Split PDF Online Free, No Upload, No Account
Extract pages or divide a PDF into separate files. Your file never leaves your browser.
or drop PDF here
Why people split PDFs
Most people split PDFs for one of three reasons: they need to extract a few specific pages from a large document, they want to divide a multi-section file into separate documents, or they need to remove confidential pages before sharing.
Common examples: pulling one chapter out of a full report, separating invoices that were scanned into a single file, extracting a single form from a multi-form packet, or isolating your resume from an application bundle someone sent back to you.
Whatever the reason, the result is the same: you get exactly the pages you need, in a separate file, without touching the rest.
What to expect
You can extract any page or range. The tool lets you select specific pages — page 3 only, pages 1 to 5, or every other page. You are not limited to splitting the file in half or splitting every page into its own file.
The original file is not changed. Splitting creates a new file from the pages you selected. Your original PDF remains exactly as it was. Nothing is deleted or overwritten.
Formatting is preserved. The extracted pages look exactly as they do in the original document. Images, fonts, and layout are carried over without modification.
No file size limits. There is no cap on how large your PDF can be. The practical limit is your device's available memory, which handles most documents without issue.
How to split a PDF in 3 steps
Select your file — Click "Select PDF File" or drag and drop your PDF into the tool. The file is loaded directly into your browser.
Choose your pages — Select the pages or page ranges you want to extract. You can pick individual pages, a range, or split the document into equal parts.
Download your file — Click split and download the result. The whole process runs in your browser. Nothing is sent to a server.
Your files stay on your device
Most online PDF splitters upload your document to a remote server, process it there, and send the result back. That means your file — whatever is in it — passes through someone else's infrastructure.
itsmypdf works differently. The split runs entirely in your browser using JavaScript. Your file is read locally, processed locally, and the output is saved locally. Nothing is transmitted. You can turn off your internet connection after the page loads and the tool still works.
This matters if you are splitting anything sensitive: legal contracts, medical records, financial statements, or confidential reports. The browser-based model is not a marketing claim. It is the technical architecture.