PDF Tools

Split PDF

Break one larger PDF into cleaner smaller files for delivery, extraction, archiving, or page-by-page exports without rebuilding the document.

or drag and drop a PDF file here

Useful for extracting selected sections, splitting handoff pages, or exporting one PDF per page.

Ready for upload.

Before you upload

  • Works with one `.pdf` file at a time and keeps the processing in this browser session.
  • Use Every page to export one PDF per page, or switch to Custom ranges to create grouped outputs.
  • For custom ranges, use one output per line. Example: 1-3 on one line and 4,6-7 on the next.

What you get

After generating the split files, you can review each output, download files one by one, or trigger all downloads in sequence.

Common use cases

  • Split scanner batches into one PDF per page
  • Separate appendices or extra pages from a client-facing document
  • Extract grouped page ranges into smaller deliverable files

What to do next

If the final files should be sent together again, use PDF Merge. If the split outputs are still too heavy for email, continue with PDF Compress.

Quick FAQ

Before you send a PDF

Decide whether the job changes visible content, page order, or file size. Fill and sign before final compression, split before merging if only some pages are needed, and review the exported PDF before sending it to a client, portal, or archive.

PDF work often fails when the final destination is ignored. A portal may care about file size, an approval flow may care about signatures, and a handoff may care about page order. Work backward from that requirement and keep the final downloaded file separate from the original.

After downloading the result, open it once before using it in a client send, upload form, website, or archive. This final check catches format support issues, unexpected file size changes, missing characters, clipped media, or page-order mistakes while the original file is still available.

If the output will be reused, note the settings that produced it. That makes the next export easier to repeat and reduces guesswork when another file needs the same treatment.