Extracting contract pages
Isolate only the specific agreement or signature pages of a contract to share with clients or partners.
PDF tools
Select pages from a PDF and prepare smaller documents without unnecessary uploads.
Drop files here
or choose files from your device
Choose filesEditor workspace
Choose a PDF file.
Enter the pages or ranges you need.
Download the selected pages as a new file.
Split PDF extracts specific pages or separate page ranges from a PDF document into a new file or multiple individual files. It is best for isolating single contract pages, chapters, or individual receipts from scanned bundles.
Splitting a PDF becomes essential when you have a bulky document but only need to share, print, or archive a small portion of it. Common scenarios include extracting the final signature page of a lengthy legal contract, saving individual chapters from a massive textbook, or separating a bundle of scanned tax forms and receipts. This tool is built to handle those tasks instantly. You can enter precise page ranges or tell the splitter to break every single page into its own file. Because the splitting logic runs locally inside your browser, your documents are completely safe from third-party server exposure, making this perfect for private paperwork, financial records, and business workflows. Note that very large PDF files are limited by your device's memory; if you experience slowdowns, close unnecessary browser tabs or process smaller files.
Isolate only the specific agreement or signature pages of a contract to share with clients or partners.
Split a single scan file containing multiple different invoices, receipts, or IDs into separate clean PDFs.
Break up a long syllabus, textbook, or project brief into focused single-topic reading files for students.
Yes. You can enter separate pages or ranges separated by commas, such as 1, 3, 5-8.
Browser memory can limit very large files. If you have extremely heavy document scans, closing other tabs can help.
No. The splitter reads your original file and generates new files, leaving your source file completely unchanged.
Yes, page structure is copied directly. However, document-wide elements like global indexes or cross-document bookmarks may be resolved to local pages or omitted.
No. Password-protected or encrypted PDFs must have their security removed before they can be split.
Absolutely. Because all processing happens inside your local web browser, no file data is ever uploaded to a server, keeping your financial information fully private.