GuidesSplit PDF

How to Split a PDF File

Splitting a PDF lets you extract specific pages, break a large document into smaller sections, or remove pages you don't need. Here's how to do it for free, right in your browser.

Step-by-Step Instructions

  1. Open the Split PDF tool — Navigate to PDF Tools and select “Split PDF” from the tool grid, or click the link directly from the homepage.
  2. Upload your PDF — Drag and drop your file into the upload area, or click to browse your files. Your file stays on your device — it is not uploaded to any server.
  3. Enter page ranges — Specify which pages you want to extract. Use commas to separate individual pages (e.g., “1, 3, 5”) or dashes for ranges (e.g., “1-5, 10-15”).
  4. Click Split — The tool processes your PDF locally and generates a new file containing only the pages you selected.
  5. Download your result — Your split PDF is ready to download immediately. The original file remains unchanged.

Common Use Cases

Extracting a chapter from a textbook. If you have a 300-page PDF textbook and only need Chapter 5 (pages 87–112), splitting lets you create a lightweight file with just those pages. This is especially useful for students who want to print or annotate specific sections without dealing with the entire document.

Separating a contract for individual signatures. Legal documents often contain multiple sections that need to go to different parties. Splitting the PDF lets you send only the relevant pages to each signer, keeping sensitive information compartmentalized.

Removing cover pages and appendices. When sharing a report, you might want to strip the title page, table of contents, or appendices that aren't relevant to the recipient. Splitting gives you a clean, focused document.

Meeting email attachment limits. Many email providers cap attachments at 25 MB. If your PDF exceeds that, splitting it into smaller sections lets you send it across multiple emails without needing file compression.

Tips for Better Results

  • Use the page range syntax “1-3, 7, 10-12” to grab non-consecutive pages in a single operation.
  • If you're unsure which pages you need, open the PDF in your browser's built-in viewer first to identify page numbers.
  • For very large PDFs (100+ pages), splitting is faster than trying to delete individual pages one by one.
  • The split operation preserves all formatting, fonts, images, and links from the original document.

Frequently Asked Questions

Does splitting a PDF reduce file size?

Yes. When you extract a subset of pages, the resulting file only contains the data for those pages — images, fonts, and other embedded resources that only appear on removed pages are excluded. The file size reduction is proportional to how many pages you remove.

Can I split a password-protected PDF?

If the PDF has an owner password (restricting editing), most browser-based tools can still process it. However, if the PDF requires a user password to open, you'll need to enter that password first before splitting.

Is my file uploaded to a server?

No. PDF Tools processes everything locally in your browser using JavaScript. Your file never leaves your device, making it safe for sensitive documents like financial records, medical files, or legal contracts.