Focused workflow
This page is designed around one clear task so users can complete it without hunting through unrelated screens.
Use this page to combine multiple PDF files into one document without adding branding or moving through a complicated workflow. It works well for resumes, invoices, scanned pages, forms, and document packets.
This page is designed around one clear task so users can complete it without hunting through unrelated screens.
Generated files, text, calculations, or conversions should be checked before important use.
Keep scrolling for use cases, limitations, related tools, and supporting guidance for this workflow.
Helpful Guide
Start by uploading the PDF files you want to combine, then confirm the reading order before merging. This keeps the output document easy to review and avoids redoing the task later.
A simple merge workflow is especially useful when you need one clean document for email, printing, client review, or uploads to a form that only accepts a single file.
People often merge PDFs when preparing application packets, combining invoices, creating one document from scanned pages, or sending a complete document set to a client or team member.
This also helps when the recipient should review everything in sequence instead of opening multiple attachments separately.
Check page order first and remove duplicates before merging if needed. A merge tool combines files, but it does not automatically correct mistakes in the original documents.
If one source PDF is blurry or badly scanned, fix that file first. The merged result can only be as clear as the original pages.
Yes. This page is designed for clean output without adding branding to the final file.
Try reducing the size of source files first or merge only the pages you actually need in the final document.