AZW3 to PDF Converter – Convert AZW3 & MOBI to PDF Free Online
📖 Kindle eBook Converter  ·  Non-DRM Files  ·  Free

Convert AZW3 & MOBI
to PDF Instantly

Upload a non-DRM AZW3, AZW or MOBI Kindle eBook file. The tool parses and extracts the text content directly in your browser, then downloads a clean, readable PDF.

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AZW3 / AZW / MOBI
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Text Extraction
0
Files Sent to Server
Instant Download
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100% Free

📖 AZW3 to PDF Converter — Start Here

Works with non-DRM AZW3, AZW and MOBI files. Kindle books purchased from the Amazon Store are DRM-protected and cannot be converted — see the notice below.

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DRM-Protected Files Cannot Be Converted
Kindle eBooks purchased from the Amazon Store contain digital rights management (DRM) that prevents browser-based conversion. This tool only works with non-DRM AZW3, AZW and MOBI files — such as self-published books, sideloaded content, or files from which DRM has been legally removed. If your file is DRM-protected, the tool will detect it and show a clear error.
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100% Browser-Based Privacy
Your eBook file never leaves your computer. All parsing, decompression, text extraction, and PDF generation happens locally in your browser using JavaScript. No uploads, no servers, no tracking — your reading material stays completely private.
📂 Upload eBook File

Browser-Based AZW3
Text Extraction

Reads the MOBI/KF8 binary format directly in your browser, decompresses PalmDoc records, strips HTML, and renders clean readable text into a PDF — no servers needed.

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MOBI/KF8 Binary Parser
Reads the PalmDB header and MOBI record structure, verifies the file signature, and extracts text records from AZW3 and MOBI eBook files in pure JavaScript with zero dependencies.
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DRM Detection
Before processing, the tool checks the DRM offset and count fields in the MOBI header. If DRM is found, a clear error is shown immediately rather than outputting garbled text.
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PalmDoc Decompression
Text records compressed with PalmDoc (LZ77-based compression used by all MOBI/AZW3 files) are decompressed in the browser to recover the original HTML text content.
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HTML Stripping & Cleanup
After extraction, HTML tags are stripped, entities decoded, and whitespace normalised to produce clean, readable plain text suitable for PDF rendering.
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Multi-Page PDF Output
The extracted text is flowed across multiple A4 pages with automatic line-wrapping, page breaks, header with book title, and page numbers in the footer.
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3 Font Styles
Choose Serif (Times), Sans-Serif (Helvetica), or Monospace (Courier) for the PDF body text to match your reading preference.
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100% Private
Your eBook file is never sent to any server. All binary parsing, text extraction, and PDF generation runs entirely in your browser using local JavaScript.
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Book Metadata
The tool reads the Full Name field from the MOBI header and uses it as the PDF title automatically — editable before converting.
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Works on Any Device
Fully responsive design works on desktop, tablet, and mobile. Convert AZW3 eBooks to PDF from any modern browser, anywhere.
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UTF-8 & Latin-1 Encoding
Automatically detects the eBook's text encoding from the MOBI header. Handles both UTF-8 (code 65001) and Windows-1252 (Latin-1) encoded files correctly.
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Flexible Layout Options
Choose between A4 portrait or landscape orientation, three font size presets, and three margin widths to match your reading or printing preferences.
Fast & Lightweight
No installation, no signup, no waiting in queue. The tool is a single HTML page that runs entirely client-side using jsPDF and runs faster than most cloud converters.
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Dark Mode Support
Automatically adapts to your system's dark mode preference, with carefully calibrated colors that remain readable in both light and dark environments.
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Smart File Naming
The downloaded PDF is automatically named based on the eBook's detected title, with invalid filename characters stripped for cross-platform compatibility.
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Live Statistics
Before converting, see exactly what's in your eBook: word count, estimated page count, format type, file size, and detected encoding — all visible at a glance.

Convert AZW3 to PDF in 3 Steps

From Kindle eBook file to downloadable PDF in under a minute — no software installs or accounts needed.

1
Upload eBook File
Drag and drop or browse to upload your non-DRM AZW3, AZW or MOBI file. The tool parses it instantly and shows extracted book details.
2
Preview & Configure
Review the extracted text preview and word count. Set font style, font size, page orientation, and margin to your preference.
3
Download Your PDF
Click Convert & Download PDF. The full eBook text is rendered across clean multi-page PDF and saved to your device instantly.

Understanding AZW3, AZW & MOBI

All three formats are variants of Amazon's MobiPocket-based eBook structure. Here's what each one is, how it differs, and what this tool can do with each.

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AZW3 / KF8
Kindle Format 8 · Modern
  • Introduced: 2011 with Kindle Fire
  • Based on: HTML5, CSS3, and SVG
  • Features: Embedded fonts, drop caps, fixed layouts, advanced typography
  • Compression: PalmDoc (LZ77) or HUFF/CDIC
  • Successor to: MOBI / AZW (Kindle Format 7)
  • This tool: ✅ Full text extraction supported
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AZW
Kindle Format 7 · Legacy
  • Introduced: 2007 with the original Kindle
  • Based on: The MOBI format with Amazon DRM wrapper
  • Features: Basic HTML, simple CSS, limited typography
  • Compression: PalmDoc (LZ77)
  • Often DRM-locked: Most files from Amazon Store
  • This tool: ✅ Non-DRM versions supported
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MOBI
MobiPocket · Classic
  • Introduced: 2000 by MobiPocket SA
  • Acquired by: Amazon in 2005
  • Based on: Palm Database (PDB) and OEB
  • Features: HTML, basic CSS, table support
  • Compression: None or PalmDoc (LZ77)
  • This tool: ✅ Full text extraction supported
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PDF Output
What you get
  • Page format: A4 portrait or landscape
  • Text: Selectable, searchable, copy-paste ready
  • Fonts: Times, Helvetica, or Courier
  • Header: Teal title bar with book name and page number
  • Footer: Centered page indicator on every page
  • File: Compressed, optimized PDF 1.3+

A Brief History of the
Kindle eBook Format

Understanding where AZW3 came from helps explain why it works the way it does — and why converting to PDF is sometimes necessary.

2000
MobiPocket Format Created
French company MobiPocket SA releases the MOBI format, based on the Palm Database (PDB) container. Designed for PDAs and early handheld devices, it uses LZ77-based PalmDoc compression and supports HTML.
2005
Amazon Acquires MobiPocket
Amazon purchases MobiPocket SA, gaining control of the MOBI format and immediately begins working on a proprietary Kindle device that will use a modified version of MOBI as its native eBook format.
2007
Kindle Launches with AZW
The first Amazon Kindle is released in November 2007. It uses the AZW format — essentially MOBI with Amazon's DRM wrapper. AZW files are MOBI files with a .azw extension and protected content sections.
2011
KF8 / AZW3 Released
With the launch of the Kindle Fire tablet, Amazon introduces Kindle Format 8 (KF8), saved with the .azw3 extension. It adds HTML5, CSS3, SVG, embedded fonts, fixed layouts and dramatically improved typography support.
2015
KFX Format Introduced
Amazon begins rolling out the Kindle Format X (KFX), a successor to AZW3 with enhanced typography (Bookerly font, Enhanced Typesetting). KFX uses stronger DRM and a more complex container, making it harder to convert.
Today
Mixed Format Era — Modern Kindles deliver content as a mix of AZW3 and KFX depending on the title and device. Many sideloaded files, self-published works, and DRM-free titles remain in AZW3/MOBI format, which is what this converter handles.

Common Use Cases

From students to writers to archivists, converting AZW3 to PDF solves a wide range of practical problems.

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Students & Academics
Convert non-DRM textbooks and reference eBooks to PDF for annotation in apps like GoodNotes, Notability, or Adobe Acrobat — features that aren't available in the Kindle app.
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Self-Published Authors
Authors who distribute their own AZW3 files can quickly convert them to PDF for proofreading on different devices, beta-reader distribution, or print-on-demand previews.
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Printing eBooks
PDFs are the universal standard for printing. Convert your DRM-free AZW3 to PDF and send it directly to a print shop, library printer, or your home printer with predictable formatting.
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Digital Archivists
PDF is a long-term archival format with broad reader support. Converting eBooks to PDF ensures readable copies will exist decades from now, regardless of what happens to proprietary formats.
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Cross-Device Readers
Read your DRM-free eBooks on devices that don't support AZW3 — iPads using Books, Linux laptops, Android phones, smart TVs, or any device with a PDF reader.
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Researchers
Extract searchable text from non-DRM eBooks for citation, quotation, and reference. PDFs work seamlessly with Zotero, Mendeley, EndNote, and other research management tools.
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Easy Sharing
PDFs are universally readable. Convert and share lawfully-distributable content with friends, colleagues, or students who don't own Kindle devices or use the Kindle app.
Accessibility
PDFs work with a wider range of screen readers, text-to-speech tools, and accessibility software than proprietary eBook formats — making content accessible to more readers.

This Tool vs Alternatives

How browser-based conversion stacks up against desktop software and cloud services for converting AZW3 to PDF.

Feature This Tool Calibre (Desktop) Cloud Converters
Cost Free Free (open source) Free with limits
Installation Required None Yes (~150MB) None
File Privacy 100% local 100% local Files uploaded
Speed (avg eBook) 2–5 seconds 10–30 seconds 30 sec – several min (queue)
Image Support Text only Full Full (usually)
DRM Removal Not supported Plugin required Not supported
Format Support AZW3, AZW, MOBI 25+ formats Varies by service
Offline Use After first load Always Internet required
File Size Limit Browser memory only None Often 50–100 MB max
Account / Signup None None Often required
Best For Quick text-only conversions, privacy-sensitive work Power users, full conversions with images Casual one-off use without local software

Tips for Best Results

Get the cleanest possible PDF output from your AZW3 conversions with these practical tips.

TIP 01
Check the file extension
If you see .azw3 or .mobi as the extension, you can try this tool. Files with .kfx, .epub or .pdf extensions are not supported — use a dedicated tool for those.
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Pick Times for novels
The Serif (Times) font is the most readable choice for long-form prose — books, novels, essays. It's a typographic standard for a reason.
TIP 03
Use Courier for code books
For programming or technical eBooks where code samples appear in the text, Monospace (Courier) preserves the visual alignment of code far better than proportional fonts.
TIP 04
Large font for reading aloud
If you'll be reading the PDF aloud, using as a teaching aid, or sharing with someone with low vision, choose 13pt with wide margins for maximum legibility.
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Landscape for printing 2-up
Use Landscape orientation if you plan to print two pages side-by-side on a single sheet — saves paper and creates a booklet-style printout.
TIP 06
Edit the title before converting
The auto-detected title is used both inside the PDF header and as the filename. If the eBook's embedded title is messy or wrong, edit it before clicking Convert.
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Use the preview to spot issues
The 3,000-character text preview shows you exactly what the PDF will contain. If you see odd characters or garbled text, the file may have an unusual encoding or compression — try another tool.
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Big files: be patient
eBooks over 5 MB or with 200,000+ words may take 10–30 seconds to render the PDF. The progress bar will move slowly during the text flow phase — this is normal.
TIP 09
Wide margins for note-taking
If you'll be printing the PDF to take handwritten notes, choose the Wide (28mm) margin option — this leaves more whitespace for marginalia and annotation.

Technical Deep Dive:
How the Parser Works

For developers, curious users, and anyone who wants to understand what's happening when you click "Convert" — here's a step-by-step look at the conversion pipeline.

1
Read PalmDB Header
The first 78 bytes contain Palm Database metadata. The parser reads bytes 60-67 to verify the type/creator codes ("BOOK" and "MOBI") — proof this is a valid file.
2
Build Record Index
Bytes 78 onward contain a record offset table. The parser reads each 4-byte offset to know exactly where every data record lives inside the file.
3
Parse Record 0
The first record contains the MOBI header — compression type, encoding, text record count, title offset, and crucially the DRM offset/count.
4
DRM Check
If DRM count is greater than zero and the DRM offset is valid, the parser stops immediately and reports the file as DRM-protected — no garbled output.
5
Extract Text Records
The parser loops through each text record (count from the header) and reads the raw bytes. Each record is typically 4 KB of compressed HTML.
6
Decompress (PalmDoc)
If compression code is 2, the LZ77-based PalmDoc decoder runs on each record. Single bytes pass through, marker bytes trigger back-references and length pairs.
7
Decode Encoding
Using the browser's TextDecoder, the decompressed bytes are turned into a JavaScript string — either UTF-8 or Windows-1252, depending on the MOBI header.
8
Strip HTML
Regex passes convert <p>, <br>, <h1-3>, and <li> tags into newlines, then strip remaining tags and decode HTML entities like &nbsp; and &quot;.
9
Generate PDF
jsPDF receives the cleaned text. Lines are wrapped to page width, flowed across pages with auto page breaks, and each page gets a header and footer.

Common Issues & Fixes

Running into trouble? Most conversion issues fall into one of these categories — here's how to identify and fix them.

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"DRM-Protected File Detected"
What it means: Your file is locked with Amazon's DRM and cannot be converted in the browser. What to do: If you legally own the book and your jurisdiction permits it, use Calibre with the DeDRM plugin to remove DRM first, then convert. Alternatively, look for a DRM-free edition of the same book from publishers like Tor or Smashwords.
"Not a valid MOBI/AZW3 file"
What it means: The file's internal type/creator codes don't match the expected MOBI signature. What to do: Check the file extension matches the actual content. Sometimes a renamed PDF, EPUB, or KFX file has been given an .azw3 extension. Open the file in a hex editor and look for "BOOKMOBI" near the start of the file.
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"Unsupported compression type"
What it means: Your file uses HUFF/CDIC compression, an advanced compression scheme that this tool doesn't decode. What to do: Use Calibre to decompress and convert the file — it has full HUFF/CDIC support. HUFF/CDIC is less common but appears in some commercial Kindle releases.
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Garbled or unreadable text in preview
What it means: The file's encoding may not match what's declared in the header, or there's an unusual character set in use. What to do: Try opening the file in Calibre — it has more aggressive encoding detection. If only certain accents or symbols are wrong, the file may use a region-specific code page that needs special handling.
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PDF is missing images from the eBook
What it means: This is expected behaviour — this tool extracts text only. What to do: If image fidelity is critical (cookbooks, photo books, illustrated guides), use Calibre, which handles embedded images during AZW3 to PDF conversion.
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Browser freezes or PDF takes forever
What it means: Very large books (500,000+ words) can take significant time as jsPDF flows text across hundreds of pages. What to do: Wait — the progress bar advances even when it appears stuck. Close other browser tabs to free up memory. For very long books (1,500+ pages), consider using a desktop tool instead.
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Download doesn't start
What it means: Your browser may be blocking automatic downloads, or pop-ups are restricted. What to do: Check your browser's notification area for a download prompt. In Safari, you may need to allow downloads from this site in Settings. Try a different browser (Chrome, Firefox, Edge) if the issue persists.
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"Could Not Parse File" — random failure
What it means: The file may be corrupted, truncated, or contain unusual structural variations. What to do: Re-download the file from its source if possible. Verify the file size matches the expected size. If the file opens correctly in a Kindle app or device, but fails here, it's likely a non-standard variant — use Calibre as a fallback.
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Won't work on my phone or tablet
What it means: Some mobile browsers restrict file access or memory available to JavaScript. What to do: Update your browser to the latest version. Try a different mobile browser. For very large files, switching to a desktop computer is usually faster and more reliable.

Your Files Never Leave Your Browser

Unlike cloud-based eBook converters that upload your files to remote servers, this tool runs entirely in your web browser. Here's exactly what happens — and what doesn't.

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Zero Server Communication
When you upload an eBook file to this page, the file's bytes are read by JavaScript running in your browser. The parsing, decompression, text extraction, and PDF generation all happen on your device, in memory. No file content is ever transmitted over the network — not to our servers, not to third parties, not to anyone.
✅ No file uploads ✅ No tracking pixels ✅ No account required ✅ No cookies stored ✅ No analytics on content ✅ Works offline after first load
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Verify It Yourself
Open your browser's developer tools (F12), go to the Network tab, and watch what happens when you upload and convert a file. You'll see no outbound requests with your file's content.
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Works Offline
After the page first loads, you can disconnect from the internet entirely and the converter still works. This is the strongest possible proof that your file isn't being uploaded.
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Open Source Approach
All conversion logic is in plain JavaScript visible in your browser's View Source. You can audit exactly what the tool does with your file — no hidden processing, no obfuscated code.
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No Retention
When you close the browser tab, all traces of your file are gone. The file data lives only in your browser's memory during the active session, and is released when you navigate away.

Frequently Asked Questions

Common questions about converting AZW3 and MOBI eBook files to PDF, organized by topic.

Why can't I convert my Kindle book?
Kindle books purchased from the Amazon Store contain DRM (Digital Rights Management). Only non-DRM AZW3 and MOBI files can be parsed and converted by this tool. The tool will detect DRM-protection automatically and inform you immediately rather than producing a corrupted output.
Is my eBook file sent to a server?
No. All file reading, binary parsing, text extraction, and PDF generation happens entirely in your browser. Your file never leaves your device. You can verify this by opening your browser's Network tab in developer tools and watching for outbound requests — you won't see any.
What file formats are supported?
AZW3 (Kindle Format 8), AZW (older Kindle Format 7), and MOBI (MobiPocket) files are all supported, provided they are non-DRM and use either no compression or PalmDoc compression. HUFF/CDIC-compressed files are not supported by this tool.
Will images from the eBook appear in the PDF?
No. This tool extracts text content only. Images embedded in the eBook are not included in the PDF output. Only the text body is converted. If you need image fidelity in your PDF, use Calibre (free, open source desktop software) instead.
What is a non-DRM AZW3 file?
Non-DRM eBooks include self-published books sent to your Kindle via email or USB, eBooks from DRM-free stores (like StoryBundle, Humble Bundle, Smashwords), publisher direct sales (Tor often releases DRM-free), public domain works, and books from which DRM has been lawfully removed.
Can I use Calibre instead?
Yes. Calibre is the most complete desktop eBook converter and supports AZW3 to PDF with full image support, 25+ input formats, and a vast library management system. This browser tool is ideal for quick text-only conversions without installing software.
Is there a file size limit?
There's no fixed limit imposed by the tool, but very large files (above 50 MB) may hit browser memory constraints. On desktop browsers with adequate RAM, books up to several hundred megabytes typically work. For very large files, a desktop converter may be more reliable.
What does the page header in the PDF look like?
Each page has a teal header bar containing the book title on the left and the page number on the right. The footer shows a centered page number indicator. The header and footer are consistent across every page and use a clean sans-serif font.
Will footnotes or endnotes be preserved?
Footnote and endnote text is included if it's part of the eBook's text records, but interactive cross-reference links won't work in the PDF — only the text content is preserved. Footnotes typically appear inline with surrounding text rather than at page bottoms.
Are bold, italic, and other formatting preserved?
No. Because the tool extracts plain text after stripping HTML tags, all character-level formatting (bold, italic, underline, color, links) is removed. The result is clean readable prose, but without the original visual emphasis.
Can I convert multiple files at once?
Currently the tool processes one file at a time. For batch conversion of many eBooks, a desktop tool like Calibre's bulk-convert feature is better suited — it can convert hundreds of files in a single operation.
Does it work on iPhone/iPad?
Yes, on Safari and Chrome on iOS, though mobile browsers may have stricter memory limits than desktop browsers. For very large eBooks, a desktop computer or laptop is more reliable. The interface is fully responsive and works smoothly on phones for normal-sized books.
What about KFX files?
KFX (Kindle Format X) files are not supported. KFX is a newer Amazon format with stronger DRM and a more complex container structure. Even non-DRM KFX files use a different binary layout than AZW3/MOBI. Use Calibre with the KFX Input plugin to handle KFX files.
Can I convert EPUB files here?
No, this tool is specifically for AZW3, AZW, and MOBI files. EPUB has a fundamentally different structure (a ZIP archive of XHTML files) and would require a separate parser. Many free EPUB-to-PDF converters exist for that purpose.
Is the converted PDF searchable?
Yes. The PDF text is selectable and searchable using any standard PDF reader (Adobe Acrobat, Preview, Foxit, browser-based viewers). You can copy text from the PDF and paste it elsewhere, perform full-text search, and use the PDF with screen readers.
What encodings are supported?
The tool automatically detects encoding from the MOBI header. UTF-8 (encoding code 65001) and Windows-1252 / Latin-1 (encoding code 1252) are both fully supported. The browser's built-in TextDecoder handles the conversion to JavaScript strings.
How long does conversion take?
For a typical 80,000-word novel (around 250 PDF pages), conversion completes in 3–8 seconds on a modern computer. Larger books or older devices may take longer. The progress bar shows real-time progress during the text flow phase.
What browsers are supported?
All modern browsers — Chrome, Firefox, Safari, Edge, Opera, Brave — are fully supported. Internet Explorer is not supported. The tool uses standard web APIs (FileReader, TextDecoder, ArrayBuffer) that have been available in all major browsers since at least 2014.
Is this tool legal to use?
Converting eBooks you legally own and that are not DRM-protected is generally legal in most jurisdictions. Removing DRM from purchased eBooks is restricted in many countries — this tool does not remove DRM and will not work on DRM-protected files. Always check your local laws.
Can I edit the PDF after converting?
Yes. The output is a standard PDF that can be edited in Adobe Acrobat, Preview (Mac), or free tools like LibreOffice Draw and PDF24. You can add annotations, highlights, merge with other PDFs, or extract pages.

Ready to Convert Your AZW3 File?

Scroll back to the top and drop your eBook into the upload zone. No signup, no software install, no waiting — just a clean PDF in seconds.

📖 Start Converting Now