Extract Pages
Pick the pages you need on a thumbnail grid and save them as a new PDF — without the source document going anywhere.
Choose a PDF
or drop files here
▚ files open locally — nothing is uploaded
- 01Open a PDF — your browser renders every page as a thumbnail, locally.
- 02Click the pages to include; each selected page gets a checkmark.
- 03Click Extract. The new PDF with just those pages downloads to your device.
Extracting is the polite sibling of removing: instead of cutting the noise out of a document, you lift the signal out of it — the two pages a colleague actually needs from a 60-page report, one exhibit from a case file, a single chapter from a manual.
The visual grid makes selection unambiguous — you see what you're taking, not just page numbers — and because everything renders and rebuilds in your browser, the 58 pages you didn't share never travel anywhere at all.
What's the difference between extracting and splitting?+
Extraction is visual and selective: you see thumbnails and pick exactly the pages you want in the new file. Split PDF works with typed page ranges (like 5-12) or breaks every page into its own file. Same engine, different workflow — use whichever fits the task.
Do the extracted pages keep their quality?+
Yes. Pages are copied into the new document exactly as they are — text stays selectable, images keep their resolution, nothing is re-rendered.
Does the original file change?+
No. Extraction creates a new PDF containing your selection; the source file on your disk is untouched.
Is anything uploaded?+
No. The thumbnails, the selection and the new PDF are all produced by your own browser. This matters most exactly here — extraction usually means pulling one sensitive exhibit out of a larger confidential file.