Illustrator to Sketch and they never looked back.

Sketch

The great news is that this is also available for a just $99.00 annually (one year of updates included). You aren’t required to pay again.

Sketch document

If you are on a MAC and working with lots of vectors and SVGs, this is definitely a tool you want to check out.

Visit Sketch

3. Vectr (free)

We also have Vectr! This is actually one I just recently discovered. This is a completely free Adobe Illustrator alternative. They have versions available for Windows, MAC, Linux, Chromebook, online version, and just recently a WordPress plugin.

Vectr

While this can do a lot of great stuff with vectors, I want to focus on the WordPress integration as this is pretty unique. You can use and create vectors from right within the WordPress post editor. Pretty cool! Just install the free Vectr plugin and you can then click into it in the visual editor.

Vectr WordPress integration

It will then open up a new editor in which you can do all sorts of amazing stuff with vectors. You can see below in my example I uploaded the Vectr SVG logo and was able to easily manipulate the layer colors within a second. You could even design your featured image for your WordPress posts from right within WordPress.

Vectr document

Here is a great overview video. If you are on a tight budget, and need something to create high-quality vector images, I definitely recommend checking out Vectr. It’s definitely the best free solution I have ever come across, and their attention to the WordPress community is exciting.

Visit Vectr

4. Amadine

Then we have Amadine. A vector software tool for Macs. This is a great little tool and only costs $19.99.

Image source: Amadine

Visit Amadine

5. Pixelmator Pro

Next, we have Pixelmator Pro. This is a Mac-only tool that costs $39.99. It’s more for photo editing, but you can also easily manipulate vectors graphics as well. As of writing this, it’s the #1 software under “Graphics & Design” in the Mac store.

Image source: Pixelmator Pro

Visit Pixelmator Pro

6. Gravit Designer (free and pro)

Last but not least we have Gravit Designer. This is a full-featured vector graphic design app that works on ALL platforms. It has both a free version with some limitations and a pro version that starts at $49.00 a year.

Gravit Designer

Gravit Designer

Summary

Hopefully this list of some top options for a cheap Adobe Illustrator alternative was helpful. I have migrated to Affinity software and never looked back. It’s fast, it’s cheap, and there was almost no learning curve involved. I’m curious, what are you guys currently using? Let me know below in the comments!