Select a page range or individual pages, and the tool creates a separate PDF right in your browser. The original stays untouched on your device.
How it works
- Add the contract PDF you want to split.
- Choose the pages to extract — a range, individual pages, or every page as its own file.
- The tool builds the new PDF in your browser from the pages you selected.
- Download the extracted file; your original document is not modified.
Your privacy
Splitting happens entirely in your browser — your contract never leaves your device.
No file is uploaded to any server, and nothing is stored once you close the tab.
Your documents are never used to train AI models.
Common use cases
- Extract the signature page of a loan agreement to confirm who signed.
- Separate the payment schedule annex so you can print just that part.
- Share one section of a contract without sending the entire document.
- Pull a guarantor annex out of a combined file to store it separately.
- Break a long merged file back into its original documents.
Limitations
- Password-protected PDFs must be opened and re-saved without the password before splitting.
- Splitting copies whole pages — it cannot separate two clauses that share a single page.
- Very large scanned files may take a moment to process on older devices.
Frequently asked questions
Does splitting change my original PDF?
No. The tool reads your file and creates a brand-new PDF from the pages you choose. The original stays exactly as it was on your device.
Can I extract several separate ranges at once?
Yes. Select the pages or ranges you need and the tool assembles them into the new file in order. If you want each range as its own file, run the split once per range.
Is it safe to split a signed contract?
Splitting for convenience is fine — for example, printing only the schedule. Keep the complete signed original though, because an extracted page on its own carries less weight as evidence than the full document.
Can I split a scanned agreement?
Yes. Scanned PDFs split the same way as digital ones, since the tool works with whole pages rather than the text on them.
Why would I split before merging?
Merging joins whole files in order. If you need to drop a blank page or reorder sections, split the file into parts first, then merge the parts in the order you want.