PDF Converter
PDF Converter helps you handle common document operations from one browser interface: merging files, extracting selected pages, reducing file size, converting pages to images, and creating PDF files from images. For workflows that require searchable text, OCR-assisted export can be used when applicable.
This tool is built for everyday operations such as preparing email attachments, submitting forms, packaging reports, or sharing a compact version of large documents. Instead of switching between separate services, you can complete most routine PDF tasks in one place.
What You Can Do
Use merge mode when you need one combined file from multiple documents. Use split mode when a full document is too large and only a subset of pages is required. Use compression when upload portals reject files because of size limits. Use PDF-to-image conversion when you need page previews for slides or social content. Use image-to-PDF conversion when scanned pages or photos must be delivered as a single portable document.
Practical Workflow
Start by selecting your operation and adding source files. If merging, confirm order before export. If splitting, define page ranges clearly. If compressing, compare output readability at several quality levels. For OCR, test at least one page to confirm text extraction quality before exporting a large batch. After export, open the generated PDF to verify page count, orientation, and text clarity.
Quality and Compliance Notes
OCR accuracy depends on source quality, language, and contrast. Complex layouts, handwritten notes, or heavily compressed scans may produce imperfect text. For legal, tax, or contract submissions, always review the final output manually. If exact preservation is critical, keep an original copy and compare the converted result page by page.
For operations teams, a good pattern is to standardize one naming scheme per output stage: original, working, and final. This makes it easier to audit what was merged, removed, or compressed. When collaborating across multiple people, agree in advance on target file size and readability threshold so everyone evaluates output with the same expectation.
If a portal rejects your upload, first verify page count and orientation, then test a lower compression level before changing to another format. For OCR workflows, pay attention to page rotation and scan contrast because those two factors often create the biggest accuracy difference. A quick spot-check of five representative pages can prevent a full re-run later.
For archive workflows, keep both original and processed copies with clear timestamps so future audits can trace document history. This is especially useful when files move across teams or external submission systems.