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

Drop a PDF file here or click to choose
50 MB maximum
    No PDF added yet.

    Apply rotations

    Your PDF is processed in server memory and discarded the moment the response leaves our server. Nothing is saved to disk, and nothing is logged.

    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.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    Are my PDFs uploaded somewhere permanent?
    No. Files arrive over HTTPS, live only in RAM while we compute the result, and are discarded the instant the response is sent back to your browser. We never write them to disk and we keep no log of file names or contents.
    What is the file size limit?
    Each file may be up to 50 MB and a single request may total up to 100 MB. Merge accepts at most 20 PDFs at a time. These caps protect the service from runaway memory use and are higher than most free PDF services.
    Do you support password-protected PDFs?
    Not yet. Remove the password in your viewer first (Preview on macOS, Acrobat, or any reader that lets you re-save without protection) and then upload. We never accept passwords ourselves so attackers cannot use our service as a brute-force oracle.
    Will my downloaded PDF have a watermark?
    No. We never add watermarks, ads, or hidden metadata to the output. What you download is just the result of the operation you asked for — nothing else is injected into the file.
    Can I process the same PDF for hours?
    You can run many operations in a row from the same browser tab — the page silently refreshes its API token every couple of hours so you do not have to reload. A short rate limit of 30 requests per minute applies per IP to keep the service fast for everyone.