Organize
Organize & Reorder PDF Pages
Reorder, rotate, duplicate and delete pages visually.
Processed locally — your files never leave your device
How to use Organize PDF
- 1
Open your PDF — its pages appear as a draggable grid of thumbnails.
- 2
Drag pages to reorder them. Hover any page to rotate, duplicate or delete it.
- 3
Insert blank pages or the pages of a second PDF anywhere you like.
- 4
Click Save to download the reorganized document.
About this tool
This is the everything-tool for page arrangement: a visual editor where your PDF's pages become draggable cards. Scanned a stack of paper in the wrong order? Drag the pages right. One page upside down? Rotate just that one. Need a divider before each section? Insert blank pages. Assembling from two source files? Pull in another PDF and interleave its pages wherever they belong.
Every change is staged visually before anything is written, so you can experiment freely — the numbered badges always show the current output order. Duplicating a page is one click, which is handy for forms that need filling in twice, and deleted pages simply disappear from the grid without touching your original file.
When you save, the pages are copied into a brand-new PDF in exactly the arrangement you built, with any per-page rotations applied permanently. As always, the entire edit happens on your device.
Frequently asked questions
Can I combine pages from two different PDFs?
Yes. Click "Insert PDF" to add a second document — its pages join the grid and can be dragged anywhere among the existing ones.
Does rotating here actually rotate the page in the file?
Yes. Unlike rotating in a viewer (which is temporary), rotations applied here are written into the saved PDF and appear rotated everywhere.
What are blank pages useful for?
Mostly printing: inserting a blank page makes the next section start on a fresh sheet when printing double-sided, and acts as a visual divider in long documents.
Will the file size grow after organizing?
Usually it stays close to the original. Duplicated pages share their underlying resources where possible, and removed pages reduce size.
