Is there a painless way to combine/merge PDF files in Windows? I understand that pdftk will do it on Linux.
PDFsam Basic is our free and open source desktop application to split, merge, extract pages, rotate and mix PDF files Download PDFsam Basic. PDFsam Enhanced PDFsam Enhanced is our commercial solution, a powerful and professional PDF editor to modify, convert, review, sign, fill forms and secure your PDF files. Feb 13, 2019 - PDF is one of the most popular and widely used file systems for e-mailing, sharing and printing documents. It is an alternative to PDFMod, which does practically the same. PDF-Shuffler is a great open source PDF editor that allows us to. PDFsam Basic is a free, open source and cross-platform app.
closed as off-topic by slhckJul 7 '13 at 11:18
- This question does not appear to be about computer software or computer hardware within the scope defined in the help center.
10 Answers
There are quite a few free options, as well as some good commercial ones:
Web-based (Free)
- MergePDF. Merge up to 10 files. Max limit of 5MB/file.
- PDF Hammer. Web-based PDF editor that supports merging of multiple files
- Booklet Creater. Merges files to create a booklet. Rearranges pages to that you can print and fold to create a simple booklet.
- BCL Premium PDF Merge Merge 2 PDF documents. Max 10MB/file. Limit of 20 merges/day
Desktop tools (free)
- PDF Sam. Also known as 'PDF Split & Merge'. FOSS tool for splitting and merging PDFs. Windows & Mac. Console and GUI interfaces. On Windows, the installer by default installs Ad-Aware Security Toolbar, sets Lavasoft SecureSearch as homepage, new tabs, and default search provider.
Swift PDF. Combines multiple images (JPG, GIF, etc.) into a single PDF.
Editor's note, 5/1/2017: Swift PDF was last updated in 2006 and was compatible with Windows 95. The original link is dead and the product appears to no longer be supported. However, it is still downloadable at https://swift-pdf.en.softonic.com/
pdftk. FOSS power tool. Command line only. Windows, Mac, Linux, FreeBSD. Windows GUI versions exist, including a portable version and the official free version.
There are also a lot of commercial tools.
pdftk.exe
is available for Windows as well. See here: http://www.accesspdf.com/pdftk/#packages and here: http://www.pdfhacks.com/pdftk/pdftk-1.41.exe.zip
Here is an example commandline for pdftk.exe
. It merges all PDF files in the current directory into a combined one:
Another one:
Ghostscript can also combine multiple input PDFs (and PostScript files) into one output PDF:
Update suggested by @sunk818
There is a GUI for pdftk
named PDFTK Builder. This essentially builds a command line based on your option choices for you and executes:
My own update
Since I originally posted this answer, pdftk
has undergone further developments.
- The application's name changed to PDFtk Server (the command line tool is still called
pdftk
). - There is now version 2.02 available.
- The developers now offer their own GUI for Windows, called PDFtk Pro.
You can use PDFill PDF Tools to perform lots of manipulations on your PDFs for free.
Use the 'Merge PDF Files' button (button #1) in the screenshot below.
Try PDFsam, which comes for Windows, Mac OS X and Linux.
The basic version is free, I'm pretty sure that the basic version will meet your needs. You will need to have Java installed on your computer to run this program.
I found the best for me: PDF Split and Merge
PDF Split and Merge tool is implemented using the PdfSharp library and is either GUI or command driven.It is useful for automated document creation.It allows bookmarks from the input pdfs to be imported and flexibly embedded in the destination document.
It just merges or splits PDF files, nothing else.
PDF Creator will do the trick -- you can print multiple documents to a single PDF. Relatively painless :)
Also this program named pdfbinder proved to be useful. It has a simple commandline interface for input and uses the same engine as the PDF Split and Merge already mentioned.
This little app I found with a Google search let me merge image files into a single PDF, which it didn't look like some of these options would. It's very limited, but it did the trick for me just now.
I know that you can do this with Adobe Acrobat. I assume that you don't want to pay for this if it's the only use you have. You highlight your PDF files, right-click and select Combine files in Acrobat...
:
Ghostscript, available on Linux and Windows, should be able to concatenate them, but it uses complicated command-line functions. You can use CutePDF, which has a free version, but I believe the Professional (paid) version is the only one that will concatenate.
When installing software is not an option, then combinepdf.cc is quite neat.