Apply opacity and transparency effects

Last updated on Jun 2, 2026

Learn how to use the Effects panel to adjust opacity levels and create transparent objects in Adobe InDesign.

Opacity controls how transparent an object appears and how much content shows through it. At 100% opacity, objects are fully solid, but lowering the value creates transparency that lets you stack and blend elements creatively. You can apply opacity to an entire object or to specific parts, such as the fill, stroke, or text. All new objects start at full opacity, and you manage transparency effects precisely through the Effects panel to add depth and emphasis to your designs.

Change the opacity of an object

Select the object using the Selection tool.

Select Window > Effects.

In the Effects panel, select Object to apply transparency to the entire object. You can also select Stroke, Fill, or Text to affect only that component.

Drag the Opacity slider or type a percentage value in the Opacity field. You can also access opacity settings through the Control panel (Window > Control) by selecting the Apply Effects button and adjusting the Opacity value. Lower values decrease opacity and increase transparency.

Apply transparency to text

Select the text frame using the Selection tool.

Select Object > Effects > Transparency.

Select Text from the Settings for drop-down menu to apply effects only to the text, or select Object to include the frame's stroke and fill.

Drag the Opacity slider or type a percentage value in the Opacity field. Lower values decrease opacity and increase transparency.

Select OK to apply the changes.

For text within a frame, you can alternatively use the Type tool to select specific characters or paragraphs, then adjust opacity through the Effects panel (Window > Effects).

Apply transparency to grouped objects

Select the grouped objects using the Selection tool.

Select Window > Effects.

In the Effects panel, you’ll view Group as the only option.

Adjust the Opacity value to apply transparency to the entire group as a single unit. When you apply transparency to a group created with Object > Group, the group is treated as one object. Objects within the group maintain their relative opacity to each other and don't create accumulated transparency in overlapping areas.

If you select ungrouped objects and change their opacity individually, overlapping areas will show accumulated transparency.

Copy transparency effects between objects

Select Window > Effects.

In the Effects panel, select the Add an object effect to the selected target icon next to the level (Object, Stroke, Fill, or Text) containing the effects you want to copy.

Drag the Add an object effect to the selected target icon to the other object in your workspace.

You can also use the Eyedropper tool to copy transparency settings between objects. Double-click the Eyedropper tool to configure which Stroke, Fill, and Object settings it copies.

To move (non-opacity) effects between levels within the same object (for example, from Stroke to Fill), drag the Add an object effect to the selected target icon from one level to another in the Effects panel. To copy the effect to another layer within the same object, hold Alt (Windows) or Option (macOS) and drag the Add an object effect to the selected target icon.

Remove transparency and effects

Select the object with transparency effects applied.

Select Window > Effects.

Select the panel menu icon and then select Clear Effects from the Effects panel to remove any effects. You can also drag the Add an object effect to the selected target icon to the Remove effects from the selected target icon.

Select the panel menu icon and then select Clear All Transparency to remove all opacity attributes to restore it to 100% and to reset the blending mode back to Normal.