PDF Merger

Combine multiple PDFs into one — drag to reorder, rotate pages, then download.

How this compares

Most online PDF mergers gate batch size, file count, or features behind logins. This one runs in your browser, so the only ceiling is your tab's memory — and your file never lands on someone else's server.

FeatureWebToolVerseSmallpdfILovePDFAdobe WebPDF24
Files leave your deviceNeverUploadUploadUploadUpload
Free file sizeBrowser memory5 MB25 MB100 MBUnlimited
Free files per mergeUnlimited2UnlimitedUnlimitedUnlimited
Login requiredAfter 1 task
Drag-to-reorder
Per-page rotate before merge
Add page numbers across output
Insert blank divider pages
Custom output filename
Watermark on merged fileNoneNoneNoneNoneNone

Free-tier features as of May 2026. Competitor feature sets change often; check their sites for the most current limits.

Runs entirely in your browser. No uploads. Your files stay private.

How to Merge PDFs — and Rotate Pages While You're at It

PDF Merger combines any number of PDF documents into a single output file. Everything happens in your browser using pdf-lib, an open-source JavaScript library that reads and writes the PDF format directly. There is no upload step, no temporary copy on our infrastructure, and no account requirement — when you select files, they're loaded into a Blob in your tab's memory and processed there.
After dropping files in, you can drag rows up and down to set the order they'll appear in the output. The merged PDF follows that order exactly. Each row also has a Pages button that expands a thumbnail strip; from there you can rotate individual pages 90° at a time before merging. Rotations are stored per-page in the document's metadata and applied to the output, so a sideways scanned page becomes upright in the final file without re-rendering.
Because pdf-lib copies the page objects byte-for-byte from the source files into the new document, nothing about the original pages changes during merging. Fonts stay embedded, vector graphics stay vector, hyperlinks remain clickable, and image quality is unchanged. This is the same approach used by Adobe Acrobat's combine-files feature — there's no re-rendering or re-compression involved.
The browser's memory is the only practical limit on how many files you can merge. On a modern laptop you can comfortably combine 50+ PDFs totalling several hundred megabytes. Very large jobs (1 GB+ of input) may slow the browser tab; in those cases, merge in two passes or use a desktop tool like pdftk.
PDF Merger does not flatten form fields, rasterize annotations, or run OCR. If you need any of those steps, run them on each input file first using the relevant tool below, then merge. Likewise, encrypted (password-protected) PDFs must be unlocked before they can be merged — pdf-lib refuses to parse encrypted streams.
After merging, you can pipe the output into the next tool in this set: compress to shrink the file size for email, add a password if it contains anything sensitive, or stamp a watermark across every page. The Workflow Next strip below links straight to those next steps.
If your real need is to rearrange or remove pages inside one existing file (rather than combining multiple files), use the PDF Page Organizer instead — it's purpose-built for that and gives you a single drag-and-drop view of every page in one document.

Common Use Cases

01

Combine contracts and addendums

Merge a main contract with its exhibits, schedules, and signature pages into one complete document for execution or archival.

02

Compile multi-section reports

Join a cover page, body, charts, and appendix from separate authors or templates into a single polished deliverable.

03

Bundle invoices for accounting

Combine monthly invoices, receipts, or expense statements into one file for bookkeeping, auditing, or client delivery.

04

Straighten scanned pages

Rotate sideways or upside-down scanned pages 90° at a time before merging so the merged PDF reads correctly throughout.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. Drag any file row up or down to control the position it occupies in the merged PDF. Expand a row with the Pages button to see thumbnails of each page in that file and rotate individual pages before export.
There is no hard limit imposed by the tool. The practical ceiling is your browser's memory — modern laptops handle 50+ PDFs totalling several hundred megabytes without issue. For multi-gigabyte jobs, merge in two passes.
No. pdf-lib copies the original page objects into the new document without re-rendering or re-compressing. Fonts stay embedded, vector graphics stay vector, hyperlinks remain clickable, and image resolution is unchanged.
No — encrypted PDFs cannot be parsed until they're unlocked. Use the PDF Password tool to remove protection first, then bring the unlocked file into the merger.
No. All processing happens locally in your browser using pdf-lib running on your CPU. Your files never leave your device — there is no upload endpoint and no server-side processing pipeline behind this tool.
Form fields are preserved when their internal names don't collide between input files. Annotations (highlights, sticky notes) are also kept. Digital signatures will be invalidated by any modification, including merging — this is a property of the PDF signing standard, not a tool limitation.
Yes. The merged file keeps each page at its original size — there is no forced normalization. If you need every page the same size, run the output through a PDF tool that resizes pages, or rebuild the source files with a consistent page size.
Each page in a PDF carries a rotation property (0°, 90°, 180°, 270°). The Pages panel lets you adjust that property before merging, and pdf-lib writes the new value into the output. Viewers and printers honour it automatically — the underlying page content is not actually rotated, which means there is no quality loss.
PDF Merger combines multiple files into one. PDF Page Organizer works inside a single file to delete, reorder, or rotate pages. If your task is 'I have one PDF and want to remove pages 3 and 7,' use Organizer; if it's 'I have five PDFs and want them combined,' use Merger.
Yes — once the page is loaded, you can disconnect from the internet and the merger keeps working. The site also installs as a Progressive Web App, so it can be added to your home screen for offline access on mobile and desktop.

Step-by-step guide

How to merge PDF files for free

Walk through every step with screenshots, format-specific tips, and the platform-by-platform limits you need to know.

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