Rotate PDF
Pick a PDF, choose which pages need 90, 180, or 270 degrees of rotation, then download the corrected copy. The original never leaves your machine — only an in-memory copy briefly lives on our server before it is discarded.
Pick a PDF to rotate
Apply rotations
Tips
Flatten before you merge
Forms, comments, and unsaved annotations can render differently once pages live inside a merged file. If any contributor used a viewer with form fields, ask them to print to PDF first — the merged copy will then look exactly like the source on every device.
Split by sections, not by page count
A 60-page report rarely splits cleanly every 10 pages. Use the page-range mode to cut at chapter boundaries — share the executive summary as pages 1-4, the methodology as 5-22, and the appendix as 23-60, each with a meaningful filename.
Rotation is metadata, not pixels
Rotating a page changes a single number in the PDF — it never re-renders the content. That is why even huge scanned files rotate instantly with no quality loss, and also why a few legacy viewers occasionally ignore the rotation flag. Saving a rotated copy here bakes the new orientation into the file so every reader displays it the same way.
Strip drafts before you send
Splitting and re-merging a PDF resets viewer history and clears most attached comments — a cheap way to make sure a draft you sent for review does not carry hidden review notes when it reaches a wider audience.
Common Use Cases
Prepare scanned application packs
Re-order scanned passport, ID, and utility-bill pages, then rotate the ones the scanner caught sideways — all without re-scanning.
Tidy lecture notes
Drop weekly handouts into the merger to build a single course pack, or split the final pack into topic-sized chunks for revision.