Extract PDF Pages
Pull specific pages out of a PDF into a new file — pick pages visually, all in your browser.
Click or drag & drop a PDF file
Select a PDF to view and split its pages
About the Extract PDF Pages
Sometimes you only need a few pages out of a long PDF — one form from a bundle, a single chapter from a report, or the relevant pages of a statement. Extracting PDF pages lets you pull exactly those pages into a new document and leave the rest behind. This tool shows your PDF as page thumbnails so you can click to choose precisely what to extract.
Working visually removes the guesswork of typing page numbers and hoping you got them right. You see each page, select the ones you want — individually or as a range — and save them as a fresh PDF containing only those pages. The original file stays untouched, so you can extract different selections as many times as you need.
As with all the PDF tools here, extraction runs entirely in your browser. Your document is never uploaded, which matters when you are pulling pages from contracts, medical records or financial statements. It is the quick, private way to get just the pages that matter.
Looking for more options? Open the full Split PDF — it’s the same tool with every feature.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I extract specific pages from a PDF?
Open your PDF, view the pages as thumbnails, click to select the ones you want, and save them as a new PDF. You can pick individual pages or ranges, and the original document is left unchanged — all within your browser.
Can I extract a range of pages at once?
Yes. You can select a continuous range as well as individual pages, then save the whole selection as one new PDF. This is ideal for pulling out a chapter, a section, or any block of consecutive pages.
Does extracting pages change the original PDF?
No. Extraction creates a new PDF containing only your selected pages and leaves the original file as it was. You can run it repeatedly to produce different selections from the same source document without affecting it.
Understanding PDF Page Extraction
Extracting versus splitting
Extracting pages means saving a chosen subset of pages into a new file, while splitting often means dividing a PDF into several parts. They overlap, and the same tool typically does both. The key idea is selection: deciding which pages you want to keep separate from the rest, whether that is a single page or a defined range.
Why visual selection helps
Choosing pages by number alone is error-prone, especially in long documents where the content does not match the page count you expect. Seeing thumbnails lets you confirm you are taking the right pages before you save, which avoids extracting the wrong section and having to start over. It is faster and far more reliable for anything beyond a couple of pages.
Common reasons to extract pages
People extract pages to share just the relevant part of a long document, to separate one form from a multi-form pack, to remove confidential pages before sending, or to pull a chapter out for reference. In each case, working with a small, focused PDF is easier and safer than circulating the entire original file.