How to Merge PDFs for Free (No Software, No Sign-up)
Published 2026-07-15
Combining PDFs shouldn't require installing software or uploading personal documents to a stranger's server. Here are the real options, and the trade-offs of each.
When you need to merge PDFs
Combining multiple PDFs into a single file comes up constantly: stitching together scanned pages, assembling a job application (resume, cover letter, portfolio) into one document, merging chapters of a report, or combining invoices for an accountant. Most people's first instinct is to search for a desktop app or a "PDF merger" website, but both come with friction, software to install, or files uploaded to a server you don't control.
Option 1: A browser-based tool (no install, no upload)
The simplest approach for most people is a tool that merges PDFs entirely inside your browser tab, using JavaScript to combine the files locally on your device. Nothing gets uploaded to a server, there's no file size limit imposed by a server timeout, and there's nothing to install or uninstall afterward. You pick your files, arrange them in the order you want, and download the merged result, typically in under a few seconds even for large files. This is the fastest and most private option for an occasional merge.
Option 2: Your operating system's built-in tools
On a Mac, Preview can merge PDFs: open the first PDF, show the sidebar (View → Thumbnails), then drag additional PDF files directly into the sidebar at the position you want them, and save. On Windows, there's no equivalent built-in tool, though Microsoft Print to PDF can be combined with a bit of manual work if you're printing from an app that supports multi-file selection. This route works, but it's slower to figure out and easy to mess up if you're not already familiar with it.
Option 3: Desktop PDF software
Full PDF editors like Adobe Acrobat can merge files with more control, page-level reordering, bookmarks, and so on, but most of the powerful ones are paid software, and installing a whole application just to combine a couple of files is overkill for a one-off task.
What to watch out for with "free" merge websites
A lot of "free PDF merger" websites work by uploading your files to their server, merging them there, and sending back a download link. That's fine for a public document, but it's worth pausing before uploading anything with personal information, financial data, or anything sensitive to a service whose privacy practices you haven't checked. A tool that does the merge entirely in your browser sidesteps this concern completely, since your files never leave your device in the first place.
A quick step-by-step
Whichever tool you use, the process is generally the same: select all the PDF files you want combined, put them in the order you want the final document to read, and merge. If you need to reorder or remove specific pages afterward rather than whole files, that's a separate step most merge tools don't handle, look for a "delete or reorder pages" tool for that instead.