TG Edit-Pdf
TG Edit-Pdf
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Extract Pages

Pull specific pages out of a PDF into a brand-new document.

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Pull just the pages you need out of a PDF

Extracting is the right tool when a long PDF contains a small section you actually care about, and you want that section as its own clean file. You type a page range — like 1-3, 5, 7-9 — and get back a new PDF containing only those pages, in page-number order. The source file is never modified; you keep the original and gain a focused copy.

When extraction is the job

  • Sending one chapter, not the whole book. You have a 240-page handbook and a colleague only needs the onboarding section on pages 12-19. Extract 12-19 and email a 8-page file instead of the entire manual.
  • Pulling an invoice or statement out of a batch. Scanners and accounting exports often dump a month of records into one PDF. Extract the page range for a single invoice to forward to a client or attach to an expense claim.
  • Separating signed pages from boilerplate. A 30-page contract where only pages 1, 14, and 28-30 carry signatures or the schedule that matters. Extract 1, 14, 28-30 so the recipient isn't paging through filler.
  • Lifting figures or appendices for reuse. Grab the appendix tables (say 45-52) from a report to drop into a new document set later.

How the page range works

The range box accepts comma-separated single pages and dash ranges, mixed freely: 2, 5, 7-9. Pages are 1-based — page 1 is the first page, matching what your PDF reader shows.

A few behaviors worth knowing so you get exactly the output you expect:

  • Out-of-bounds numbers are ignored. If the file has 10 pages and you ask for 8-15, only pages 8, 9, and 10 are extracted. Nothing errors out; the impossible part is simply dropped.
  • Duplicates collapse. Asking for 3, 3, 2-4 gives you pages 2, 3, and 4 once each, not repeats.
  • Output is in page order. The extracted PDF comes out in ascending page order regardless of how you typed the ranges, so 9, 1, 5 produces a file ordered 1, 5, 9.

That last point matters: if your goal is to reorder pages into a custom sequence rather than just pull a subset, extraction won't do it.

Tips

  • Open the PDF in your normal viewer first and note the page numbers from its page counter — they line up with what you type here.
  • For large files (this tool accepts up to 100 MB per PDF), extracting the pages you need first, then compressing the smaller result, is faster than the reverse.
  • Watch the gap between a document's printed page labels and its physical page positions. A report whose body starts at "page 1" after a few cover pages still counts those covers, so the third printed page may be physical page 5.

When to use a different tool

  • Need a custom page order, deletions, or per-page rotation? Use Organize PDF — it gives you a drag-and-drop thumbnail grid where order is whatever you arrange, not forced ascending.
  • Want to break one file into many pieces at once? Use Split PDF; it produces multiple files (by page or by range) delivered as a ZIP, rather than a single combined extract.
  • Pulling pages from several PDFs into one document? Extract from each, then Merge PDF to stitch the results together.
  • Just need the file smaller, not shorter? Reach for Compress PDF.

How it works

  1. Upload the PDF you want to pull pages from.
  2. Click the thumbnails of the pages you want to extract.
  3. Click Extract Pages to save them into a new PDF.
  4. Download your new PDF instantly.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The range box accepts comma-separated singles and dashes mixed freely, such as 2, 5, 7-9. Pages are 1-based, matching what your PDF reader shows.

No — output is always in ascending page order, so typing 9, 1, 5 produces a file ordered 1, 5, 9. To arrange pages into a custom sequence instead, use Organize PDF.

Out-of-bounds numbers are silently ignored, not errored. On a 10-page file, asking for 8-15 extracts only pages 8, 9, and 10. Duplicates also collapse, so 3, 3, 2-4 yields pages 2, 3, 4 once each.

Each page's own content — text, images, and annotations on that page — is copied into the new PDF. Document-level structure pointing at pages you didn't include, such as outline bookmarks or cross-page links targeting dropped pages, won't carry over because those destinations no longer exist.

Extraction counts physical page positions, not the printed page labels a document shows. If a report has a few cover pages before its body starts at "page 1," the third printed page may be physical page 5 — open the file in your viewer and read its page counter to confirm the real numbers.

No — extraction works on one uploaded file at a time. Run each PDF through separately; if you then want them combined, merge the extracted files afterward.

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