How to Merge PDF Files for Free (Without Uploading Them)
Merging PDFs — combining several files into a single document — is one of the most common office tasks. The catch with most free tools is that they upload your files to a server, cap how many you can do per day, or stamp a watermark on the result. Here's how to merge cleanly and privately.
Step by step
- Open the PDF tools and stay on the Merge tab.
- Drag in all the PDFs you want to combine (or click to browse).
- Reorder them with the ↑ / ↓ buttons until they're in the sequence you want — this order is exactly how pages will appear.
- Click Merge and your combined PDF downloads instantly.
Because everything runs in your browser, there's no upload wait, no file-size limit, no daily quota, and never a watermark.
Tips for a clean merge
- Order matters. Rename files with a number prefix (01-, 02-) before importing if you have many — it makes ordering obvious.
- Mixed page sizes are fine. A4 and Letter pages can live in the same merged file; each page keeps its own dimensions.
- Scanned + digital PDFs merge together without issue.
Why local merging is safer
Contracts, invoices, medical forms and IDs are exactly the kind of documents people merge — and exactly the kind you shouldn't upload to a random website. Local, in-browser processing means the file never leaves your device, so privacy is built in.
Reducing the merged file's size
If the result is large, it's usually because of high-resolution scanned images inside the source PDFs. Compress those images before creating the PDF, or export your scans at 150–200 DPI rather than 600 DPI for documents meant to be read on screen.
FAQ
Is there a limit on how many PDFs I can merge?
No. Add as many as you like — there's no per-day cap because nothing is uploaded.
Will the merged PDF have a watermark?
Never. The output is clean.
Can I merge password-protected PDFs?
Remove the password first (open it and "print to PDF"), then merge — encrypted files can't be read directly.