Professional PDF Tools for Everyone
Fast, secure, and privacy-first document processing. Merge, compress, convert, and edit PDFs with professional-grade tools.
All Tools
Merge PDF
Combine PDFs in the order you want with the easiest PDF merger available.
Split PDF
Separate one page or a whole set for easy conversion into independent PDF files.
Compress PDF
Reduce file size while optimizing for maximal PDF quality.
Extreme Compression
Maximum reduction in size. Less quality, but smallest file size.
Rotate PDF
Rotate your PDF pages. You can simply select the angle of rotation.
Protect PDF
Protect PDF files with a password. Encrypt PDF documents.
PDF to Images
Convert PDF pages to JPG, PNG, or WEBP images. Download as ZIP.
JPG to PDF
Convert JPG images to PDF in seconds. Easily adjust orientation and margins.
PDF to Text
Extract readable text from PDF files. Download as a plain text file.
Image to PDF
Upload multiple images and merge them into a single PDF document.
Compress Image
Reduce image file size while maintaining acceptable visual quality.
PDF to Excel
Pull data straight from PDFs into Excel spreadsheets in a few seconds.
URL Shortener
Shorten long URLs easily. Powered by TinyURL.
QR Generator
Generate professional QR codes for text, URLs, WiFi, and contacts.
Why choose Easy PDF Lab?
We provide the best tools to manage your documents effectively.
100% Secure
All files are processed securely and deleted automatically from our servers after 2 hours.
Lightning Fast
Our powerful cloud servers process your documents in seconds, not minutes.
Fully Responsive
Works seamlessly on your desktop, tablet, and mobile phone directly from the browser.
Extreme PDF Compression
Secure, fast and easy to use.
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Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between standard and extreme compression?
Extreme compression uses 72 DPI (vs. 100–150 DPI for standard), enabling all optimization passes. Result is a much smaller file but with lower image quality.
Can I undo extreme compression?
No. Compression is permanent. Always keep a backup of your original PDF before compressing.
Is extreme compression suitable for printing?
No. The 72 DPI output is optimized for on-screen viewing and email. Use standard compression for print-quality output.
QR Code Generator
Generate professional QR codes instantly
Blog
Practical guides to help you work with PDFs faster and smarter
How to Reduce PDF File Size Without Losing Quality
Email limits, slow uploads, full inboxes — oversized PDFs are a constant frustration. Learn how to shrink them by 50–80% without any visible quality loss.
How to Merge Multiple PDFs Into One File
Separate chapters, invoices, contracts — combining them into a single ordered PDF takes under a minute. Here's the step-by-step process.
How to Rotate PDF Pages Online — Free, No Software
Scanned sideways? Pages upside down? Fix any PDF's orientation in seconds without installing anything, and without losing a pixel of quality.
The Ultimate PDF Toolkit Guide: Edit, Convert, Compress & Secure
Most people use 10% of what PDF tools can do. This guide covers the full toolkit — merge, split, compress, rotate, and protect — in one place.
How to Convert PDF Files: PDF to Image, Excel, Text & More
PDFs often need to be something else — a spreadsheet, images, or plain text. This complete guide covers every conversion you'll need.
Compress Images & PDFs Without Losing Quality (Best Free Methods)
Storage is cheap but email limits and page load times are real. Learn which compression method to use — and how to never over-compress again.
Top Free Online Tools for Productivity: URL Shortener & QR Generator
A short link and a QR code can make the difference between a professional presentation and an amateur one. Here's how to use both effectively.
How to Password-Protect a PDF: A Guide to Document Security
Contracts, financial reports, personnel files — some documents simply shouldn't travel unprotected. Here's how AES-256 encryption works and when to use it.
How to Split a PDF: Extract Pages, Chapters, and Sections Cleanly
A 40-page report where the client only needs page 12. An invoice batch where accounting wants them separated. Here's exactly how splitting works.
How to Convert PDF Pages to Images: JPG, PNG, and WEBP Explained
Presentation slide needed as an image. Infographic extracted for social media. Contract page turned into a JPEG for a web form. This guide covers all of it.
How to Combine Multiple Images Into a Single PDF File
Photos from a site visit. Scanned receipts. Product shots for a quote. Converting a batch of images into one clean PDF takes under a minute.
How to Extract Text From a PDF (And When It Simply Won't Work)
Text extraction is one of those tools that works brilliantly on some PDFs and completely fails on others. The difference isn't obvious — until you know why.
PDF Best Practices for Business: Contracts, Reports, and Client Documents
Most business PDF problems — files too large to email, documents arriving unprotected, disorganized multi-part proposals — are easily preventable.
The Student's PDF Toolkit: Manage University Documents Like a Pro
Submission portals with size limits, scanned readings rotated sideways, thesis files that won't attach — university PDF problems are predictable. So are the fixes.
Working With Scanned Documents: Rotate, Compress, and Share PDFs
Scanned documents are always larger than they need to be and often sideways. Two simple steps fix both problems — and make the file actually worth sending.
10 Smart Ways to Use QR Codes for Business (With Real Examples)
QR codes went from gimmick to essential tool in about three years. Here are ten ways businesses are using them right now — with practical setup tips for each.
The Complete Guide to PDF Security: Encryption, Passwords, and File Privacy
Sending a sensitive document should feel like more than just hoping for the best. This guide explains exactly what PDF encryption does — and what it doesn't.
How to Reduce PDF File Size Without Losing Quality
A step-by-step guide for students, professionals, and anyone tired of oversized PDFs.
Updated March 2026 · 7 min read
You finish a report, try to send it by email, and get the dreaded error: "File exceeds the 25 MB limit." Or you upload a PDF to a company portal that caps attachments at 10 MB, and your file is sitting at 38 MB. It happens constantly — scanned documents, image-heavy presentations, and design files bloat fast.
The good news is that most PDFs can be reduced by 50–80% without any visible drop in quality. The trick is knowing the right method — and not blindly squashing everything down to the smallest size possible.
This guide walks you through exactly how to compress a PDF the smart way: what tools to use, what settings to choose, and what mistakes to avoid.
What Does PDF Compression Actually Do?
A PDF file can contain text, embedded fonts, images, vector graphics, and metadata. When a PDF is "too big," it's almost always because of embedded images. A single high-resolution photo can be 5–10 MB on its own.
Compression works by resampling those embedded images to a lower resolution — reducing them from 300 DPI (print quality) down to 100–150 DPI (screen quality). Text stays sharp because it's stored as vector data, not pixels.
Step-by-Step: Compress a PDF Online for Free
- Open the Compress PDF tool. No signup needed — ready to use immediately.
- Upload your file. Add up to 5 PDFs at once. Each is processed individually.
- Set the compression level. Use the slider — mild preserves more quality, aggressive produces the smallest file. Medium hits the sweet spot for most documents.
- Click "Compress PDF." Processing takes a few seconds depending on file size.
- Download your compressed file. The tool shows original vs. new file size so you see the reduction immediately.
If you need maximum reduction and quality is secondary — such as archiving old scans — try Extreme Compression, which applies the most aggressive settings available.
Real-World Situations Where This Saves Time
- Students submitting assignments: University portals often cap uploads at 5–10 MB. A thesis with charts can easily exceed that.
- Professionals sending proposals: A brochure full of product images may need to be emailed — and most corporate systems reject files over 20 MB.
- Freelancers sharing portfolios: A 40 MB portfolio file downloads slowly and may not open on a weak connection.
- Small businesses handling invoices: Scanned receipts pile up. Compressing before archiving saves significant storage over time.
Common Mistakes That Make PDFs Unnecessarily Large
- Exporting at print resolution for digital use. 300 DPI is overkill for a file that will only ever be read on screen. 150 DPI looks identical but is 3–4× smaller.
- Saving scans without compression. Scanner apps default to uncompressed storage. Run these through a compressor before sharing.
- Merging without cleaning up first. Split out unwanted pages first, then merge, then compress.
- Compressing a PDF that's already compressed. Running an already-small file through aggressive compression can sometimes slightly increase the size. Always check the output.
Pro Tips for Getting the Best Results
- Match compression to purpose. If the PDF will be printed, use mild. If it's for email or web sharing, medium to aggressive is fine.
- Compress source images first when possible. Use the Image Compressor before embedding photos into documents — the result is always leaner.
- Fix orientation before compressing. If a scanned document came out sideways, rotate it first so the recipient doesn't have to wrestle with it.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will compressing a PDF make the text blurry?
No. Text in PDFs is stored as vector data, not images, so it stays sharp at any compression level. Only embedded photos are affected.
How much can I realistically reduce a PDF's size?
It depends on the content. A text-only document might shrink 10–20%, while a scanned photo-heavy report can be reduced 70–85%.
My compressed PDF is still too large. What else can I do?
Try aggressive compression first. If it's still too large, split the PDF into smaller sections and share them separately.
Can I compress multiple PDFs at once?
Yes. The Compress PDF tool accepts up to 5 files in a single upload. Each is compressed and delivered individually.
Does compression affect password-protected PDFs?
Most compressors cannot process encrypted PDFs. Remove the password first, compress, then re-protect using the Protect PDF tool.
Quick Takeaway
PDF compression takes 30 seconds and solves a real problem. Use medium compression for most files, aggressive only when size matters most, and always do a quick visual check before sending. Compress images before embedding them for the cleanest results.
How to Merge Multiple PDFs Into One File (Step-by-Step Guide)
Got separate chapters, invoices, or contracts? Here's the fastest way to combine them into one clean, ordered PDF.
Updated March 2026 · 6 min read
You've got seven separate PDF files — each chapter of a research paper, or an invoice alongside a receipt and a delivery confirmation — and you need to send them as one. Attaching multiple files is messy, risks the recipient missing one, and looks unprofessional.
Merging PDFs solves this immediately. You combine all your files into a single document, in the exact order you choose, and share just one attachment. It takes under a minute and doesn't require any software installation.
This guide walks you through the full process — from uploading your files to downloading the merged result — and covers the common mistakes that trip people up along the way.
What Happens When You Merge PDFs?
PDF merging combines the pages from multiple files into a single document in the order you specify. No data is lost or modified — text, images, formatting, and hyperlinks all stay exactly as they were in the original files.
Unlike printing and re-scanning (which degrades quality), merging is a lossless operation. The original content of each file is preserved completely.
Step-by-Step: Merge PDFs Online for Free
- Open the Merge PDF tool. No account required. Works on any device with a browser.
- Upload your files. Select up to 10 PDFs at once. You can drag and drop or browse from your device.
- Verify the order. Files are merged in the order they appear. Make sure the sequence is correct — chapter 1 first, then chapter 2, and so on.
- Click "Merge PDF." The tool combines all pages into a single file. Processing is fast even for larger files.
- Download your merged PDF. Scroll through it to confirm the order and content look right before sharing.
If your source files are large, consider compressing them individually before merging. This keeps the final combined file at a manageable size.
Who Uses PDF Merging and Why
- Students: Combining thesis chapters, bibliography, and appendices into a single submission file.
- Legal and HR professionals: Assembling contracts, amendments, and signature pages into one document for signing.
- Freelancers: Packaging a project proposal, portfolio samples, and pricing sheet into a single professional PDF.
- Medical staff: Combining lab results, prescriptions, and referral letters into a single patient record attachment.
- Small businesses: Combining invoice, receipt, and delivery confirmation into one file for accounting records.
Common Mistakes When Merging PDFs
- Merging files in the wrong order. Verify the sequence before clicking Merge. Once merged, reordering requires splitting and re-merging.
- Combining very large files without compressing first. Two 20 MB PDFs produce a 40 MB combined file. Compress each file first for a leaner result.
- Including unnecessary pages. Split out unwanted pages first, then merge only what you need.
- Not checking the final document. Always scroll through before sending. A five-second check saves a lot of back-and-forth.
- Merging mixed-orientation files. If some PDFs are portrait and others landscape, rotate them to a consistent orientation before merging.
Pro Tips
- Rename files with number prefixes before uploading. Files named 1_intro.pdf, 2_chapter.pdf sort correctly when you select them in the file picker.
- Compress before merging for large files. Smaller source files = a smaller, more shareable final document.
- Split first if you only need certain pages. Don't merge entire documents when you only need specific page ranges from each.
Other Ways to Merge PDFs — And Their Limits
- Adobe Acrobat Pro: Reliable, but requires a paid subscription (~$20/month).
- macOS Preview: Can combine PDFs for free, but ordering control is limited and batch processing isn't supported.
- Microsoft Word: Can insert PDFs as objects, but the result is a Word document — not a true merged PDF.
- Easy PDF Lab: Free, browser-based, supports up to 10 files, delivers the merged PDF instantly.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will the formatting change when I merge PDFs?
No. Each page is combined as-is, preserving all text, images, and formatting from the original files.
How many PDFs can I merge at once?
Easy PDF Lab supports up to 10 files per merge session.
Can I rearrange pages after merging?
Use the Split PDF tool to extract specific pages, then re-merge in the correct order.
What if my files are different page sizes (A4 vs US Letter)?
Each page keeps its original size. If you need uniform sizing, convert them individually before merging.
Can I merge a PDF with images?
Yes — first convert your images using the Image to PDF tool, then merge everything together.
Quick Takeaway
Merging PDFs takes under a minute. Upload your files in the right order, click Merge, and download the result. Compress large source files first to keep the combined file manageable, and always scroll through the final document before sending.
How to Rotate PDF Pages Online — Fast, Free, and Without Software
Scanned sideways? Pages upside down? Fix any PDF's orientation in seconds without losing quality.
Updated March 2026 · 5 min read
A scanned document comes through completely sideways. A PDF downloaded from a government portal has every other page rotated 90 degrees. You're on a deadline, your PDF viewer doesn't save rotation permanently, and you don't want to pay for a subscription just to flip a few pages.
Rotating PDF pages takes about 30 seconds online. And — done correctly — it doesn't reduce the quality of your document at all. Not even slightly.
Here's how to do it properly, what to avoid, and why the tool you choose actually matters.
What PDF Rotation Actually Does
PDF rotation changes the page orientation metadata — it tells PDF viewers to display the page at a different angle. Unlike rotating an image (which re-renders pixels and can introduce blur or artifacts), PDF rotation is stored as a metadata flag. The actual content is never re-encoded.
Result: zero quality loss, regardless of how many times you rotate. Text stays sharp, images stay crisp, and the file size barely changes.
Step-by-Step: Rotate a PDF Online for Free
- Open the Rotate PDF tool. No sign-up, no installation — works directly in your browser.
- Upload your PDF. Select the file from your device. Files up to 50 MB are supported.
- Choose your rotation direction. Right 90° rotates clockwise. Left 90° rotates counterclockwise. 180° flips the page upside down.
- Click "Rotate PDF." Processing is instant for most files.
- Download the rotated PDF. The rotation is permanently saved in the file — it won't revert when opened in another viewer.
If you're working with a scanned document that also needs to be smaller, compress it after rotating for the best result.
When You Actually Need This
- Scanned documents that came out sideways. Scanners don't always auto-detect orientation, especially with older hardware.
- Landscape reports mixed with portrait pages. A PDF with slide-style pages embedded in a portrait document needs rotation to look consistent.
- Phone camera scans. Documents photographed in portrait mode that were saved as landscape PDFs.
- Downloaded forms with wrong orientation. Government and institutional PDFs sometimes render at the wrong angle in certain viewers.
- Upside-down pages in multi-page documents. A 180° rotation on specific sections brings everything into alignment.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Using an image converter to fix orientation. Some people screenshot a PDF, rotate the image, and convert it back. This re-renders everything at lower resolution. Use a proper PDF rotation tool instead.
- Rotating the wrong direction. If the first attempt goes the wrong way, just apply 90° in the opposite direction to correct it.
- Trying to rotate a password-protected PDF. Encrypted PDFs cannot be modified. Remove protection first, rotate, then re-protect if needed.
- Not checking all pages before sharing. Scroll through the entire document after rotation to confirm everything looks right.
Pro Tips
- Rotate before merging. If combining multiple PDFs with mixed orientations, fix each file first so all pages land consistently in the merged document. Then use the Merge PDF tool.
- Use 180° for upside-down documents. A single 180° rotation is more precise and efficient than two 90° rotations.
- Split first for per-page control. If only certain pages need rotating, split the PDF first, rotate those specific pages, then merge everything back.
Other Methods — And Their Limitations
- Adobe Acrobat Reader (free): Can rotate the current view but does NOT save rotation permanently. The next person who opens the file sees it in the original orientation.
- Adobe Acrobat Pro: Saves rotation permanently but requires a paid subscription (~$20/month).
- macOS Preview: Can rotate individual pages and save permanently — free, but only available on Mac.
- Windows PDF viewer: Most versions don't save rotation to the file.
- Easy PDF Lab: Free, browser-based, saves rotation permanently, works on any device, no installation required.
Frequently Asked Questions
Does rotating a PDF reduce image quality?
No — PDF rotation changes display metadata, not the actual content. Images, text, and graphics remain completely unchanged.
Can I rotate just one page in a multi-page PDF?
The Rotate PDF tool applies rotation to all pages at once. For per-page control, split the document first, rotate the needed pages, then merge back together.
Will the rotation be saved permanently?
Yes. Unlike PDF viewers that only rotate the current view, the downloaded file has the rotation baked in permanently across all viewers and devices.
Can I rotate a password-protected PDF?
Not directly. Remove the password protection first, rotate the pages, then re-protect the file using the Protect PDF tool.
Is there a file size limit?
You can upload PDFs up to 50 MB. For larger files, try compressing first to bring the file within the limit.
Quick Takeaway
Rotating a PDF is a 30-second task. Use a dedicated PDF rotation tool — not an image converter — to preserve quality. Rotate before merging when combining files with mixed orientations. Remember: the free version of Adobe Reader doesn't save rotation permanently. Download from a proper tool to get a result that actually sticks.
The Ultimate PDF Toolkit Guide: Edit, Convert, Compress & Secure PDFs Online (2026)
Everything you can do to a PDF — in one place, for free, without installing anything.
Updated March 2026 · 10 min read
Introduction
Most people use PDFs for exactly one thing: reading them. But PDFs are involved in almost every professional workflow — contracts, reports, invoices, presentations, forms. And at some point, you need to do more than just read one.
You need to split a report into sections, compress it for email, rotate a few scanned pages that came out sideways, merge in a signed appendix, and then lock the whole thing with a password before sending to a client. That used to mean paying for Adobe Acrobat Pro or stitching together four different free tools with their own watermarks and upload limits.
Today, a complete PDF toolkit is available in your browser, free, with no account required. This guide covers every tool and exactly when to use each one.
What Is an Online PDF Toolkit?
An online PDF toolkit is a collection of browser-based tools that handle the full lifecycle of a PDF — from combining and editing to optimizing and securing. Each tool does one job well. Together they cover everything you'd previously need Acrobat for, without installation or subscriptions.
The Core Tools Every PDF User Needs
Merge PDF — Combine Multiple Documents Into One
The Merge PDF tool combines multiple PDF files into a single ordered document. Choose the files, set the order, click Merge, and download one clean PDF. No formatting changes, no quality loss — pages from each file are assembled exactly as they were.
When to use it: Assembling a report from chapter files. Combining a contract with its amendment and signature page. Sending a complete job application as one attachment. Merging invoices and receipts for accounting records.
Split PDF — Extract Pages or Break Into Sections
The Split PDF tool separates every page into its own file, delivered as a ZIP download. This is the foundation for precision editing: extract only the pages you need, discard the rest, then re-merge in the order you want.
When to use it: Extracting a specific clause from a 50-page contract. Separating individual pay slips from a batch payroll PDF. Isolating a single page for signature. Pulling out only relevant pages from a research paper before sharing.
Compress PDF — Reduce File Size Without Visible Quality Loss
The Compress PDF tool reduces file size by resampling embedded images to a lower DPI. Text stays perfectly sharp (stored as vectors, not pixels), while photos shrink significantly. A 40 MB report can often come down to 6–8 MB at medium compression, indistinguishable on screen.
For documents where size matters most — old scans for archiving, or files that must pass through tight email limits — Extreme Compression pushes images to 72 DPI for the smallest possible output.
When to use it: Any time a file exceeds an email attachment limit. Before uploading to a form with a cap. When sharing large portfolios over messaging apps.
Rotate PDF — Fix Page Orientation Permanently
The Rotate PDF tool changes page orientation metadata without touching the actual content. Unlike rotating an image (which re-renders pixels and can blur), PDF rotation is stored as a flag. Zero quality loss, regardless of how many times you rotate.
When to use it: Scanned documents that came out sideways. Landscape presentations embedded in a portrait document. Phone-photographed pages saved in the wrong orientation.
Protect PDF — Add Password Encryption
The Protect PDF tool adds AES-256 encryption with a password of your choice. The file cannot be opened without the correct password — not by PDF viewers, not by other online tools, not by anyone without the key.
When to use it: Sending confidential contracts. Sharing financial documents via email. Distributing sensitive HR records. Any scenario where the file might reach unintended recipients.
Step-by-Step: Compress Then Protect a PDF
A common workflow — large file that needs to be emailed securely:
- Open Compress PDF. Upload your file, set Medium compression, click Compress PDF, download the result.
- Open Protect PDF. Upload the compressed file, enter a strong password, click Protect PDF, download the encrypted version.
- Send the protected PDF and share the password via a separate channel — never send both in the same message.
Common Mistakes
- Merging without checking page order first. Once merged, reordering means splitting and re-merging. Verify the sequence before clicking Merge.
- Compressing an already-compressed file. Running a small PDF through aggressive compression sometimes increases the size. If output is larger, use the original.
- Using an image editor to rotate PDFs. Screenshotting, rotating, and converting back re-renders everything at lower quality. Always use a proper PDF rotation tool.
- Not compressing before merging large files. Two 20 MB PDFs merge into a 40 MB document. Compress each individually first.
- Losing the password for a protected PDF. AES-256 encryption is not recoverable. Store passwords in a password manager.
Pro Tips
- Process in the right order: Split → Rotate → Compress → Merge → Protect. Each step builds on the previous. Fixing orientation after merging means re-splitting — add extra steps every time.
- Match compression level to purpose. Mild (1–30) for print-quality. Medium (31–70) for most email/web sharing. Aggressive (71–100) only for archiving.
- Split before sending for selective sharing. Don't send a client your entire 80-page project file. Split out the 4 pages that matter and share those.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need to create an account to use these tools?
No. All tools on Easy PDF Lab work without registration. Upload, process, download — done.
Are my files kept on the server?
Files are processed temporarily and deleted immediately after. Never stored, indexed, or accessed by anyone.
What's the difference between Compress PDF and Extreme Compression?
Compress PDF has a slider for mild, medium, or aggressive settings. Extreme Compression applies the most aggressive settings automatically — no adjustment, optimized purely for the smallest output at the cost of image quality.
Can I use these tools on my phone?
Yes. All tools are fully responsive and work on any device with a modern browser.
What's the maximum file size I can upload?
Most tools accept PDFs up to 50 MB. Extreme Compression caps at 20 MB. If your file is larger, compress it first.
Can I process multiple files at once?
Merge PDF accepts up to 10 files. Compress PDF accepts up to 5. Other tools process one file at a time.
Quick Takeaway
A complete PDF toolkit isn't a luxury — it's a time-saver you'll use weekly. The right order: split to isolate pages, rotate to fix orientation, compress to reduce size, merge to reassemble, protect before sending. All of this takes minutes, costs nothing, and requires no installation.
How to Convert PDF Files: PDF to Image, Excel, Text & More (Complete Guide)
PDFs are great for sharing — but sometimes you need the content in a completely different format.
Updated March 2026 · 8 min read
Introduction
PDFs are designed to look exactly the same on every device — which makes them perfect for sharing. But that same quality, fixed and locked-in formatting, becomes a problem when you need to work with the content inside. A finance team needs the table from a PDF report as an editable spreadsheet. A designer needs a PDF page as a high-resolution image. A developer needs the text extracted for processing.
PDF conversion tools bridge this gap. They pull content out of the PDF format and put it somewhere more useful — without requiring Acrobat, without subscriptions, without compromising quality.
This guide covers every conversion direction you'll encounter, with the step-by-step process for each one.
Why PDF Conversion Matters
PDFs are the universal read-only format. Banks send statements as PDFs. Governments issue forms as PDFs. Contracts arrive as PDFs. Research papers are published as PDFs. When you need to do anything with that content beyond reading it, conversion is the answer.
The alternative — retyping data, or screenshotting pages and hoping quality holds — is slow, error-prone, and unnecessary when a proper tool handles it in seconds.
PDF to Different Formats: A Complete Overview
PDF to Images — Convert Pages to JPG, PNG, or WebP
The PDF to Images tool converts each page of a PDF into a separate image file, delivered as a ZIP download. Choose your format: JPG (smallest size, good for photos), PNG (lossless, best for text and sharp graphics), or WebP (excellent quality-to-size ratio for web use).
Best for: Sharing individual pages on social media. Embedding PDF content in websites. Creating document thumbnails. Extracting images from a PDF that only exist as rendered content. Archiving documents as image files.
PDF to Excel — Extract Tables Into Editable Spreadsheets
The PDF to Excel tool analyzes text positions in the PDF and reconstructs table structures in an Excel workbook. Especially valuable for financial reports, bank statements, and data exports originally created as spreadsheets before being saved to PDF.
Best for: Extracting financial data from PDF bank statements. Working with government-issued data tables. Importing PDF inventory or pricing lists into management systems. Any time you need to perform calculations on content locked inside a PDF.
PDF to Text — Extract All Text Content
The PDF to Text tool extracts all readable text from a PDF as a plain .txt file. No formatting or layout — just the words, clean and unbroken.
Best for: Feeding PDF content into AI summarizers or translation tools. Creating searchable text archives. Extracting references from academic papers. Running word counts or text analysis on document content.
Image to PDF — Combine Images Into a PDF Document
The Image to PDF tool converts one or more JPG/PNG images into a single PDF. Each image becomes a page — turning a stack of photos or scans into a shareable, printable document.
Best for: Digitizing paper documents by scanning as images and converting to PDF. Compiling photos from a project into a report. Sending multiple images as one attachment. Creating a PDF portfolio from individual image files.
JPG to PDF — Quick Single-Image Conversion
The JPG to PDF tool is streamlined for converting JPEG images specifically. Upload one or more JPGs and get a PDF back. Faster when all your source files are JPEGs.
Best for: Converting scanned receipts to PDF for expense reports. Turning phone camera photos into a PDF for submission. Quick conversions from JPEG source files.
Step-by-Step: Convert a PDF to an Excel Spreadsheet
- Open the PDF to Excel tool. No account needed.
- Upload your PDF. Works best with digitally-created PDFs (not scanned images). Bank statements, exported reports, and data tables convert cleanly.
- Click "Convert to Excel." The tool analyzes text positions and reconstructs table structure.
- Download the .xlsx file. Open in Excel, LibreOffice, or Google Sheets — data should be in editable cells ready for formulas.
- Review and clean up. Complex multi-column layouts sometimes need minor adjustments after conversion.
Common Mistakes
- Trying to extract text from scanned PDFs. Scanned PDFs are photos of documents — text extraction won't work without OCR software. This tool works on digitally created PDFs with embedded text data.
- Expecting perfect table reconstruction every time. Complex layouts with merged cells or unconventional formatting may need manual cleanup after conversion.
- Converting the whole document when you only need part. Split out the relevant pages first, then convert. Smaller input = faster, cleaner output.
- Using a screenshot instead of PDF to Images. Screenshotting a PDF gives a low-resolution image. PDF to Images uses Ghostscript rendering at full quality.
Pro Tips
- For the best image quality, choose PNG. PNG is lossless — no compression artifacts. JPG is smaller but introduces quality loss, especially on text-heavy pages.
- Split before converting for large PDFs. If you need pages 12–18 from a 60-page PDF, split first, then convert only those pages. Faster and cleaner results.
- Use PDF to Text before feeding content to AI tools. Copying from a PDF viewer often breaks paragraph structure. A .txt file preserves clean, unbroken text.
- For scanned documents, convert to image then compress. Convert physical scans using Image to PDF, then compress the result for a smaller, shareable file.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why doesn't PDF to Excel extract my table correctly?
PDF to Excel works by analyzing text position coordinates. Scanned PDFs (images of documents) or tables with complex merged cells may need manual cleanup after conversion.
What image format should I choose for PDF to Images?
PNG for documents with sharp text and graphics (lossless). JPG for photo-heavy PDFs where file size matters. WebP for web use — smaller than JPG with better quality.
Can I convert a password-protected PDF?
Not directly. Remove password protection first, then run the conversion.
What's the difference between Image to PDF and JPG to PDF?
Image to PDF accepts both JPG and PNG files. JPG to PDF is streamlined specifically for JPEG files. Either works for JPEGs — JPG to PDF is slightly more focused for that format.
Does PDF to Text work on all PDFs?
On any PDF with embedded text data — the vast majority of digitally created PDFs. It does not perform OCR. Scanned documents that are images of text will not extract well.
Can I convert multiple PDFs at once?
Conversion tools currently process one file at a time for best accuracy. Upload and convert one PDF per session.
Quick Takeaway
PDF conversion is about getting content out of a locked format into something you can work with. For tables: PDF to Excel. For pages as images: PDF to Images (PNG for quality). For raw text: PDF to Text. For the reverse: Image to PDF or JPG to PDF. Always split out just the pages you need before converting — faster and cleaner every time.
How to Compress Images & PDFs Without Losing Quality (Best Free Methods)
Know which compression method to use, at what level, and when to stop — so you never over-compress again.
Updated March 2026 · 7 min read
Introduction
Storage is cheap. But email attachment limits, web page load times, upload form caps, and messaging app size restrictions are all very real. A product photo at 8 MB slows your website. A 35 MB presentation fails to attach. A portfolio PDF gets rejected by a platform's upload limit.
The answer is compression — but compression done wrong either doesn't help much or destroys quality. The difference comes down to three decisions: what you're compressing, what tool you use, and what level you apply.
This guide covers every scenario — PDFs, JPEGs, PNGs — with specific guidance on what settings to choose for each purpose.
Why File Size Matters More Than You Think
Beyond email limits, file size affects real performance. A compressed product image (300 KB vs 3 MB) loads 10× faster on a slow mobile connection. A compressed PDF portfolio (4 MB vs 40 MB) downloads in seconds instead of a frustrating wait. Compressed files require less cloud storage and load faster in document management systems.
Done correctly, compression is invisible. The goal is the smallest file that looks identical to the original at the intended viewing size.
Compression Methods: Which to Use When
Compress PDF — Slider-Based Smart Compression
The Compress PDF tool uses Ghostscript — the industry standard for PDF processing — to resample embedded images. The slider gives three effective ranges:
- Mild (1–30): 150 DPI. Good reduction, minimal visible change. Use when the document may still be printed.
- Medium (31–70): 100 DPI. Excellent for email and web sharing. The right default for most documents.
- Aggressive (71–100): 72 DPI. Maximum reduction. Use only for archiving where quality doesn't matter.
Text, vectors, and fonts are unaffected by compression level — they stay sharp regardless of the slider position. Only embedded raster images (photos) are resampled.
Extreme Compression — When Minimum Size Is the Only Goal
The Extreme Compression tool applies the most aggressive settings with no adjustment — optimized purely for the smallest possible file. Accepts up to 3 files and caps at 20 MB per file.
When to use it: Archiving old scans where you just need text to be readable. Passing files through systems with very tight size limits. Reducing file size as much as physically possible, accepting the quality tradeoff.
Compress Image — Direct Photo and PNG Compression
The Compress Image tool works on images directly — JPEGs, PNGs — before they're embedded in a PDF or uploaded anywhere. Uses Sharp (a high-quality image processing library) with a percentage slider and output format selector.
- JPEG: Progressive encoding. Significant reduction (60–80%) at 70–80% quality with minimal visible difference.
- PNG: Adaptive compression. PNGs that are already small won't be inflated — the tool never increases file size.
- WebP output: Converting to WebP typically gives 25–40% additional reduction over compressed JPEG.
Best practice: Compress images BEFORE embedding them in a document. A PDF built from already-compressed images is leaner from the start.
Step-by-Step: Compress a Large PDF for Email
- Open Compress PDF and upload your file (up to 5 PDFs at once).
- Set the slider to Medium (around 50) for most email scenarios.
- Click "Compress PDF" and wait a few seconds for processing.
- Download the result. The tool shows original vs. new size — check the reduction percentage.
- If still too large, re-upload and try Aggressive (70–85), or use Extreme Compression for scan-heavy files.
- Open the compressed file and scroll through quickly to verify quality before sending.
Common Mistakes
- Compressing a text-only PDF and expecting huge savings. If a PDF has no embedded images — just text and vectors — compression will have minimal effect. The file is already compact by nature.
- Running Extreme Compression on documents you'll print. 72 DPI looks fine on screen but prints poorly. Use Mild or Medium for anything that might be printed.
- Re-compressing already-compressed images. Applying JPEG compression twice introduces artifacts that look worse than a single pass. Always work from the original source file.
- Using screenshots to "compress" PDFs. Screenshotting and converting to JPEG doesn't reduce the file intelligently — it just degrades quality arbitrarily, often producing a larger file than proper compression would.
- Not checking the compressed result before sending. Aggressive compression can make images noticeably degraded. A 10-second scroll-through saves embarrassment.
Pro Tips
- Compress at the source, not at the end. Use the Image Compressor before embedding images in a document. A PDF built from well-compressed images is always smaller than one compressed after assembly.
- Use Medium as your default. Medium (100 DPI) is invisible on screen and reduces most image-heavy PDFs by 50–70%. Don't default to Aggressive or Extreme — save those for specific needs.
- Split before compressing large PDFs. If you only need to share pages 5–12 of a 60-page document, split those pages first, then compress the smaller file.
- For web images, convert to WebP. WebP consistently produces smaller files than JPEG at equivalent quality. If your platform supports it, use WebP output from the Image Compressor.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will compressing a PDF make text blurry?
No. Text in PDFs is vector data — it stays perfectly sharp at any compression level. Only embedded raster images (photos, scanned pages) are resampled.
How much can I reduce a PDF's file size?
Text-only PDFs: 10–20%. Image-heavy documents at medium compression: 50–70%. Scanned documents at aggressive settings: 70–90%.
What's the best compression level for email?
Medium (slider around 50) for most email use cases. Dramatically reduces size while keeping quality high for screen viewing.
Can I compress images in bulk?
Yes — the Compress Image tool accepts up to 5 files per session. Each is compressed and delivered individually.
My compressed file is larger than the original. Why?
This happens when the source file is already well-compressed. Compression adds overhead. If output is larger, use the original — it's already at near-optimal compression.
Should I compress before or after merging PDFs?
Before. Compress each source file individually, then merge. The combined file will be significantly smaller than if you compressed the merged PDF at the end.
Quick Takeaway
Good compression is invisible — the recipient can't tell the difference between the original and a well-compressed version. Use Medium PDF compression for most sharing. Use Aggressive or Extreme only when size matters more than quality. Compress images at the source before embedding. And always do a quick quality check before sending anything important.
Top Free Online Tools for Productivity: URL Shortener, QR Code Generator & More
The small tools you use daily can make a bigger difference than you'd expect.
Updated March 2026 · 6 min read
Introduction
The most valuable digital tools aren't always the most complex ones. Spreadsheet pivot tables and database queries are powerful — but so is a well-placed short link or a QR code that actually works. These small tools handle specific recurring tasks in seconds. When you're doing them dozens of times a week, those seconds add up.
A long URL in a printed document is ugly, untypeable, and breaks across line wraps. A QR code on that same document lets someone scan and go instantly. A shortened link in an email looks cleaner and is more trustworthy. These aren't optional polish — in professional contexts, they're expected.
This guide covers the two most-used productivity tools on Easy PDF Lab: the URL Shortener and the QR Code Generator — what each does, when to use it, and how to get the most out of it.
URL Shortener — Turn Long Links Into Clean, Shareable URLs
What It Does
The URL Shortener takes any URL — regardless of length or complexity — and creates a shorter version that redirects to the same destination. Easier to type, share, remember, and fit into character-limited contexts like SMS or social media.
Long URLs with tracking parameters or deeply nested paths can run to 200+ characters. A short URL collapses all of that into something manageable. And if the destination ever changes, the short URL can be updated without reprinting materials or re-sending messages.
How to Use It
- Open the URL Shortener.
- Paste your long URL into the input field (must start with https:// or http://).
- Click Shorten. The tool generates a shortened URL instantly.
- Copy the short URL and use it — in documents, presentations, emails, SMS, print materials, or social posts.
When to Use a URL Shortener
- Print materials: Business cards, flyers, and brochures can't contain a 180-character URL. A short link is readable and typeable.
- Social media: Twitter/X, Instagram bios, and SMS all have character limits. Short URLs save space and look cleaner.
- Email campaigns: Long tracking URLs look spammy. A shortened version is more trustworthy and visually cleaner.
- Presentations: A resource URL in a presentation needs to be short enough for the audience to note down in real time.
- Internal sharing: A shortened link to a specific document or report is faster to share than the raw URL.
QR Code Generator — Create Scannable Codes for Any Purpose
What It Does
The QR Code Generator creates scannable QR codes for three content types: URLs/text, WiFi network credentials, and contact information (vCard). Codes are generated entirely in your browser — no server request, no data sent anywhere, instant output.
A QR code is a visual URL. Any smartphone camera can scan one and instantly open a link, connect to WiFi, or save a contact — no typing required. The barrier between physical and digital content disappears.
The Three QR Code Types
- Text/URL: The most common type. Encodes any URL or plain text. Scanning opens the URL in the phone's browser. Use for websites, landing pages, documents, and resources.
- WiFi: Encodes network name, password, and security type. Scanning automatically connects the phone to the WiFi — no typing. Ideal for offices, cafes, events, and hotels.
- Contact (vCard): Encodes name, phone, email, and other fields. Scanning adds the contact directly to the phone's address book. Replaces business card exchanges with a single scan.
How to Generate a QR Code
- Open the QR Code Generator and select your type (Text/URL, WiFi, or Contact).
- Fill in the required fields — the URL, WiFi credentials, or contact details.
- The QR code generates live as you type. No button click needed.
- Download the QR code as a PNG image file.
- Use it in documents, on print materials, in presentations, or on your website. Minimum 2cm × 2cm for reliable scanning when printed.
Real-World Use Cases
- Restaurants and cafes: QR code for the digital menu — no printed menus to sanitize or replace.
- Events and conferences: QR code for the event schedule, registration link, or WiFi access.
- Business cards: QR code linking to your LinkedIn profile, portfolio, or contact vCard.
- Product packaging: QR code for instructions, warranty registration, or a promotional offer.
- Educational materials: QR code linking to supplementary videos or reading lists.
- Office signage: QR code for the room booking system or building rules.
Common Mistakes
- QR codes printed too small. Codes smaller than 2cm × 2cm are often unscannable, especially in poor lighting. Test print at actual size before distributing.
- Low contrast QR codes. Light gray on white, or dark blue on black, reduces scan reliability. Use high-contrast colors — ideally black on white.
- Linking to a URL that later breaks. If the destination changes or the page is deleted, the QR code becomes useless. Encode a shortened URL instead — then you can update the destination without reprinting materials.
- Not testing before distribution. Always scan your QR code with a phone before printing hundreds of flyers. Test in different lighting conditions.
- Including too much data in a vCard QR code. A dense QR code is harder to scan. Include only essential fields: name, one phone number, one email, optionally a website.
Pro Tips
- Combine URL shortener and QR generator. Shorten your URL first, then encode the short URL as a QR code. Result: cleaner QR code (shorter data = smaller pattern = easier to scan), and if the destination changes you can update the short link without regenerating the QR code.
- For WiFi QR codes, use WPA2 security type. Most modern networks use WPA2 or WPA3. Selecting the wrong type means auto-connect won't work.
- Export at 1000px or larger for print. If using PNG, export at high resolution to maintain quality when printing at poster size.
- Test scanning in poor conditions before committing to print. Simulate the environment your QR code will be displayed in — dim lighting, angle, distance.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are the QR codes free to use commercially?
Yes. QR codes are generated entirely in your browser and are yours to use however you like — commercially, in print, on products, or in digital materials.
Is there a limit on how many URLs I can shorten?
No enforced limits for normal use. The tool is designed for practical, everyday shortening tasks.
Can I create a WiFi QR code without sharing the password with anyone?
Yes. The QR code is generated entirely in your browser — your WiFi password is never sent to any server. It's encoded locally into the QR image.
What size should I print a QR code at?
Minimum 2cm × 2cm for close-range scanning (business cards, product labels). 5–10cm for posters and signs. Larger codes with more data need to be printed bigger for reliable scanning.
My QR code won't scan. What's wrong?
Most common causes: too small, too low contrast, printed at low resolution, or the camera app doesn't support QR scanning natively (try a dedicated QR scanner app).
Do shortened URLs expire?
For critical links used in permanent printed materials, consider using your own domain for URL shortening to maintain permanent control.
Quick Takeaway
A short URL and a QR code are two of the most-used micro-tools in professional life. Use the URL Shortener for any link that needs to be readable in print, fit a character limit, or shared cleanly. Use the QR Generator for anything that bridges physical and digital — WiFi access, contact sharing, product pages, event links. Combine both for maximum flexibility: short URL → QR code means you can update the destination without reprinting.
How to Password-Protect a PDF: A Plain-English Guide to Document Security
When to lock a document, how encryption actually works, and the mistakes that leave files exposed.
Updated May 2026 · 6 min read
Most people send sensitive PDFs by email and hope for the best. Contracts, financial statements, personnel files, legal correspondence — documents that genuinely should not be readable by anyone who intercepts or receives them by mistake. Password protection is the straightforward fix, and yet a surprising number of professionals skip it entirely because they're not sure how it works or which tool to trust.
This guide explains what PDF password protection actually does, when you need it, how to apply it in under a minute, and the few situations where it won't help you as much as you expect.
What PDF Password Protection Does (and Doesn't Do)
When you protect a PDF with a password, the file's contents are encrypted using AES-256 — the same standard used by banks, governments, and major cloud providers. Without the correct password, the file is completely unreadable: the text, images, and structure are all scrambled at the binary level.
What it doesn't do: it doesn't prevent someone from forwarding the file, storing a copy, or sharing the password you gave them. Encryption secures the contents of the document — it doesn't control what the recipient does with it once they've opened it. Think of it as a lockbox that becomes a normal document once unlocked.
That said, for the vast majority of use cases — protecting a document during transit and ensuring that only the intended recipient can read it — AES-256 password protection is more than sufficient.
When You Should (and Shouldn't) Protect a PDF
Protect when: the document contains sensitive personal or financial data, you're emailing a contract that shouldn't be readable if intercepted, you're sharing HR documents, legal agreements, or anything marked confidential.
Skip protection when: the document is a general brochure, a public report, or anything that will be shared on a website. Protecting routine files adds friction for recipients without any real security benefit.
Step-by-Step: Add a Password to a PDF
- Open the Protect PDF tool. No account required — the tool is ready immediately.
- Upload your PDF. Files are accepted up to 50 MB. The document is processed on a secure server and deleted immediately after download.
- Enter your password. Use a strong password — at least 12 characters, mixing upper and lower case, numbers, and symbols. Avoid dictionary words or names.
- Click "Protect PDF." Processing takes a few seconds. The output file is AES-256 encrypted.
- Download and verify. Open the protected file in any PDF reader and confirm it prompts for a password before displaying content.
- Share the password separately. Never include the password in the same email as the document. Send it by phone, text message, or a separate secure channel.
If you need to protect a document that's currently too large to email, compress the PDF first to reduce its size, then apply password protection. The two steps take under two minutes combined.
Choosing a Strong Password
AES-256 encryption is mathematically unbreakable with modern computing — but the password itself can be guessed. A weak password negates the encryption entirely. Some practical rules:
- Length matters most. A 16-character password is vastly harder to crack than an 8-character one, even if the short one has symbols. Aim for 12+ characters minimum.
- Avoid real words. Dictionary attacks can test millions of words and combinations per second. A passphrase of three random words is better than one common word with numbers appended.
- Store it securely. Use a password manager (1Password, Bitwarden, or similar) to store the password alongside the file reference. Never email the password to yourself — that defeats the purpose.
- There is no recovery. If you lose the password to an AES-256 encrypted PDF, the contents are gone. Keep a backup of the unprotected original in a secure location before distributing the protected version.
Real-World Scenarios Where This Matters
- Law firms emailing client contracts: Sent to a client's personal email, which is not necessarily secure. Protection ensures even accidental forwarding exposes nothing.
- HR teams distributing salary bands or offer letters: These documents should not be readable by anyone other than the specific recipient.
- Accountants sharing financial statements: Tax returns, profit and loss statements, and balance sheets contain data that requires discretion.
- Freelancers protecting proposal pricing: Shared with one client, not meant to circulate. A password limits casual forwarding.
- Healthcare workers sharing patient summaries: Any document containing personal health information warrants encryption before being sent electronically.
How to Remove a Password After the Fact
If you need to remove password protection from a PDF you own, open it in any PDF reader (Adobe Reader, Preview on Mac, or your browser's built-in viewer), enter the password, and use "Save As" or "Print to PDF" to create a new, unprotected copy. This only works if you know the password — there is no legitimate shortcut around AES-256 encryption.
Frequently Asked Questions
What does AES-256 encryption actually mean for my PDF?
AES-256 is the same encryption standard used by banks and government systems. It means your PDF is mathematically locked — without the correct password, the contents cannot be read or extracted by any currently known method.
Can someone bypass the password if they really want to?
With AES-256, brute-force cracking is computationally infeasible for strong passwords. The encryption itself is not the vulnerability — weak passwords are. Use 12+ characters with mixed types.
Is it safe to upload my PDF to protect it online?
Easy PDF Lab processes files on a secure server and deletes them immediately after processing is complete. Files are never stored, indexed, or accessible after download. No account or personal data is required.
Can I protect a PDF that I've already compressed or merged?
Yes. Password protection can be applied to any standard PDF regardless of how it was created or previously processed. Always apply protection as the final step after all other edits are complete.
Quick Takeaway
Password-protect PDFs that contain sensitive information — contracts, financial data, personal records. Use a strong password of 12+ characters, share it via a separate channel, and keep an unprotected backup before distributing. The process takes under a minute and provides genuine AES-256 encryption.
How to Split a PDF: Extract Pages, Chapters, and Sections the Clean Way
When a single large document needs to become several smaller, targeted ones.
Updated May 2026 · 5 min read
You've been sent a 48-page PDF report, but a colleague only needs the executive summary on pages 2 and 3. Or you've generated an invoice batch as one combined PDF, and accounting wants each invoice as a separate file. Or you need to isolate a single signature page before resending for a countersignature. These are all splitting problems — and they come up constantly in professional work.
Splitting a PDF is straightforward when you know what the tool is actually doing, what it produces, and how to get the specific output you need.
What Splitting a PDF Actually Does
When you split a PDF, the tool takes every page of the document and saves each one as its own individual PDF file. A 20-page document becomes 20 separate single-page PDFs. Every page retains all its original content — text, fonts, images, vector graphics — with absolutely no quality change.
The output is delivered as a ZIP archive containing all the individual page files. You download the ZIP, extract it, and then use or share whichever pages you actually need. If you only wanted pages 5 and 12, download the ZIP and discard the rest — or re-merge just those two pages using the Merge PDF tool.
Step-by-Step: Split a PDF Into Individual Pages
- Open the Split PDF tool. No account or software needed.
- Upload your PDF. Files up to 50 MB are accepted. Very large documents work fine — larger files just take a few extra seconds.
- Click "Split PDF." The tool processes the document and separates every page into its own file.
- Download the ZIP archive. The file contains every page as a separately named PDF (page-1.pdf, page-2.pdf, and so on).
- Extract and use the pages you need. Open the ZIP, pull out the relevant pages, and share or store them individually.
If your goal is to reassemble specific pages into a new document, split first to get the individual pages, then merge the ones you want in the correct order. This split-then-merge approach is the standard way to reorder or selectively extract pages from a PDF.
Common Situations Where Splitting Saves Time
- Separating invoice batches: Accounting software often exports multiple invoices as one combined PDF. Splitting produces individual invoice files for each client or transaction, making filing and email attachment far cleaner.
- Isolating a signature page: Before resending a long contract for countersignature, extract just the signature page so the recipient doesn't have to scroll through 30 pages of legalese they've already reviewed.
- Breaking up a scanned document batch: A scanner set to multi-page mode sometimes produces one huge PDF when you actually needed individual files for each receipt, form, or page. Splitting fixes this instantly.
- Sharing specific report sections: A quarterly report has financial data, operational summaries, and an executive overview. Different stakeholders need different sections — split and distribute only what's relevant.
- Extracting a certificate or credential: A PDF portfolio might contain multiple credentials. Split it to share individual certificates without exposing the entire document.
Splitting vs. Extracting: What's the Difference?
Some tools distinguish between "splitting" (separating all pages) and "extracting" (pulling out a specific range). The Split PDF tool here splits every page — which is the most flexible starting point because you decide which pages to keep after splitting.
For a document where you need just one specific page, split the whole document and extract that page from the ZIP. For a document where you need pages 5 through 12 as a section, split, then merge pages 5 through 12 back together. The two-step process takes under two minutes and gives you precise control.
Before You Split: Things Worth Checking
- Is the PDF password-protected? Protected PDFs need to be unlocked before splitting. Open in a PDF reader, remove the password, then upload the unlocked version.
- Is the file oversized? If you're splitting a large scanned document, consider compressing it first to make the individual page files smaller and easier to share.
- Are pages in the right orientation? If the document has sideways pages, rotate it first. This means each extracted page will be correctly oriented without additional steps.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I split only certain pages rather than every page?
The Split PDF tool separates every page into its own file. To isolate specific pages, download the ZIP and keep only the pages you need — or use the merge tool to reassemble just the pages you want into a new document.
Will splitting affect the quality of each page?
No. Each page is extracted with all original content, fonts, and images fully intact. There is no re-rendering or re-compression — quality is completely preserved.
What if my PDF has hundreds of pages?
There is no hard page limit. Very large documents may take a few extra seconds to process, but all pages will be extracted and included in the ZIP archive.
How are the pages named in the output ZIP?
Pages are named sequentially (page-1.pdf, page-2.pdf, etc.) corresponding to their position in the original document. Page 1 in the ZIP is page 1 of your PDF.
Quick Takeaway
Splitting creates one PDF per page, all delivered in a ZIP. Use it when you need to share specific pages, separate invoice batches, or isolate a single document from a multi-page scan. For custom page ranges, split first then merge only the pages you need.
How to Convert PDF Pages to Images: JPG, PNG, and WEBP Explained
Which format to choose, why DPI matters, and what to expect from the output.
Updated May 2026 · 6 min read
You need a presentation slide as an image for a LinkedIn post. An infographic from a report needs to be embedded in a web article. A contract page needs to be attached to a form that only accepts image uploads. PDF-to-image conversion is one of those tasks that sounds technical but takes about 30 seconds once you know the right approach.
The more interesting question is which image format to choose — and that depends entirely on what you're going to do with the images. This guide walks through every scenario.
JPG vs PNG vs WEBP: Which Format to Choose
This decision matters more than most people expect. Using the wrong format for the job produces either unnecessarily large files or visible quality loss.
- JPG is lossy compression — it permanently discards some image data to produce smaller files. Excellent for photo-heavy PDFs (product catalogues, image-rich reports). Not ideal for documents with sharp text and fine lines, where the compression artifacts become visible on close inspection.
- PNG is lossless — every pixel is preserved exactly. Choose PNG for any document containing crisp text, technical diagrams, screenshots, charts, or anything where sharpness is essential. The files are larger, but the quality is perfect.
- WEBP is a modern format developed by Google that delivers better compression than both JPG and PNG with comparable quality. Use it for web publishing — embedding images in websites, email newsletters, or web apps where page load speed matters.
In practice: use PNG when in doubt for documents, JPG for photo-heavy material where file size matters, and WEBP when the images are going online.
Understanding DPI: Why Resolution Matters
DPI stands for dots per inch — it controls how many pixels are used to represent each inch of the PDF page. Higher DPI means sharper images and larger file sizes.
- 72 DPI — web-only quality. Acceptable for small thumbnails but text may appear soft at full size.
- 150 DPI — the default output from Easy PDF Lab. Sharp enough for presentations, social media, email, and most screen uses. A solid all-around choice.
- 300 DPI — print quality. Required if you're going to print the images. Not needed for purely digital use and produces significantly larger files.
Step-by-Step: Convert PDF Pages to Images
- Open the PDF to Images tool. No installation or account required.
- Upload your PDF. Files up to 25 MB are accepted. If your file is larger, compress it first.
- Select your output format. Choose JPG, PNG, or WEBP based on your use case (see the format guide above).
- Click "Convert." Each page of the PDF is rendered as a separate image at 150 DPI using Ghostscript.
- Download the ZIP archive. All page images are bundled together. Extract the images you need from the ZIP.
Common Use Cases for PDF to Image Conversion
- Social media posts: A data visualization, quote card, or infographic from a report converted to PNG is ready to post on LinkedIn, Instagram, or Twitter without any editing software.
- Blog and web embeds: Extract specific pages as WEBP images to embed in articles, documentation, or landing pages. Much lighter than embedding a full PDF viewer.
- Form uploads: Many online forms only accept image attachments. Converting a contract or certificate page to JPG solves this immediately.
- Thumbnail previews: Extract the first page of a document as a preview image for a file management system, CMS, or document library.
- Presentations: Pull specific slides or pages as PNG images to embed in a PowerPoint or Keynote presentation without needing the original file.
- Client proofing: Share a page-by-page image preview of a designed document with a client via email or messaging app — much more readable than asking them to download and open a PDF.
Frequently Asked Questions
Which format should I use for a text-heavy document?
PNG. Text in documents requires lossless compression to stay sharp. JPG compression creates visible artifacts on high-contrast edges like text characters, especially at smaller sizes.
Can I convert only specific pages, not the whole PDF?
The tool converts all pages and delivers them in a ZIP. To use only specific pages, download the ZIP and keep just the images you need. Alternatively, split the PDF to isolate specific pages before converting.
How large will the output images be?
At 150 DPI, a typical A4-sized page converts to approximately 1240×1754 pixels as PNG (roughly 300–800 KB), or 150–300 KB as JPG. WEBP falls between the two in file size with similar or better visual quality.
Will a scanned PDF produce good images?
Yes — scanned PDFs are already stored as images internally. The output quality will reflect the original scan quality. If the scan is blurry at 150 DPI output, the source scan was low-resolution.
Quick Takeaway
Use PNG for documents with text and diagrams (lossless). JPG for photo-heavy PDFs where file size matters. WEBP for web publishing. All output is rendered at 150 DPI — sharp for screen use, suitable for most professional applications outside of commercial print.
How to Combine Multiple Images Into a Single PDF File
Receipts, photos, scans — here's how to turn a pile of image files into one clean, shareable PDF.
Updated May 2026 · 5 min read
You have eight photos from a site inspection, five scanned receipts from a business trip, or a set of product photos that a client needs as a single document. Individually, they're image files — useful but fragmented. As a single PDF, they become a shareable, printable, professionally structured document. The conversion takes about 30 seconds.
This guide covers everything about combining images into PDFs: what formats work, how page order is controlled, what happens to image quality, and the real-world situations where this saves meaningful time.
What the Conversion Actually Does
When you convert images to a PDF, each image becomes a full page in the resulting document. The images are embedded at their original resolution — no recompression, no quality reduction. A 3MB JPEG goes in as a 3MB JPEG embedded in the PDF structure. The page dimensions are sized to match the image.
The key difference from the JPG to PDF tool: the Image to PDF converter is designed specifically for combining multiple images into a multi-page document, with control over the order in which they appear. You build the page sequence before converting, and the PDF reflects that sequence exactly.
Step-by-Step: Combine Images Into One PDF
- Open the Image to PDF tool. No account or software installation required.
- Upload your images. JPEG and PNG formats are supported. You can upload multiple files at once — up to 5 images per batch, each up to 25 MB.
- Arrange the page order. Place your images in the order you want them to appear in the PDF before processing. First image uploaded becomes page 1.
- Click "Convert to PDF." Processing takes a few seconds depending on total image size.
- Download your PDF. The resulting file contains one page per image, in the order you specified, ready to share or print.
JPG to PDF vs. Image to PDF: What's the Difference?
The platform has two image conversion tools, and choosing the right one matters:
- JPG to PDF — converts one or more JPG/PNG images into a single PDF. Optimized specifically for JPG files with a streamlined workflow.
- Image to PDF — combines multiple images of any supported type (JPEG, PNG) with explicit page ordering control. Best for building multi-page documents from a mixed image set.
Real-World Use Cases
- Expense reports: Photograph receipts throughout a trip, then combine all receipt photos into a single PDF for accounting. One attachment instead of fifteen image files.
- Site inspection reports: Field photos from a construction, maintenance, or real estate inspection combined into a single ordered document. Add a cover page using Merge PDF after converting.
- Product catalogues for clients: Product photos, dimensions, and spec sheets as a combined PDF. Far more professional than a folder of images or a multi-image email.
- Scanned document collections: When a scanner saves pages as individual image files rather than a single PDF, combining them restores the document to a single navigable file.
- Portfolio submissions: Creative work — design mockups, photography, artwork — presented as a single PDF document is the professional standard for client and employer submissions.
- Medical or insurance documentation: Photos of injury, property damage, or supporting evidence combined into a single ordered PDF for a claim or consultation.
Tips for the Best Output
- Compress large images first. If you're working with high-resolution photos, use the Image Compressor before converting. This keeps the resulting PDF to a manageable size for email without visible quality loss.
- Name your files sequentially. If you're uploading a batch, naming files 01_, 02_, 03_ makes ordering them much easier and reduces the chance of a page landing in the wrong position.
- Use PNG for screenshots and diagrams. JPG compression can make text in screenshots look soft. PNG preserves sharp text and is the better choice for any image containing text or fine lines.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will image quality be reduced in the output PDF?
No. Images are embedded at their original resolution without additional compression. The quality of the PDF output is identical to the quality of the source images.
Can I mix JPEG and PNG images in the same PDF?
Yes. Both JPEG and PNG formats are supported and can be combined in a single conversion. Each image is embedded in its original format in the PDF.
Can I add a text cover page to the resulting PDF?
The Image to PDF tool creates a PDF from images only. To add a typed cover page, create the cover as a separate PDF (or convert a cover image) and use the Merge PDF tool to combine the cover with the image PDF.
Is there a limit on how many images I can combine?
The tool accepts up to 5 images per batch with a combined size limit. For larger sets, process in batches and then merge the resulting PDFs together.
Quick Takeaway
Combining images into a PDF creates a professional, shareable document from fragmented files. Images are embedded at original quality with no recompression. Compress large photos first to keep the PDF manageable, use PNG for screenshots and text-based images, and merge the PDF with other documents afterward if needed.
How to Extract Text From a PDF (And When It Simply Won't Work)
Understanding the difference between text-based and scanned PDFs — and why it changes everything.
Updated May 2026 · 5 min read
You paste a paragraph from a PDF into a document and the formatting collapses into garbage. Or you try to extract a table from an annual report and get a jumbled string of numbers. Or worse — you run the tool and get an empty file. PDF text extraction works beautifully in some situations and fails completely in others, and the reason isn't random. It comes down to how the PDF was created.
This guide explains exactly when text extraction works, what you'll get from it, and what to do when it doesn't give you what you need.
The Two Types of PDF — and Why It Matters
There is a fundamental distinction between two kinds of PDF files that looks invisible from the outside but changes everything about how text extraction works:
- Text-based PDFs — created digitally by exporting from Word, Google Docs, PowerPoint, InDesign, or any office application. These contain actual embedded text data. You can select text in your PDF viewer, copy it, and paste it. Text extraction works well on these.
- Image-based (scanned) PDFs — created by scanning a physical document with a scanner or phone camera. The pages are stored as photographs of paper. There is no text data in the file — just pixels. You cannot select text in a PDF viewer. Text extraction will produce nothing useful because there is no text to extract.
The easiest way to tell which type you have: open the PDF and try to select a word with your mouse. If you can highlight individual words, it's text-based. If the whole page selects as one block (or nothing selects), it's an image-based scanned document.
What You Get from Text Extraction
When extraction works — on a properly text-based PDF — the output is a plain .txt file containing the document's text in reading order. Most paragraph structure is preserved. Headings appear on their own lines. Body text flows naturally.
What doesn't survive: columns often collapse into a single stream, complex tables lose their grid structure (use PDF to Excel for table data), page numbers and headers may appear mid-text, and visual formatting like bold or italic is stripped out entirely. You get the words — not the presentation.
Step-by-Step: Extract Text From a PDF
- Open the PDF to Text tool. No account required.
- Upload your PDF. Files up to 25 MB are accepted. The tool processes one file at a time.
- Click "Extract Text." For most text-based PDFs, processing completes in a few seconds.
- Download the .txt file. Open it in any text editor, word processor, or import it into whatever system you need the text in.
- Review and clean up. Some minor formatting artifacts are normal — extra line breaks, hyphenated words split across lines. A quick review takes a minute or two.
When to Use PDF to Text (and Better Alternatives)
- Use PDF to Text when: You need to copy large amounts of text into another document, search for specific content across a long report, feed the text into a translation tool, or import it into a content management system.
- Use PDF to Excel instead when: The data you need is in tables, rows, and columns. PDF to Excel's layout-aware detection produces structured data far better suited to spreadsheet analysis than plain text extraction.
- Use PDF to Images when: The document is scanned and you just need to share or display it — don't try to extract text from a scan. Convert to images and share those instead.
- Consider OCR software when: You genuinely need to extract text from a scanned document. Tools like Adobe Acrobat Pro, ABBYY FineReader, or free alternatives like Tesseract perform Optical Character Recognition on the scanned page images. Easy PDF Lab's PDF to Text tool does not perform OCR.
Practical Use Cases That Work Well
- Research and reference: Extract quotes and citations from academic papers or reports without retyping.
- Content repurposing: Pull article text from a PDF publication to adapt for a blog post or social media content.
- Search and analysis: Extract text from a long legal document or policy to search for specific clauses or keywords in a text editor.
- Translation workflows: Copy extracted text directly into a translation tool or send to a translator in an editable format.
- Accessibility improvements: Extract and reformat text from PDF-only documents to make content accessible to screen readers or other assistive tools.
Frequently Asked Questions
Why did I get an empty text file or garbled output?
Almost certainly because the PDF is a scanned document — the pages are stored as images, not as embedded text data. Open the PDF in your viewer and try to select a word: if you can't select individual words, it's a scanned file and text extraction won't work.
Will the text come out in the right reading order?
For most single-column documents, yes. Multi-column layouts (like newspaper-style documents) sometimes extract in column-by-column order rather than left-to-right reading order. Manual cleanup may be needed for complex layouts.
What about PDFs with both text and images?
The tool extracts only the embedded text data. Images within the PDF are ignored — text that is part of an embedded image (like a scanned signature block or a photo of a label) will not be extracted.
Can I extract text from a password-protected PDF?
Not directly. Remove the password protection first using the original password, then upload the unlocked version for text extraction.
Quick Takeaway
PDF text extraction works on digitally created PDFs (from Word, Google Docs, etc.) and produces a plain .txt file you can use anywhere. It does not work on scanned documents — those need OCR software. For table data, use PDF to Excel instead for structured output.
PDF Best Practices for Business: Contracts, Reports, and Client Documents
A practical guide to managing business PDFs professionally — from first draft to secure delivery.
Updated May 2026 · 9 min read
Most business PDF problems — a contract that's too large to email, a report that arrives with pages rotated sideways, a proposal where the appendices got lost — are entirely preventable. They happen not because the work is poor but because no one sat down and thought about how the document would actually travel from sender to recipient.
This guide covers the practical decisions that separate professional document handling from the kind that generates "can you resend that?" emails. It's organized around the most common business document types and the specific issues each one tends to cause.
The Core Principle: Prepare Documents for the Recipient, Not Yourself
Most PDF problems are caused by treating documents as finished the moment they're exported from a word processor or design tool. A 45 MB client proposal is finished from a creation standpoint. From a delivery standpoint, it's going to fail — email rejection, slow download, frustrated client.
The question to ask before sending any PDF is: will this arrive cleanly, open correctly, and be readable without extra steps on the recipient's end? If the answer to any part is uncertain, it's worth spending two minutes to make it certain.
Contracts and Legal Documents
Contracts have specific requirements that other documents don't. They need to be readable, page-complete, and — depending on sensitivity — protected during transit.
- Always compress before emailing. Legal documents with letterheads, logos, and signature images can reach 10–20 MB. Use medium compression — it reduces size by 50–70% with no visible quality change on screen.
- Protect sensitive contracts with a password. NDAs, employment agreements, and financial terms should travel encrypted. Use the Protect PDF tool for AES-256 encryption, and share the password via a separate channel (call or text).
- Split out signature pages when needed. For countersignature workflows, extract just the signature page rather than resending the full 30-page contract. Split the document, send only what's needed.
- Merge supporting documents before sending. A contract plus three annexes should arrive as one organized PDF, not four separate attachments. Merge all parts in the correct order before sending.
Client Proposals and Reports
Proposals are often a business's first visual impression. A proposal that downloads slowly, displays pages in the wrong orientation, or requires a viewer to navigate multiple files suggests disorganization before a single word is read.
- Compress aggressively for web and email delivery. Most clients will open a proposal on a laptop or tablet. 150 DPI image quality is indistinguishable from 300 DPI on screen. A 35 MB design-heavy proposal can typically be reduced to 4–6 MB with medium compression and look identical to the client.
- Merge before sending — every time. Cover letter, proposal body, case studies, pricing, terms — one file, correct order. Never send a proposal as a ZIP of separate PDFs.
- Check page orientation before sending. Scanned supporting documents sometimes contain sideways pages. Use the Rotate PDF tool to fix these before merging them into the final document.
- Consider file size against context. A proposal sent to a construction firm's on-site manager might be opened on a mobile connection. 3 MB is fine. 40 MB is not.
Financial Documents and Reports
- Protect financial reports. P&L statements, balance sheets, management accounts, and investor reports contain sensitive information. Encrypt before sharing with board members, investors, or external advisors.
- Extract tables to Excel when needed. If a financial PDF needs to be analyzed rather than just read, the PDF to Excel tool can extract structured table data into a .xlsx file for further analysis.
- Keep originals before compressing. Always compress a copy, not the original. Financial documents may need to be reprinted at a later date. Original quality matters for printed copies even when the emailed version is compressed.
Invoices and Administrative Documents
- Batch invoices efficiently. If your billing system exports a combined invoice run as one PDF, split it into individual invoices before sending each client their own copy.
- Standardize file naming before sending. Invoice_ClientName_2026-05.pdf tells the recipient exactly what the file is at a glance. Rename files before attaching — it reduces email back-and-forth and looks professional.
- Archive a compressed copy. Monthly invoice batches accumulate. Compressing archived copies can reduce storage requirements by 60–70% without ever needing to read the original quality version again.
The Complete Business PDF Workflow
For most business documents, the correct sequence of operations is:
- Fix any orientation issues in source documents (rotate if needed)
- Combine all parts into a single file (merge)
- Reduce file size for delivery (compress)
- Encrypt if sensitive (protect)
- Send — along with the password via a separate channel if protected
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I password-protect every client document?
No — only documents with genuinely sensitive content: contracts with financial terms, confidential proposals, financial reports, HR documents. Over-protecting routine communications adds friction without real benefit.
What compression level is safe for business documents?
Medium compression (slider at 40–60%) is safe for virtually all business documents. It typically reduces file size 50–70% with no perceptible quality change on screen. Reserve aggressive compression for archiving purposes only.
Is it safe to process client documents through an online tool?
Easy PDF Lab processes files on a secure server and deletes them immediately after download. No files are stored, retained, or accessible after processing. No account or registration is required, meaning no client file data is associated with any stored account.
Quick Takeaway
The professional PDF workflow: fix orientation → merge all parts → compress for delivery → encrypt if sensitive. Do this in order for every significant business document. It takes under three minutes and produces cleaner, more professional results every time.
The Student's PDF Toolkit: Manage University Documents Like a Pro
Submission portals, oversized thesis files, sideways scans — common problems with straightforward fixes.
Updated May 2026 · 7 min read
University generates a remarkable volume of PDFs. Lecture slides, reading lists, journal articles, assignment briefs, submission confirmations, transcript requests — and then there's everything you create: essays, lab reports, dissertations, presentations converted to PDF for submission. Managing all of this efficiently isn't something that gets taught anywhere, but it's a real skill that saves time throughout an academic career.
This guide covers the most common student PDF scenarios, what causes them, and exactly how to handle them — without paying for expensive software.
The Submission Portal Size Problem
It's 11:45 PM and the assignment is due at midnight. The PDF is ready. You upload it to the university portal — and get an error: "File size exceeds the 10 MB limit." The file is 23 MB.
This happens constantly with image-heavy assignments — lab reports with photographs, design portfolios, architecture presentations, geography fieldwork reports. The fix is quick:
- Open the Compress PDF tool
- Upload your assignment PDF
- Set compression to medium (slider around 50)
- Download the compressed version and check it looks acceptable
- If still over the limit, try a higher compression setting or use Extreme Compression as a last resort
Most student assignments — even image-heavy ones — compress by 50–70% at medium settings with no visible quality change on screen. A 23 MB file typically becomes 6–8 MB, comfortably under a 10 MB limit.
Combining Multiple Assignment Files
Many assignments have separate components: main essay, appendices, data tables, figures, bibliography. Some portals accept only one file. The solution is to merge everything into a single ordered PDF before submitting.
- Ensure all parts are saved as PDFs (Word, Google Docs: File → Export/Download as PDF)
- Open the Merge PDF tool
- Upload all parts and arrange them in submission order
- Merge and download — you now have one complete submission file
- Compress the merged file if needed before uploading
Fixing Sideways Scanned Readings
Scanned lecture notes, photocopied articles, and library scans often arrive rotated 90 degrees. Reading them requires physically rotating your screen or tilting your head sideways — which is fine for a moment but becomes exhausting across a 40-page reading.
The Rotate PDF tool fixes this permanently. Upload the sideways PDF, select the correction angle (90° right if the text appears on its side to the left, 90° left if it faces right), and download the corrected version. The rotation is saved into the file — it will open correctly on every device, every viewer, every time.
Dissertation and Thesis Submission
Dissertations are a special case. They're long, they contain figures and images, and university repositories often have strict size limits (many cap at 20–50 MB). A well-formatted dissertation with graphs, photographs, and charts can easily reach 80–100 MB straight from a word processor.
- Compress images before inserting them. Use the Image Compressor to reduce photos and figures before embedding them in your document. Starting with leaner source images is more effective than compressing the final PDF.
- Export at screen resolution, not print. When saving from Word or LaTeX, choose "optimize for screen" rather than "print quality" if the PDF will only be read digitally. This alone can halve the file size.
- Compress the final PDF. After exporting, run the finished document through Compress PDF at mild to medium settings. Most dissertations compress 40–60% without any visible quality change on screen.
- Keep the original. Always keep a copy of the uncompressed original. You may need to produce a print-quality version at some point — a hardbound copy for the library, or a copy to submit with minor corrections.
Working With Journal Articles and Research PDFs
- Extracting passages for notes: Use the PDF to Text tool to extract text from digitally created journal articles. This is faster than copying sections by hand for note-taking or quotation work. Note: scanned articles (common in older journals) will not extract cleanly — these require OCR software.
- Combining readings into a study pack: Merge multiple articles or chapters into a single PDF for a reading session or to share a curated reading list with a study group. One file is easier to annotate and navigate than ten separate PDFs.
- Extracting specific chapters: Split a large edited volume to isolate the one chapter you need, rather than carrying the entire 400-page book around in your reading app.
Frequently Asked Questions
My thesis is still over the portal limit after compression. What next?
Try aggressive compression first. If still too large, consider splitting the thesis into volumes (if your institution permits it), or contact the department — most will have a process for handling oversized submissions of this type.
Will my lecturer see any quality difference after compression?
At medium compression (slider 40–60%), text remains perfectly sharp and figures remain clear on screen. The difference is only visible on very close inspection of photo elements — well within acceptable range for academic submissions.
Can I password-protect an assignment before submission?
Technically yes, but check with your institution first — some submission systems cannot process password-protected files. If you want a protected copy for your records, keep the protected version separately and submit the unprotected one.
Is it academic misconduct to use a PDF tool on my assignment?
Absolutely not. Compressing, merging, rotating, or formatting a PDF is document management, not content manipulation. Using PDF tools to prepare a submission for upload is no different from changing a font or adjusting margins.
Quick Takeaway
For submission portals: compress to meet size limits. For multi-part assignments: merge into one file. For sideways scans: rotate once and save. For dissertations: compress source images before inserting them, then compress the final PDF at mild settings. All of this takes under five minutes and prevents the most common last-minute submission panics.
Working With Scanned Documents: How to Rotate, Compress, and Share PDFs From a Scanner
Why scanned PDFs are always too large and often sideways — and the two-step fix for both.
Updated May 2026 · 6 min read
Every office scanner and phone scanning app produces the same two problems: files that are much larger than anyone expects, and pages that are sometimes rotated sideways. The first problem comes from how scanners work. The second comes from how you hold the phone. Both are completely fixable in under two minutes.
This guide explains the technical reason behind both issues — which helps you prevent them in future — and walks through the precise steps to correct them when they happen.
Why Scanned PDFs Are Always So Large
A digital PDF created from a Word document or spreadsheet contains actual text data, vector graphics, and instructions for rendering content. A scanned PDF contains something entirely different: photographs of pages. Every page is stored as a high-resolution image — essentially a digital photo of a piece of paper.
A scanner set to 300 DPI (standard for "archival quality") produces images of approximately 2,480 × 3,508 pixels for an A4 page. At that resolution, each scanned page can be 2–5 MB on its own. A 10-page document can easily reach 30–50 MB before any processing.
The fix is straightforward: compress the scanned PDF to resample those embedded images to a lower resolution. For screen viewing and sharing, 100–150 DPI is completely sufficient and typically produces files 60–80% smaller than the original scan.
Why Pages Come Out Sideways
Office scanners with automatic document feeders (ADF) process pages as they're fed through. If a page was placed in the feeder sideways, the scan comes out sideways. With phone scanning apps, portrait and landscape orientation detection sometimes fails — particularly in low light or when the phone isn't held perfectly level.
The result is pages in a PDF that display rotated 90° from their correct orientation. The content is perfectly legible — but sideways. PDF viewers sometimes remember your rotation correction for a session, but the file itself remains incorrectly oriented. Sending a sideways PDF to a colleague or client requires them to correct the rotation on their own, which is an unnecessary friction point.
Step-by-Step: Fix and Compress a Scanned PDF
Step 1: Fix orientation (if needed)
- Open the Rotate PDF tool
- Upload the scanned PDF
- Select the correction angle: 90° right if text appears rotated left, 90° left if rotated right, 180° if upside down
- Download the corrected PDF
Step 2: Compress to reduce file size
- Open the Compress PDF tool
- Upload the rotation-corrected PDF
- Set the slider to medium (around 50) for email and sharing
- Click Compress — a 30 MB scanned document typically becomes 5–8 MB
- Download and verify the text is still clearly legible
How Compression Affects Scan Readability
The concern with compressing scanned documents is always legibility — particularly for handwritten text, small print, and fine lines in diagrams or forms. Here's what actually happens at different compression levels:
- Mild (slider 20–35%): Minimal quality reduction. Handwriting and fine detail stay sharp. File reduction is typically 30–50%. Good for documents that will be read carefully or potentially printed.
- Medium (slider 40–60%): Clear reduction in embedded image resolution. Standard printed text and bold handwriting remain clearly readable. Faint pencil marks or very small text may soften slightly. File reduction is typically 55–70%. The right setting for most email and sharing use cases.
- Aggressive (slider 70%+): Noticeable image degradation. Use only for archiving where file size matters and the document will rarely be viewed. Not suitable for sending to clients or official submission.
What Scanned PDFs Can't Do
Understanding the limitations of scanned documents helps avoid wasted effort:
- Text extraction won't work. The PDF to Text tool only works on digitally created PDFs that contain embedded text data. Scanned documents store pages as images — there is no text to extract without OCR software.
- Text search won't work. A PDF viewer's Ctrl+F search function can only search embedded text. Scanned document text is invisible to search.
- PDF to Excel won't produce useful results. Table data in a scanned document is pixel data, not structured numbers. Extraction requires OCR.
For these capabilities, you would need an OCR tool (Adobe Acrobat Pro, ABBYY FineReader, or free tools like Google Docs' built-in OCR via Drive upload). Easy PDF Lab's tools work with what's in the PDF file — and scanned documents contain images, not text.
Preventing Scanned PDF Problems at the Source
- Set your scanner to 150 DPI for documents you'll share digitally. 300 DPI is overkill for screen viewing and produces files 3–4× larger than necessary. Most scanner apps allow DPI configuration in settings.
- Use your phone's scanner app in document mode. Apps like Adobe Scan, Microsoft Lens, and Apple's built-in document scanner apply automatic perspective correction and lighting normalization. The results are consistently better than a simple camera photo.
- Scan in portrait orientation for portrait documents. Hold the phone in portrait position when scanning portrait documents — the orientation detection works more reliably when phone and document share the same orientation.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much can I compress a scanned PDF without it becoming unreadable?
At medium compression (slider 40–55%), standard printed text remains clearly readable and file size reduces 55–70%. Fine pencil handwriting may soften slightly. For archiving only, aggressive compression is acceptable; for sharing, keep to medium.
Can I extract text from a scanned PDF?
Not with standard text extraction tools. Scanned PDFs store pages as images — OCR (Optical Character Recognition) software is required to convert those images into text data. Google Docs can perform basic OCR for free via the Drive upload feature.
Will rotating a scanned PDF reduce its quality?
No. Rotation is a metadata operation on the PDF container — it records the display orientation without touching or re-encoding the embedded page images. Quality is completely unchanged.
Quick Takeaway
Scanned PDFs are large because every page is a high-resolution photo. Fix orientation first if needed (rotation is lossless), then compress at medium settings for email or sharing. Mild compression keeps fine handwriting sharp; medium is right for most document types. Scanned files cannot have text extracted without OCR software.
10 Smart Ways to Use QR Codes for Business (With Real Examples)
From restaurant menus to WiFi access to event check-in — practical QR applications that actually get used.
Updated May 2026 · 7 min read
QR codes went mainstream in 2020 when contactless everything became a necessity, and they stayed mainstream because they turned out to be genuinely useful. By 2024, smartphones had QR scanning built directly into the camera app, removing the last barrier to adoption — no one needs to download a scanner anymore.
The result is that a QR code placed in the right context now reliably gets scanned. The question is no longer "will people scan this?" but "where does it make sense to put one?" This guide covers ten business applications where QR codes add real value — with specific setup notes for each.
All examples can be set up using the QR Generator tool — no account required, no expiry, free to generate.
1. Restaurant and Café Menus
The most visible QR use case in the last five years. A QR code on a table card, tent card, or coaster links to an online menu — typically a PDF or a hosted menu page. Benefits: menus are updated instantly without reprinting, seasonal specials are easy to add, and physical menus don't pass between tables.
Setup: Host your menu as a PDF and link to it, or use a menu hosting service. Generate a URL QR code pointing to the menu link. Print at a minimum 3 cm × 3 cm for reliable scanning from a phone held at arm's length. Consider laminating — QR codes on glossy surfaces scan just as well as matte.
2. Business Cards With a Digital Profile
Printing a LinkedIn URL on a business card looks dated. A QR code that opens your LinkedIn profile, website, or a digital contact card is faster and more elegant. The recipient scans it, taps "Connect" or saves the contact, and no URL needs to be typed.
Setup: For a LinkedIn profile: shorten your profile URL with the URL shortener, then encode the short URL as a QR code. For contact details: use a vCard QR code (available in the Contact QR type) — this allows recipients to save your full contact information with one scan, no typing required.
3. WiFi Access for Customers and Guests
Sharing WiFi credentials verbally — spelling out a 20-character password — is inefficient and error-prone. A WiFi QR code displayed at a reception desk, in a waiting room, or on a welcome card connects the guest to your network automatically when scanned. No typing, no errors.
Setup: Use the WiFi QR type in the QR Generator. Enter the network name (SSID), password, and security type. When a guest scans the code, their phone shows a "Connect to [NetworkName]?" prompt — one tap connects them. Note: regenerate this code whenever you change your WiFi password.
4. Event Check-In and Ticketing
For smaller events where a full ticketing platform is overkill, QR codes provide a lightweight check-in system. Generate a unique QR code per ticket (or per attendee) that links to a confirmation page or contains the attendee's booking reference. Staff scan codes at the door rather than checking names on a list.
Setup: Embed a booking reference or attendee ID directly in the QR code as text data, or link to a confirmation URL. For small events (under 50 attendees), visual confirmation from a check-in spreadsheet works fine. For larger events, purpose-built event management tools handle unique code generation and validation more efficiently.
5. Product Information and Specifications
Physical products can carry a QR code linking to a detailed specification sheet, installation guide, safety data sheet, or user manual. This is far better than cramming dense text onto a small label — and the linked content can be updated without changing the physical product.
Setup: Host the product documentation (often a PDF) online and link to it. Shorten the URL for a simpler QR code pattern. Label or engrave the QR code on the product or packaging. For products with a long shelf life, ensure the hosting URL is permanent — don't link to a temporary file share.
6. Email Campaign and Print-to-Digital Bridging
A printed flyer, brochure, or direct mail piece has limited space. A QR code bridges print and digital — linking to a landing page, special offer, video, or booking form that couldn't fit on paper. This also makes the printed piece measurable: QR scan tracking (available through URL shorteners and analytics tools) shows how many people responded.
Setup: Create a dedicated landing page URL for each campaign so scan traffic is isolated. Shorten the URL, generate the QR code, and embed it in the print design. Always test scan the final printed piece (not just the digital proof) before the full print run.
7. In-Store and Retail Signage
A QR code on a shelf edge or product display can link to a how-to video, customer reviews, full product specification, or an "order online" page for out-of-stock items. It extends the information density of physical retail space without additional print costs.
Setup: Keep the destination page mobile-optimized — over 90% of QR code scans happen on mobile devices. Test with the three most common smartphones before finalizing. Print size on shelf labels should be at least 2.5 cm × 2.5 cm; on wall signage, larger is better (5 cm × 5 cm minimum for scanning from a distance).
8. Customer Feedback Collection
A QR code on a receipt, table card, or packaging linking to a short feedback form dramatically improves response rates compared to handing out paper questionnaires or sending follow-up emails. The scan happens at the moment of experience — when feedback is most accurate and motivation is highest.
Setup: Create a short feedback form (Google Forms, Typeform, or similar) and link to it via QR code. Keep the form to 3–5 questions maximum — longer forms see abandonment rates rise sharply on mobile. Refresh the QR code destination link seasonally to keep questions current.
9. Social Media Profile Linking
At trade shows, markets, pop-up shops, and networking events, a QR code displayed at your stand or on promotional materials lets visitors follow your social profile without searching for your handle. It's faster than asking someone to type "@yourbrand" and eliminates the risk of them finding the wrong account.
Setup: Generate a URL QR code pointing to your Instagram, Facebook, or TikTok profile URL. Display it prominently — on a standing banner, tabletop display, or packaging. Pair it with a clear label ("Follow us on Instagram") so the purpose is obvious before scanning.
10. Document and File Sharing
At a meeting or presentation, distributing a handout as a URL everyone has to type is awkward. A QR code on the first slide or on a whiteboard lets everyone in the room pull up the document on their phone or laptop instantly.
Setup: Upload the document (PDF, presentation, spreadsheet) to a file hosting service and copy the share link. Shorten the URL, generate the QR code, and display it at the start of the meeting. Attendees scan once and have the document for the rest of the session. This also works for post-meeting resource distribution — include the QR code in the meeting follow-up email alongside the link for those who prefer to click.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do QR codes expire?
No. A QR code encodes data directly — it works permanently as long as the destination (URL, WiFi network, etc.) remains active. The code itself has no expiry. The only risk is if the destination URL changes or goes offline.
Should I use a shortened URL in my QR codes?
Yes, whenever possible. Shorter URLs produce simpler QR code patterns that scan more reliably, especially when printed small. Use the URL shortener, then encode the shortened link. This also makes the QR pattern cleaner and easier to integrate into printed designs.
What's the minimum print size for reliable scanning?
2.5 cm × 2.5 cm (roughly 1 inch square) for close-range scanning on business cards and labels. 5 cm × 5 cm for table cards and shelf signage. For wall-mounted displays scanned from 2+ meters away, scale up proportionally — at least 10 cm × 10 cm.
Can I use QR codes for WiFi without a password manager?
Yes. WiFi QR codes encode the SSID, password, and security type directly. When scanned, the phone connects automatically — no password entry required. The password is embedded in the QR pattern and is not displayed to the user in plain text.
Quick Takeaway
QR codes work best when they solve a specific friction point: connecting guests to WiFi without typing, sharing a menu without printing, linking print materials to digital content. Always shorten the URL before generating the code, print at a size appropriate for the scanning distance, and test on actual printed output before deploying.
The Complete Guide to PDF Security: Encryption, Passwords, and File Privacy
What PDF encryption actually does, what it doesn't, and how to build a sensible document security practice.
Updated May 2026 · 8 min read
Most people treat PDF security as a binary question: either the document is password-protected or it isn't. But PDF security is a spectrum — and understanding the specifics matters because a lot of common assumptions are wrong. A password-protected PDF is not necessarily safe. An unprotected PDF sent via HTTPS is not necessarily insecure. The details determine the actual risk level.
This guide explains exactly how PDF encryption works, what it protects against, what it doesn't, and how to build a document security practice that's proportionate to your actual risk level — without being paranoid about every file you send.
How PDF Encryption Works
Modern PDF password protection uses AES-256 encryption — the Advanced Encryption Standard with a 256-bit key. This is the same cryptographic standard used by the U.S. government to protect classified information, by banks to secure online transactions, and by virtually every major secure cloud storage service.
When you protect a PDF with a password, the document's contents are encrypted using a key derived from your password. The file itself becomes unreadable binary data without the correct key. Open it in any PDF viewer without the password, and you'll see a prompt for credentials — the viewer cannot decrypt or display the contents without them.
The mathematics of AES-256 are such that brute-force cracking is computationally infeasible with current and foreseeable technology. A computer testing a billion passwords per second would take longer than the current age of the universe to exhaust the keyspace. The practical vulnerability is not the encryption — it's the password that unlocks it.
What PDF Encryption Protects Against
- Unauthorized reading during transit. If an encrypted PDF is intercepted in transit — via email network sniffing, an unsecured WiFi network, or a compromised mail server — the contents are unreadable without the password. The file is just encrypted noise.
- Unauthorized access if the file is misdelivered. If you accidentally send a sensitive document to the wrong recipient, encryption means they cannot read it without the password you never shared with them.
- Exposure from cloud storage breaches. If your email account, file storage, or backup service is compromised, encrypted files stored there remain protected even if the attacker downloads them.
- Casual access on shared or borrowed devices. If a PDF is stored on a shared computer, encryption ensures someone who finds the file cannot open it without the password.
What PDF Encryption Does Not Protect Against
Understanding the limits of encryption is just as important as knowing what it does. Misplaced confidence in encryption leads to poor decisions.
- The recipient forwarding the file. Once the correct recipient opens the file, they can save an unprotected copy (via print to PDF) or simply forward the original with the password. Encryption secures transit and access — not what the authorized recipient chooses to do.
- Screenshots or photographs of the screen. Content displayed on screen can always be captured. Encryption cannot prevent this.
- Weak passwords. AES-256 is unbreakable in practice, but the password can be guessed. "password123" with AES-256 provides essentially zero real security. The encryption is only as strong as the password that generates the key.
- Vulnerabilities in the PDF viewer. Old or unpatched PDF viewers sometimes have security vulnerabilities. Keep your software updated regardless of whether files are encrypted.
User Passwords vs Owner Passwords
The PDF standard supports two types of passwords:
- User password (open password): Required to open and view the document. This is the encryption password. Without it, the file is completely inaccessible.
- Owner password (permissions password): Controls what an authorized viewer can do — printing, copying text, modifying the document. An owner password without a user password means the file opens freely but has restricted permissions. In practice, owner-only restrictions have limited effectiveness — various tools can bypass permission restrictions without decrypting the content.
For genuine security, use a user (open) password. Owner-only password restrictions should not be relied on to protect sensitive content. The Protect PDF tool applies a user password with AES-256 encryption — genuine content protection.
Password Best Practices for PDF Security
- Use 12+ characters minimum. Length is the most important factor. A 16-character random password is vastly more secure than an 8-character complex one.
- Avoid dictionary words and personal information. Names, dates, company names, and common words are the first targets of dictionary attacks.
- Never send the password in the same email as the document. If the email account is compromised, both the file and the password are exposed simultaneously. Share the password via phone call, text, or a separate secure message.
- Use a password manager. Generate random passwords with a tool like 1Password or Bitwarden. Store the password linked to the document reference so you can retrieve it later. Never store passwords in plain text.
- Accept that there is no recovery. AES-256 encryption provides no backdoor. If you lose the password, the file contents are inaccessible. Keep an unencrypted original in a secure location before distributing the protected version.
A Proportionate Document Security Framework
Not every PDF needs encryption. Over-protecting documents creates unnecessary friction — users stop using passwords when every file is locked, or they use weak passwords that defeat the purpose. A proportionate approach:
- Encrypt: Contracts with financial terms, NDAs, HR documents (salary bands, offer letters, performance reviews), financial statements, patient or client records, anything marked "confidential" or "restricted."
- Consider encrypting: Proposals with pricing that shouldn't circulate, business strategy documents, internal reports not intended for external distribution.
- Don't encrypt: General brochures, publicly available reports, correspondence without sensitive information, any document intended for wide distribution.
File Privacy During Processing
When using online tools to process sensitive PDFs, the tool's privacy practices matter. Easy PDF Lab processes all files server-side and deletes them immediately after the download is complete. Files are never stored, indexed, or retained beyond the processing session. No account is required — there is no user profile to associate your documents with. For sensitive documents, this transient processing model is preferable to tools that store files in a personal cloud library by default.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is AES-256 encryption actually unbreakable?
In practice, yes. Brute-forcing AES-256 with current hardware would take longer than the age of the universe. The vulnerability is always the password, not the encryption algorithm. Use a strong password and AES-256 provides genuine, robust protection.
Can I remove a password from a PDF I encrypted?
Yes, if you know the password. Open the PDF in any viewer, enter the password, then use "Save As" or "Print to PDF" to create an unprotected copy. Without the password, there is no legitimate method to remove AES-256 encryption.
Should I compress a PDF before or after encrypting it?
Compress first, then encrypt. This is the correct sequence: compression algorithms work on the raw PDF structure. An encrypted PDF is opaque binary data that cannot be effectively compressed — the file size after encryption will be larger if you encrypt first.
Is a PDF sent over HTTPS secure without encryption?
HTTPS encrypts the connection during transmission, so the file is secure in transit. However, it's stored unencrypted on the recipient's device and in their email. Encryption the PDF itself protects it at rest — on their device, in email storage, in backups — not just in transit.
Quick Takeaway
AES-256 PDF encryption is genuinely secure — the weakness is always the password, not the algorithm. Encrypt sensitive documents, use strong passwords (12+ characters, not dictionary words), never send the password in the same message as the file, and compress before encrypting. Apply protection proportionately — not every PDF needs a password.
Privacy Policy
Last updated: February 2026
1. Introduction
Welcome to Easy PDF Lab. We respect your privacy and are committed to protecting any information you share while using our website. This Privacy Policy explains how we collect, use, and safeguard your data when you visit our site and use our online tools.
2. Information We Collect
We do not require account registration or login. Our tools process files directly in your browser or on our server temporarily. We may collect:
- Usage Data: Pages visited, tools used, time spent on pages, browser type, device type, and operating system.
- Log Data: IP address, access times, and referring URLs collected automatically by our servers.
- Cookies: Small files stored on your device to remember preferences such as dark mode settings.
3. How We Use Your Information
- To provide and maintain our PDF tools and services.
- To analyze usage patterns and improve our website performance.
- To detect and prevent technical issues or abuse.
- To display relevant advertisements through third-party ad networks.
4. File Processing and Security
Files uploaded to our tools are processed temporarily and are automatically deleted from our servers after processing is complete. We do not store, share, or access the content of your uploaded files. All file transfers use secure connections.
5. Cookies and Tracking Technologies
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
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You can manage cookie preferences through your browser settings. Disabling cookies may affect some site features.
6. Third-Party Services
We may use third-party services that collect information used to identify you. These include:
- Google AdSense: Displays advertisements. Google may use cookies to serve ads based on your prior visits. Learn more at Google's Privacy Policy.
- Google Analytics: Tracks website usage statistics to help us improve our services.
7. Your Data Rights (GDPR)
If you are located in the European Economic Area, you have certain data protection rights including:
- The right to access, update, or delete your personal information.
- The right to object to or restrict processing of your data.
- The right to data portability.
- The right to withdraw consent at any time.
To exercise these rights, please contact us using the details provided on our Contact page.
8. Children's Privacy
Our services are not directed to individuals under the age of 13. We do not knowingly collect personal information from children. If you become aware that a child has provided us with personal data, please contact us.
9. Changes to This Policy
We may update this Privacy Policy from time to time. Changes will be posted on this page with an updated revision date. We encourage you to review this page periodically.
10. Contact Us
If you have questions about this Privacy Policy, please contact us at qsaad3195@gmail.com.
Terms and Conditions
Last updated: February 2026
1. Acceptance of Terms
By accessing and using Easy PDF Lab ("the Website"), you agree to be bound by these Terms and Conditions. If you do not agree with any part of these terms, you must not use the Website.
2. Description of Services
Easy PDF Lab provides free online tools for PDF manipulation and document conversion, including but not limited to merging, splitting, compressing, rotating, converting, and protecting PDF files. All tools are provided "as is" for personal and commercial use.
3. User Responsibilities
- You are solely responsible for the files you upload and process using our tools.
- You must not upload files that contain illegal, harmful, or copyrighted content without proper authorization.
- You agree not to misuse the services or attempt to disrupt the website's functionality.
- You must not use automated scripts, bots, or similar tools to access our services in bulk.
4. File Handling
Files uploaded to our website are processed temporarily and are automatically deleted after processing. We do not store, retain, or share user files. However, we cannot guarantee absolute security during file transfer and processing.
5. Intellectual Property
All content on this website, including text, graphics, logos, icons, and software, is the property of Easy PDF Lab and is protected by applicable intellectual property laws. You may not reproduce, distribute, or create derivative works without our prior written consent.
6. Limitation of Liability
Easy PDF Lab is provided on an "as is" and "as available" basis. We make no warranties, expressed or implied, regarding the reliability, accuracy, or availability of our services. In no event shall we be liable for any indirect, incidental, or consequential damages arising from your use of the Website.
7. Content Usage Policy
You retain ownership of all files you upload. By using our tools, you grant us a temporary, limited license to process your files solely for the purpose of providing the requested service. This license terminates immediately upon completion of processing.
8. Third-Party Links and Services
Our website may contain links to third-party websites or services. We are not responsible for the content, privacy policies, or practices of any third-party sites. We encourage you to review the terms of any third-party services you interact with.
9. Modifications to Terms
We reserve the right to modify these Terms and Conditions at any time. Changes will be effective immediately upon posting on this page. Your continued use of the Website after changes constitutes acceptance of the updated terms.
10. Governing Law
These Terms and Conditions shall be governed by and construed in accordance with applicable laws. Any disputes arising from the use of this Website shall be resolved through appropriate legal channels.
11. Contact
For questions about these Terms, please contact us at qsaad3195@gmail.com.
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About Us
Easy PDF Lab
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Easy PDF Lab is a comprehensive online platform providing powerful, easy-to-use tools for all your document needs. Our mission is to make PDF manipulation and document conversion accessible to everyone, completely free of charge.
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