Extract pages into separate files. Choose every page, a range, or hand-pick specific pages.
Splitting a PDF is one of the most common document tasks - whether you're extracting a single page from a contract, separating chapters from a report, or pulling specific slides from a presentation deck. Our free online PDF splitter handles all of these scenarios without requiring desktop software.
Splits your entire PDF into individual single-page files. Ideal for creating separate invoices, flashcards, or distributing pages to different people.
Extract a consecutive range of pages by specifying the start and end page numbers. Perfect for pulling out a specific chapter or section from a larger document.
Click on visual page thumbnails to hand-pick exactly which pages you want. Select any combination of non-consecutive pages.
When splitting into many files, download everything at once as a ZIP archive instead of saving each file individually.
Our splitter extracts pages directly from the original file structure. Every element - vector graphics, embedded fonts, form fields, hyperlinks, and image resolution - is preserved exactly as it was. The process runs in your browser; your file is never uploaded to a server.
After splitting, you can merge extracted pages with other PDFs or compress them to reduce file size.
Upload your PDF, select the "Every Page" split mode, and click Split PDF. Each page will be extracted as a separate PDF file. You can download them individually or all at once as a ZIP archive.
Yes. Use the "Pick Pages" mode to click on thumbnail previews and select exactly which pages you want. You can also use "Page Range" to extract a consecutive range of pages (e.g., pages 3 to 7).
Since splitting happens directly in your browser, there's no strict server-side file size limit. Very large PDFs over 100MB may take longer depending on your device's memory and performance.
Yes. The split tool extracts pages from the original PDF without re-encoding or compressing them. Output files retain the exact same quality, fonts, images, and formatting as the original.