Merge PDF Files Online Free

Combine multiple PDF files into one document online. Reorder files, merge pages, and download a single PDF. Free to use with no sign-up required.

Free online file converter tool. Works in Chrome Firefox Safari Edge Opera and other modern browsers on Windows macOS Linux Android and iOS. No software installation required. Browser-side processing keeps your file local when supported. Completely free to use with no account needed.

Merge PDF Files Online Free

Combine multiple PDF files into one. Drag to reorder, then merge and download after processing.

Drop your PDF files here

or click to browse files

Supports PDF files - drag to reorder after upload
Browser When supported
Free No registration
Practical Processing limits

PDF Merge Features

Simple and powerful PDF combining.

Merge Features

Custom Order

Drag and drop to reorder files before merging.

Page Count Display

See the page count of each PDF file before merging.

Workflow Privacy

Merging uses browser-side processing when available. That mode avoids file upload.

Output

Fast Processing

Processing time depends on file size, page count, browser support, and device memory.

Quality Preserved

Original formatting, images, and fonts are typically preserved during page merging.

Browser-Side When Supported

No software installation needed. Works in any modern browser.

Key Takeaways

  • Merging runs entirely in your browser using pdf-lib, so your PDF files are processed on your device.
  • Pages are copied without re-rendering or recompression, so original layout, fonts, and images are preserved exactly, but the merged file size stays roughly the sum of the inputs.
  • The merged document follows the top-to-bottom order of the file list, so drag files into the correct sequence before merging, and note that you need at least two PDFs to combine.
  • Password-protected or encrypted PDFs are not supported and will fail to load, so remove the protection first; to shrink the output, run a PDF compressor afterward since merging does not reduce file size.

PDF Merging Tips

File order matters

Drag files into the order you want them merged before clicking Merge. The order you upload them is the order they appear in the final PDF.

Combine scanned documents

Merging works well for combining scanned pages where each page is a separate PDF file. Upload all pages, arrange them, then merge into one document.

Large file merging

Merging runs entirely in your browser, so your PDFs are never uploaded to any server — your files stay private on your device.

Password-protected PDFs

PDFs with password protection cannot be merged without entering the password first. Remove password protection using a PDF editor before merging.

How to Merge PDF Files in Your Browser

  1. Add your PDF files

    Drag your PDFs onto the upload area or click to browse and select them. The tool reads each file and shows its name, size, and exact page count so you can confirm you loaded the right documents before combining.

  2. Arrange the order

    Drag any file by its handle to set the sequence you want. The merged PDF follows the top-to-bottom order of the list. Use the remove button to drop any file you added by mistake before continuing.

  3. Merge and download

    Click Merge PDFs to combine every page into one document, then click Download Merged PDF to save it as merged.pdf. All work happens locally with pdf-lib, so your files stay on your device throughout.

What the Merger Keeps and Changes

Merging copies the pages from each PDF into a brand new document in the order you set. Here is what stays the same and what is affected so you know what to expect from the output.

AspectBefore MergeAfter Merge
PagesSpread across separate filesCombined into one file, in your chosen order
Page layout and fontsOriginal per filePreserved exactly, no re-rendering
Images and vectorsEmbedded in each PDFCopied without recompression
File sizeSum of all inputsRoughly the sum, no compression applied
Encrypted or password PDFsLockedNot supported, remove protection first
Output nameIndividual namesSingle file saved as merged.pdf

When This Merge Tool Is the Right Choice

Combining whole documents

Ideal when you want to join two or more complete PDFs, such as a cover letter and a resume, or several scanned pages, into one file in a specific order.

Keeping originals intact

Choose this when you need the merged result to preserve the original formatting, fonts, and images without any quality loss, since pages are copied rather than re-rendered.

Working with sensitive files

A good fit when you prefer that documents are not uploaded. Merging runs in your browser with pdf-lib, so the files stay on your device during the process.

Use a different tool instead

If you need to remove or extract single pages, use the Split PDF tool. To shrink the result, run a PDF compressor afterward, since merging does not reduce file size.

Common Problems and Fixes

The merge button does nothing

You need at least two PDF files in the list to merge. Add another file, then click Merge PDFs. A single file cannot be merged on its own.

A file shows zero pages or fails to load

This usually means the PDF is password-protected, encrypted, or damaged. Remove the password in a PDF editor, then re-add the file. Confirm the file actually opens in a normal PDF viewer first.

The pages came out in the wrong order

The output follows the order in the file list, not the order you selected files in. Drag each item by its handle into the correct position before clicking Merge PDFs.

Merging is slow or the tab freezes

Very large PDFs or many files are processed using your device memory, which can take a few seconds. Close other heavy tabs, merge in smaller batches, and let the status text finish before downloading.

How to Merge PDF Files

Upload two or more PDF files, drag them into the order you want, then click Merge PDFs to combine them into a single file.

Frequently Asked Questions

How are my PDF files processed?

Merging can run in your browser using pdf-lib when supported.

For sensitive documents, confirm the browser-side workflow before processing.

For very large numbers of files, processing may take longer.

How many PDF files can I merge?

You can merge multiple files in one operation.

Practical limits depend on file count, file size, browser support, and device memory.

For sensitive documents, confirm browser-side mode or avoid uploading files you are not comfortable processing online.

Will the merged PDF keep all formatting?

Yes. All pages, images, fonts and formatting are preserved.

The merger simply combines pages from each PDF into a new document.

Page counts are shown for each file to help you organize.

Can I reorder the PDFs before merging?

Yes. Drag the file list items to set the order you want.

The merged PDF will follow the order shown in the list.

No quality is lost during the merge process.

Can I merge password-protected PDFs?

Password-protected PDFs cannot be merged without removing the password first.

Remove the password protection using a PDF editor before merging.

If you have the password, decrypt the PDF first, then merge.

Are there any file size limits?

Practical limits depend on file size, page count, browser support, and device memory.

This depends on your device's available memory.

Most standard documents will merge quickly.

What browsers are supported?

All modern browsers including Chrome, Firefox, Safari, and Edge.

JavaScript must be enabled.

The merged PDF preserves the original page sizes.

Can I remove individual pages?

You can remove an entire PDF file from the list using the remove button.

For removing individual pages, use the PDF Split tool.

A progress indicator shows the merge status.

Is this tool free?

Yes, completely free with no registration.

Practical workflow limits on merges.

Drag-to-reorder is supported on touch devices.

Will the merged file be larger?

The merged file size is approximately the sum of all input file sizes.

No compression is applied during merging.

There are no watermarks added to your merged PDF.

Sources and References

Format and tool details on this page are based on the official specifications and documentation below.