Combine to Single Page

Merge all pages of your PDF into one continuous page, either horizontally or vertically.

Click to select a file or drag and drop

A single PDF file

Your files never leave your device.

What is Combine to Single Page?

The "Combine to Single Page" tool stitches all pages of your PDF document into one continuous page. Unlike traditional PDF merging that creates multi-page documents, this tool concatenates pages end-to-end, creating a single, scrollable page.

Common use cases for combining PDF pages:

  • Continuous Documents: Create single-page resumes, certificates, or banners
  • Printing Efficiency: Print multiple pages on one continuous sheet for plotter printers
  • Web Viewing: Create scrollable PDFs for websites and mobile viewing
  • Archiving: Combine related documents into one searchable page
  • Presentation: Create seamless presentations without page breaks
  • Data Analysis: Line up charts or graphs for side-by-side comparison

Key Features

  • ✓ Vertical or horizontal stacking
  • ✓ Adjustable spacing between pages
  • ✓ Custom background colors
  • ✓ Optional separator lines
  • ✓ Preserves original page quality
  • ✓ 100% free & browser-based

How to Combine PDF Pages

1

Upload PDF

Select your PDF document. Our tool supports PDFs of any size and page count. All processing happens locally in your browser.

2

Configure Layout

Choose vertical or horizontal stacking, adjust spacing, add separators, and customize background. Preview options in real-time.

3

Download Combined PDF

Download your single-page PDF. Original page quality is preserved. File is ready for printing, sharing, or archiving.

Best Practices & Tips

Recommended Uses

  • Vertical stacking: Best for resumes, reports, and documents meant for scrolling
  • Horizontal stacking: Ideal for timelines, comparison charts, and panoramic views
  • Use spacing (10-20px) for visual separation between pages
  • Add separator lines for multi-section documents

Technical Considerations

  • Very large combined pages may be difficult to view in some PDF readers
  • For printing: ensure your printer supports the final page dimensions
  • Use Compress PDF if file size becomes too large

Frequently Asked Questions

These are two different operations:

  • Combine to Single Page: Stitches all pages into one continuous page (like taping pages together)
  • Merge PDF: Combines multiple PDFs into a multi-page document with separate pages
  • Use Case Example:
    • For a scrollable resume: Use "Combine to Single Page"
    • For a report with chapters: Use Merge PDF

Yes, but there are considerations:

  • Pages will maintain their original dimensions
  • Different sized pages will create a "stair-step" effect when combined
  • For uniform appearance, first use Fix Page Size to standardize all pages
  • The combined page width/height will be determined by the largest page in the document

There's no hard limit, but practical considerations apply:

  • Browser Performance: Very large documents (100+ pages) may process slower
  • File Size: Combined PDFs can become very large (use Compress PDF if needed)
  • Viewing/Printing: Some PDF readers have trouble with extremely large single pages
  • Recommendation: Combine 20-30 pages at a time for optimal results

Yes, but with some limitations:

  • The combined PDF is a regular PDF that can be edited with any PDF editor
  • Individual original pages become part of one large canvas
  • For major edits, it's easier to edit the original documents and re-combine
  • Use our PDF Editor for basic modifications to the combined PDF

Text searchability is preserved:

  • All text from original pages remains searchable in the combined PDF
  • Text selection and copying works normally
  • If your PDF isn't searchable, use OCR PDF first to make text selectable
  • Search results will show page 1 (since it's now a single-page document)

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