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Removing pages...
Delete unwanted pages from your PDF by entering page numbers or ranges. Free, instant and private.
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Choose PDFPDF files only ยท Max 25MB
Removing pages...
This tool removes specific pages from a PDF, producing a new file without those pages โ everything else stays exactly as it was. It's useful for cutting out blank pages, removing outdated content, deleting duplicate scans, or trimming a document down to just the sections you need.
This happens entirely in your browser โ your document is never uploaded to a server, and the original file on your device is left untouched (you're downloading a new file with the selected pages removed).
Removing pages from a PDF doesn't automatically renumber any page numbers that were printed as part of the document content โ if page 5 had "Page 5" printed on it and you remove page 3, the remaining page still displays "Page 5" even though it's now the fourth page in the file. If you need the printed page numbers to reflect the new sequence, you would need to add fresh page numbers using Add Page Numbers after removing pages, which can overlay new numbering onto the remaining pages.
For documents with many pages, reviewing thumbnails to identify exactly which pages to remove is much faster than opening the full document and scrolling through page by page. Blank pages are usually easy to spot as thumbnails โ they appear as plain white or grey rectangles compared to pages with visible content. Duplicate pages can be slightly trickier to spot at thumbnail size if the duplication isn't exact (for example, two scans of the same page that were cropped slightly differently), so for documents where duplicates are suspected, it's worth zooming in on thumbnails that look similar to confirm before removing either one.
A common reason to remove pages is preparing an internal document for external sharing โ removing draft notes, internal comments, pricing information not meant for a client, or appendices that are only relevant to your team. When doing this, it's worth reviewing the entire remaining document after removal, not just confirming the targeted pages are gone โ sometimes content that references a removed page (a "see Appendix B" reference, for example) remains in the document and now points to nothing, which can look like an oversight to whoever receives the document. While this tool removes the pages themselves cleanly, any textual references to those pages elsewhere in the document are a separate consideration that's worth checking manually.
For image-heavy documents โ particularly scanned documents where each page might be a full-resolution image โ removing unnecessary pages (blank pages, duplicates, low-value sections) can meaningfully reduce file size, sometimes more effectively than compression alone, since you're removing data entirely rather than just reducing its quality. If file size is a concern after removing pages, combining this with PDF Compressor on the resulting smaller document can reduce the size further while keeping all the pages you've decided to keep.
After removing pages, you might want to rotate any remaining pages that are sideways, reorder the remaining pages into a different sequence, or compress the result if file size matters. If you removed pages from one document because you want to combine the remainder with another file, PDF Merger can join them afterwards.
Yes. You can select as many pages as needed and remove them all in a single operation.
No. The remaining pages keep their original quality, formatting and content exactly as they were โ only the selected pages are excluded from the output.
No. The tool produces a new downloaded file with the selected pages removed. Your original file on your device remains unchanged unless you choose to overwrite it yourself.
You'll need to unlock it first using Unlock PDF, then remove pages from the unlocked file.
No. Everything happens in your browser, so your document never leaves your device.