Merge PDF
Combine multiple PDF files into a single document. You can merge entire files in a specific order, or switch to Page Mode for granular control over individual pages from every uploaded PDF.
How It Works
- Upload two or more PDF files by clicking the drop zone or dragging them in.
- Choose between File Mode and Page Mode using the toggle at the top.
- In File Mode, drag files to reorder them and optionally specify page ranges (e.g.,
1-3, 5) for each file. Leave the range blank to include all pages. - In Page Mode, drag and drop individual page thumbnails to build your exact page sequence.
- Click Merge PDFs to combine everything into one file. The merged PDF downloads automatically.
Features
- Two merge modes: File Mode for quick whole-file combining, Page Mode for per-page control
- Drag-and-drop reordering in both modes with smooth animations
- Page range syntax (e.g.,
1-3, 5, 8-10) lets you cherry-pick pages without switching to Page Mode - Lazy-loaded page thumbnails keep the UI responsive even with large documents
- No limit on number of files or total page count
- Preserves original PDF quality with no re-encoding
Options
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| File Mode | Merge entire files in a custom order, with optional page range filters per file |
| Page Mode | Visual grid of all pages from all files -- drag thumbnails to build your exact sequence |
| Pages input | Per-file text field accepting ranges like 1-3, 5 to include only specific pages |
Use Cases
- Combining separate chapter PDFs into a single book or report
- Merging a cover letter and resume into one application document
- Pulling specific pages from multiple source documents into a consolidated file
- Assembling scanned receipts or invoices into one archive PDF
- Creating a presentation handout from slides across multiple decks
Tips
- Use Page Mode when you need to interleave pages from different files rather than appending one file after another.
- You can add more files after the initial upload using the Add More Files button without losing your current arrangement.
- Page ranges are 1-indexed, so
1refers to the first page of that file.