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✅ PDF Files Only · Multiple Files SupportedUpload multiple PDF files, drag to reorder, and merge them into one perfectly combined PDF document. All done inside your browser — zero uploads.
Upload your PDF files, arrange them in the order you want, then click Merge & Download.
Drag & Drop PDF files here
or click to select multiple PDF files from your device
✅ PDF Files Only · Multiple Files SupportedNo PDF files added yet
Upload at least 2 PDF files above to start merging
Powerful, private, and easy to use. Merge any number of PDFs into one polished document in seconds.
From upload to merged PDF in under a minute. No sign-up, no software required.
A quick primer on how PDF merging works behind the scenes — and why combining files is so common.
PDF merging is the operation of combining the pages of two or more separate PDF files into a single new PDF. Because PDF documents are structured as ordered collections of page objects, merging is essentially a copy-and-paste operation at the page level — there is no re-rendering, re-encoding, or quality loss. This tool uses the open-source PDF-lib JavaScript library to read each source PDF, copy every page in order, and assemble a new PDF that contains all of them. The result is a clean, standards-compliant PDF that opens correctly in any PDF reader on any device.
Need to convert images to PDF, extract text, or split files? Try our other tools.
From students to business owners, here's where a fast browser-based PDF merger saves real time every day.
Three ways to merge PDFs — each with different tradeoffs. This table shows when each one is the right choice.
| Feature | 🌐 Browser (This Tool) | ☁️ Online Server Tool | 💻 Desktop Software |
|---|---|---|---|
| Privacy | Files stay on device | Files uploaded | Files stay local |
| Installation | None | None | Required |
| Cost | Free | Often paid / limited | Free or paid |
| Speed | Instant | Depends on upload speed | Fast |
| File-size limit | Browser memory only | Often capped | System RAM only |
| Works offline | After first load | No | Yes |
| Account required | No | Often yes | Sometimes |
| Cross-platform | Any device with a browser | Any device with internet | OS-specific |
| Advanced editing | Basic merge | Varies | Full editor features |
| Watermarks on output | No | Often yes (free tier) | No |
| Quality preservation | Lossless | Usually lossless | Lossless |
| Setup time | 0 seconds | Account creation | Download + install |
Combining files into one PDF is one of the most universal document workflows. Here's where it shows up most.
Combine case files, exhibits, depositions and disclosure documents into chronological bundles ready for court filing and party distribution.
Combine consultation notes, lab results, imaging reports and prescriptions into single patient record PDFs for HRIS upload or referral.
Combine annual statements, audit trails and account documents into single yearly bundles for tax filing and regulatory compliance.
Combine CAD exports, RFI responses, inspection photos and specifications into single project deliverables for permitting and handover.
Combine chapter PDFs, contributor pages, glossaries and front-matter into single book proofs for typesetters and printers.
Teachers and students bundle assignments, lesson plans and supporting reading into single PDFs for LMS upload and submission.
Combine product catalogs, wholesale price sheets and retailer agreements into one trade-show bundle for buyer distribution.
Combine scripts, storyboards, call sheets and crew lists into single production bibles for distribution to entire film crews.
Combine forms, notices, supporting records and FOIA responses into single document packets for archive and citizen response.
Combine product specifications, design docs, code review PDFs and release notes into single launch bundles for stakeholders.
Combine flight tickets, hotel vouchers, tour confirmations and itineraries into single travel-pack PDFs for guest delivery.
Combine packing lists, customs forms, bills of lading and proof-of-delivery slips into single shipment bundles for downstream record-keeping.
A complete reference for every control in the merger — what it does, what to pick, and how it affects the output PDF.
The string here becomes the downloaded filename (with non-alphanumeric characters stripped and spaces converted to dashes). It's also written to the PDF's title metadata, so it shows in the browser tab and in any PDF reader's document properties. Use a descriptive name like Q4-2026-Report or Smith-vs-Jones-Bundle.
If filled in, this is written to PDF metadata under author and is also shown on the cover page (when cover page is enabled). Leave blank for an anonymous merge, or fill it in for organizational deliverables so anyone opening the PDF knows who created it.
When set to Add a cover page, the tool inserts a styled A4 cover at the front of the merged PDF, showing the document title, author, creation date, total file count, total page count, and a numbered list of every source PDF that was merged. Turn it off if you just want the raw page-by-page content with no preamble.
When set to Add page numbers, the tool stamps a small n / total page number at the bottom-center of every page after the cover. Page numbering is continuous across all merged files (not restarted per file). Use this for professional reports, court bundles and reference documents where numbered pages aid navigation.
Drag-and-drop one or many PDF files directly onto the dashed upload area, or click anywhere on it to open the system file picker. You can add files in multiple batches — every new file appends to the existing queue. Only PDF files are accepted; other file types are silently filtered out.
Each file in the queue has Up and Down buttons that move it one position. The order you see on screen is the order pages appear in the merged PDF, top to bottom. Re-arrange before clicking Merge — once the PDF is generated, the order is baked in.
The trash icon on each file removes only that file. The red Clear All Files button at the bottom resets the entire merger in one click (with a confirmation prompt). Both leave the original files on your disk untouched — only the queue is affected.
A few small adjustments can make a big difference to the final result. Use these tips to keep your output clean and professional.
The cover page lists files by name. Rename to something descriptive (like "01-Contract.pdf", "02-Exhibits.pdf") before uploading so the cover reads naturally.
Prefix file names with numbers (01-, 02-, 03-…) and they'll usually arrive in the queue in the right order, saving you from manual reordering.
The badge next to each file shows its page count. If any file says "Could not read PDF", remove it before merging — that file's content won't make it in.
Legal bundles, audit packs and reports rely on stable page references. Always enable page numbers — they make later citation and review enormously easier.
For a 2-3 file quick merge, the cover page is overkill. Turn it off — you'll save a page and your readers won't have to flip past it.
Encrypted PDFs can't be merged. If a file fails, open it in your PDF reader, save it without a password, then upload that unencrypted copy here.
If three files are all "section 1", arrange them together. The merged PDF reads more logically when content of the same type stays adjacent.
If you're merging 50+ files, do a 5-file test first. You'll catch order or naming issues before committing to a full run that might take a minute.
The output filename becomes the cover heading too. Set it first so you can see exactly how the cover will look when you preview later.
The merger never modifies your source files — but always retain originals separately so you can re-run the merge with different settings if needed.
The Output Pages stat updates live. If the number looks wrong (way too high or too low), check that all files loaded properly before merging.
Merging 500 files into one PDF works, but produces a hard-to-navigate document. Consider merging into 5 separate PDFs of 100 files each instead.
Most online PDF mergers upload your files to a server. This one runs entirely in your browser — your PDFs never leave your device.
Every step of the merge — reading each PDF, copying its pages, building the new document, adding cover and page numbers, saving the result — runs in your browser's own JavaScript engine. No file content, no metadata and no preview is ever transmitted over the network.
Everything you need to know about merging PDF files online — covering quality, limits, privacy and output options.
Key terms used in PDF merging and on this page, explained simply.
Drop your PDF files into the tool above and get a clean, combined PDF in seconds — no signup, no upload, no limits.
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