GuidesMerge PDFs

How to Merge PDF Files

Merging PDFs combines multiple documents into a single file. Whether you're assembling a report, compiling scanned pages, or organizing paperwork, here's how to do it for free.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Open the Merge PDFs tool — Select “Merge PDFs” from the PDF Tools homepage. It's in the “Most Popular” section at the top.
  2. Add your PDF files — Drag and drop multiple files into the upload area, or click to select them from your file browser. You can add as many PDFs as you need.
  3. Arrange the order — Files appear in the order you added them. If you need to reorder them, drag the files into your preferred sequence. The final merged document will follow this order.
  4. Click Merge — The tool combines all your PDFs into a single document. This happens entirely in your browser — no files are uploaded anywhere.
  5. Download the merged PDF — Your combined document is ready for immediate download. All original files remain untouched.

When to Merge PDFs

Assembling a job application package. Most employers want a single PDF with your resume, cover letter, references, and portfolio samples. Instead of sending four attachments, merge them into one clean file that's easy to review and forward.

Compiling scanned documents. If you scanned a multi-page document but your scanner created individual files for each page, merging brings them back together into a single coherent document. This is common with receipt scanning, tax documents, and medical records.

Creating course packets or study materials. Students and teachers often need to combine readings from multiple sources — journal articles, textbook chapters, and lecture slides — into a single study guide. Merging makes it easy to distribute and read on any device.

Consolidating monthly reports. If your team produces separate PDF reports each week or month, merging them into quarterly or annual compilations creates a clean archive. This is especially useful for compliance documentation and audit trails.

Combining contracts with exhibits. Legal documents frequently reference exhibits, schedules, or appendices that exist as separate files. Merging them creates a single, self-contained document that's easier to reference and less likely to have pieces go missing.

Tips for Better Results

  • Name your files clearly before merging so you can verify the correct order (e.g., “01-cover-letter.pdf”, “02-resume.pdf”).
  • If some PDFs have different page sizes (letter vs. A4), the merged document preserves each page's original dimensions.
  • For very large merges (50+ files), add them in batches to keep things manageable.
  • After merging, consider running the result through the Compress tool if the combined file size is too large for your needs.
  • Bookmarks and internal links from the original files may not carry over during a merge — this is a limitation of browser-based PDF processing.

Understanding File Size After Merging

When you merge PDFs, the resulting file size is roughly the sum of all input files. However, it can sometimes be slightly smaller because shared resources (like common fonts) are deduplicated. Conversely, if the PDFs use different fonts or have high-resolution images, the merged file will be correspondingly large.

If the merged file is too large for your purposes — for example, if you need to email it and the total exceeds 25 MB — use the Compress PDF tool after merging. Compression can often reduce file size by 30–70% depending on the content, especially for image-heavy documents like scanned pages.

Frequently Asked Questions

How many PDFs can I merge at once?

There's no hard limit — you can merge as many files as your browser can handle. In practice, most modern browsers can comfortably process dozens of files. For very large batches (100+), consider merging in groups of 20–30 to avoid memory issues.

Will the formatting be preserved?

Yes. Each page retains its original layout, fonts, images, and formatting. The merge operation appends pages sequentially without altering their content. Different page sizes and orientations within the same merged document are fully supported.

Can I merge non-PDF files?

The Merge tool accepts only PDF files. If you need to include images, Word documents, or presentations, first convert them to PDF using the respective conversion tools (Image to PDF, Word to PDF, etc.), then merge the resulting PDFs together.