Working with PDFs

Merge, sign, rotate and annotate PDFs privately — the document never leaves your device.

PDF is the format people reach for when a document has to look the same everywhere, which is exactly why the edits it needs are so specific: combine several files into one, drop a signature on a contract, rotate a page that scanned sideways, reorder pages, or mark something up before sending it back. And because PDFs are so often contracts, statements and records, where they get edited matters as much as how.

Every guide here uses the EditItAll PDF editor, which does all of that entirely inside your browser — the file is opened, edited and rebuilt on your device, and nothing is uploaded. For a confidential agreement or a bank statement, that privacy is the whole point. The editor reorders, rotates, duplicates, extracts, deletes and merges pages from multiple files; adds highlights, notes, shapes, ink and free text; and includes Fill & Sign for dropping a drawn, typed or uploaded signature onto a page. Exports are standards-compliant PDFs that open correctly in Acrobat, Preview and any other viewer.

The guides are equally clear about what it does not do: it does not rewrite the existing text stream of a PDF, fill interactive AcroForms, or run OCR on a scan. Where a task needs one of those, the guide says so plainly rather than sending you in circles.

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