Extract Pages from a PDF Privately, in Your Browser
Pull one page or a whole range out of any PDF without uploading a single byte. Free, no signup, no watermark, instant results.
How to Extract Pages from a PDF
Sometimes you only need part of a document: one signed page from a contract, a single invoice from a statement, a chapter from a report. GoPDFConverter copies exactly the pages you pick into a fresh PDF, directly in your browser, with no uploads, no installs, and no cost.
- Open the Extract PDF Pages tool and drop your file, or click Choose a PDF.
- Browse the page thumbnails to find the pages you need. The total page count is shown below the preview.
- Type the pages to extract in the box, for example 1,3-5 for page 1 plus pages 3 through 5.
- Click Extract Pages & Download to save a new PDF containing only those pages.
Why Extract Pages in Your Browser
The documents people most often pull pages from are exactly the ones they least want on someone else's server: contracts, medical records, bank statements, tax filings. Most online extractors make you upload the entire file just to get one page back. GoPDFConverter does the whole job inside your browser using the open-source PDF-LIB library, so the file never leaves your device and there is nothing for anyone to log, scan, or retain.
Extraction copies pages into the new PDF without recompressing them. Text, images, fonts, and vector graphics come through untouched, and the process finishes in a second or two even on large documents. The original file is never modified; you simply get a second, smaller PDF with the pages you chose.
Common Page Extraction Use Cases
- Contracts: send only the signature page instead of the full agreement.
- Statements: pull a single invoice or transaction page out of a long bank or billing statement.
- Reports and books: share one chapter or section without distributing the whole document.
- Records: extract the one page of a medical or insurance file an office actually asked for.
- Applications: grab the pages a form requires from a longer scanned packet.
- Presentations: save a handful of slides exported to PDF as their own file.