About Crop PDF
Crop PDF trims uniform margins from every page using millimeter offsets from left, top, right, and bottom—ideal when scans include huge black borders from flatbeds or when slide PDFs carry redundant template chrome. Researchers crop journal article margins for tablet reading; offices clean up fax headers; designers tighten exports before print. Uniform cropping keeps page geometry consistent across the whole document.
This model applies the same crop box to all pages, which suits evenly scanned stacks. Heterogeneous pages—some landscape, some portrait—may need desktop tools or a split-merge strategy. Always preview output: aggressive cropping can clip footnotes, page numbers, or signatures.
Respect upload limits; split long files first if necessary. After cropping, run Page numbers if trimming removed old footers, or Compress if high-resolution scans remain oversized.
Do not crop legally required disclosures just to save space—contracts and filings may mandate full-page capture. Confidential documents should follow your policy on cloud cropping versus offline editors. Keep an uncropped archival copy when authenticity could be questioned later.
Supported formats
This tool accepts PDF. Always respect the upload limit shown next to the form before sending large documents.
How to use
- Upload your file in the file field.
- Complete the extra fields (password, page ranges, quality, and similar).
- Click Run tool.
- Download or read the output below.
If processing fails, check the upload size limit on the form, try fewer or smaller files, or retry in a fresh tab.
Security & privacy
Files and text you send are processed to produce your result and are not intended for long-term storage on your behalf. Avoid uploading passports, bank details, medical records, or legally sensitive material unless you accept the risks of any online service. For confidential workflows, prefer offline software on a device you control. Read our privacy policy for site-wide practices.