quialo.

Extract PDF Pages

All processing happens in your browser
Drop a PDF here, or click to browse
One PDF at a time. Pages are selected below.
Use commas for single pages and a hyphen for a range, for example 1, 3-5, 8. Pages are kept in the order you list them.

Add a PDF by clicking or dropping it here. It never leaves your browser.

Extract PDF Pages lets you pull out just the pages you need from a PDF and save them as a fresh document. Type a selection like 1, 3-5, 8 and the tool copies those pages, in the exact order you list them, into a new PDF you can download. Everything runs in your browser, so your files never leave your device.

How to use

  1. Click the drop zone or drag a PDF onto it to load your file.
  2. Type the pages you want to keep, using commas for single pages and a hyphen for a range, for example 1, 3-5, 8.
  3. Press Extract pages to build a new PDF with only those pages.
  4. Click Download to save the extracted PDF to your device.

Examples

  • Keep pages 1, 3-5, 8 from a 20 page report and get a new 5 page PDF in that order.
  • From a 10 page scan, enter 2, 4, 6 to extract just the even numbered pages into a 3 page file.
  • Reorder while extracting: enter 5, 1, 3 to keep three pages with page 5 first.

FAQs

Are page numbers 1-based or 0-based?
They are 1-based, so the first page is 1. Enter the page numbers exactly as they appear when you read the PDF.
Does the order I type the pages matter?
Yes. Pages are copied in the order you list them, so 5, 1, 3 produces a PDF with page 5 first, then page 1, then page 3.
Can I repeat a page?
Yes. If you list the same page more than once, it appears that many times in the result, which is handy for building handouts or proofs.
What happens if I enter a page that does not exist?
The tool checks your selection against the document and shows a clear message instead of producing a broken file. For example, page 12 in a 5 page PDF is flagged as out of range.
Do my files get uploaded anywhere?
No. The extraction happens entirely in your browser using pdf-lib. Your PDF is never sent to a server.
Can I use this on a password protected PDF?
Not directly. Remove the password in a PDF viewer first, then load the unprotected file here.

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