Not every page in a PDF earns its place — a blank scanned page, an outdated cover sheet, a page with information you don't want to share. Deleting the pages you don't need is a smaller, more targeted job than splitting a document, and it keeps everything else exactly as it was.
When you need to delete pages, not extract them
- Removing a blank or duplicate page left over from scanning.
- Dropping an outdated cover sheet or table of contents before resending a document.
- Taking out a page with information you don't want to include in the final version.
- Trimming an appendix or section that's no longer relevant.
Step by step: deleting PDF pages online, free
- Upload the PDF you want to edit.
- Select the pages to remove, either individually or as a range.
- Confirm the pages shown for deletion match what you intended to remove.
- Save and download the new PDF with those pages gone and everything else intact.
Remove exactly the pages you don't need in seconds, right in your browser — free, with no upload and no signup.
Try the Delete Pages ToolDouble-check the page numbers
Page numbers printed on a document don't always match the actual PDF page order — a cover page or blank sheet can shift everything by one. Before deleting, glance through the document in a viewer and note the true PDF page number of what you want gone, not just the number printed on the page itself.
If you actually need to keep a section instead
Deleting pages keeps everything except what you remove. If your goal is really the opposite — pulling out just one section and discarding the rest — a Split tool is more direct, since it extracts a page range rather than removing pages one at a time.
A note on privacy
If you're deleting a page precisely because it contains something sensitive, it makes sense to use a tool that never uploads the file at all — a client-side tool processes the deletion entirely in your browser.
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