Desktop
Install in Chrome, Edge, Brave, or Arc for one-click open from your dock.
Look for the install icon in your browser address bar.Three tools. Runs in your browser. Files never leave your device.
Drop in files. Get one PDF.
Open Merge PDFExtract pages. Make many PDFs.
Open Split PDFShrink file size. Keep quality.
Open Compress PDFPDF to JPG, Word to PDF, and more.
Open Convert PDFEdit text. Reorder. Delete pages.
Open Edit PDFFind differences between two files. Visual & Text.
Open Compare PDFPDFs, images, Word, Excel, Markdown, HTML — drag straight from your desktop.
Page size · orientation · margins. Reorder by dragging. Done.
Get a clean PDF. Send straight to Edit to tweak text or reorder pages.
Same browser-only PDF tools — wherever you work, no upload, no account.
Install in Chrome, Edge, Brave, or Arc for one-click open from your dock.
Look for the install icon in your browser address bar.Open in Safari, then add iKeepPDF to your Home Screen — it launches like a real app.
A native Play Store version is on the way. For now, open in Chrome to install as a web app.
Chrome menu (⋮) → Add to Home Screen also works today.SmallPDF, iLovePDF, PDF24 — they all upload your PDFs to their servers. Sometimes that's fine. For invoices, contracts, anything personal — not really. This one runs in your browser. The file never leaves.
Most free PDF sites cap you at 2-3 conversions a day to push the paid plan. Here you can combine as many files as your browser can handle (which is a lot — I've tested 200-page PDFs).
Once the page loads the first time, it's cached. Open it again with no internet and it still works. Handy on flights or when WiFi is being garbage.
iLovePDF, SmallPDF, Adobe — they all upload your files to their servers. iKeepPDF doesn't. Every operation (merge, split, convert, edit) runs as JavaScript inside the browser tab you're looking at. The file bytes stay on your device.
End of the month, you've got a folder full of phone-snapped receipts. Drop them in, drag the order, hit combine. One PDF, ready to attach to the expense form.
Don't have Word installed? Drop a .docx and you get a PDF. Same for .xlsx — pick which sheets you want and skip the rest.
You spotted a typo in the contract after exporting to PDF. Open it in Edit, click the word, retype, save. Doesn't work on scanned PDFs (no text to click).
Designing a doc handoff? Drop screenshots in order, pick A4, get a clean paginated PDF. Way faster than pasting them into Google Docs.
Bank statement is 40 pages but you only need 3? Drop it, click delete on the rest, save. Done in 30 seconds.
Got README-style notes with code blocks and images? Drop the .md file. The conversion preserves headings, lists, tables. Good enough for sharing with someone who doesn't do Markdown.
Yeah. There's no paywall or daily limit. I run ads on the page (Google AdSense, the small banner kind) and that covers hosting. If you use an ad blocker, the tool still works — I'm not going to nag you about it.
There's no hard cap. The limit is whatever your browser's RAM is OK with. Desktop Chrome handles 500MB fine. I've tested a 200-page PDF and a 10-sheet Excel without it choking. Phones tap out earlier — maybe 50-100MB before things slow down.
Yes. The Edit tool embeds a Roboto Unicode font as fallback, so text edits work for Latin diacritics (é, ñ, ø), Vietnamese (ố, ấ, ư), Cyrillic, Greek, and other Latin-extended scripts. CJK characters (Chinese, Japanese, Korean) display correctly but edits may swap to a fallback font if the source PDF doesn't embed CJK fonts.
If you don't mind uploading your files, SmallPDF works fine. They have more features (compression, OCR, eSign). The reason I built this: I work with client invoices and contracts, and uploading those to a random web service for a one-second job felt wrong. Pick whichever fits.
Correct. The whole tool is JavaScript that runs in your browser tab. When you drop a PDF, the bytes load into browser memory. There's no "Send" step happening behind the scenes. You can verify by opening DevTools → Network tab — no outgoing requests for your file.
Scanned PDFs are pictures of text, not text. So the Edit tool can't click on words there's no underlying text data for. You can still reorder pages, delete them, and combine with other files. If you need to edit the text, run the PDF through OCR first (Adobe Acrobat does this, or there's good free tools online).
Once you've loaded the page once, yeah. It's a PWA — the browser caches everything after first visit. You can also click "Install iKeepPDF" in the browser menu and it becomes an app icon. Useful on planes.
Ads on the page pay for the domain and hosting. That's it. No account, no upgrade button, no 7-day trial nonsense. Use it as much as you want.