Guide
How to Split a PDF Into Separate Pages
Extract individual pages or page ranges from a PDF directly in your browser.
When splitting a PDF helps
Splitting a PDF is useful when the recipient only needs a few pages instead of the entire document.
It works well for signed pages, appendices, tickets, forms and long reports where a smaller subset is easier to share or review.
A browser-based split is especially convenient when you want the result quickly without opening a large desktop PDF editor.
Choose single pages or ranges
If every page needs its own file, export each page separately so the result is easy to sort and send.
If a few pages belong together, export a page range instead of generating lots of tiny files.
That choice usually depends on whether the output is headed into a review workflow, an archive, or another combined document.
Local-first page extraction
A local-first PDF split flow keeps the original document in the browser while creating the smaller outputs.
That matters when the source file contains internal material or signed pages you would rather not upload to an external service.
For a quick one-off task, local extraction is often the simplest path from “too much PDF” to “only the pages I need.”