Drag page thumbnails into the order you want, spin sideways scans upright, and pull out the blank or duplicate pages — then export one tidy PDF. Because it's content-preserving, your text stays selectable, your fonts and vectors stay sharp, and the file size barely moves. One PDF in, one cleaned-up PDF out.
Your document never leaves your device. Organize PDF runs entirely in your browser on pdf-lib and pdf.js, so nothing is uploaded, stored, or used for training. Turn on airplane mode and it still works — useful proof when the file is a contract, a medical record, or anything you'd rather not hand to a server.
Open the file straight in the browser — no signup to try. pdf.js renders a live thumbnail of every page on your device, so you can see exactly what you're working with. The PDF is never sent anywhere.
Drag thumbnails to rearrange pages, rotate a sideways scan in 90-degree steps, and remove the ones you don't need. Everything updates live in the grid, fully on your machine.
pdf-lib copies your chosen pages into a fresh PDF in the new order — text, fonts and images carried over intact, not rasterized. The cleaned-up file saves to your downloads, still never uploaded.
A court bundle or discovery packet usually arrives as pages in the wrong order, with sideways scans and a few blanks to drop. Organize PDF lets you drag the exhibits into the right sequence, straighten the rotated scans, and delete the junk pages, then export one clean file ready to serve. Because nothing is uploaded, a privileged document never touches a third-party server on its way to being tidied up.
Intake forms, EOBs and personnel files often need pages pulled or reordered before they're shared, and these contain personal data you can't paste into a random web tool. Doing it on-device sidesteps the question of a business-associate agreement entirely, since the file stays in your browser. The export keeps the real text layer, so the cleaned record is still searchable for the next person who opens it.
Multi-page statements, invoices and signed agreements come off the scanner with duplicates, blank backs and the occasional upside-down page. Reorder the sections, rotate the offenders upright, and delete the duplicates to hand off a document that looks deliberate. The content-preserving export means numbers, tables and selectable text all survive untouched.
Phone scans of a lease, a tax form or a stack of receipts almost always need a quick reshuffle and a rotate before sending. Drag the thumbnails into order, spin the sideways pages, drop the blurry duplicate, and download — no account, no upload, no install. It's free to try, and the file stays on your device the whole time.
When you open a PDF, pdf.js renders each page to a thumbnail locally so you can arrange the document visually. On export, pdf-lib builds a brand-new PDF and copies the page objects you kept into it in your chosen order, applying any per-page rotation as it goes. Because it copies pages rather than re-rendering them to images, the original text, fonts, vector graphics and embedded images come across byte-for-byte — your text stays selectable and the file size barely changes. The honest trade-off is that this is a page-level tool: it reorders, rotates and deletes whole pages, but it does not edit the text, images or layout inside a page, and it works on one file at a time. For combining files reach for Merge PDF, for breaking one apart use Split PDF, and to shrink a heavy file use Compress PDF.
The files people most often need to reorder — contracts, medical records, financial statements, signed agreements — are exactly the ones you shouldn't be uploading to an unknown server just to drag a few pages around. Organize PDF runs entirely in your browser with a local PDF worker, so the document is never transmitted, stored, or used for training. The verifiable proof is airplane mode: cut your network and the tool still loads thumbnails, reorders pages and exports, because there was never a round-trip to begin with. That means no retention window to worry about and no "where did our file go" question to answer afterward.
No. Organize PDF runs entirely in your browser, so the file never leaves your device — nothing is uploaded, stored, or used for training. You can switch to airplane mode and it still works, which is the proof that it's genuinely on-device.
Yes, there's a generous free tier with no signup to try. Pro is $9/mo or $69/yr and unlocks batch with ZIP export, no watermark, and unlimited history across every nimbril tool, or $4/mo for just this app.
No. This is a content-preserving tool — pdf-lib copies your existing page objects into a new file rather than re-rendering them, so text stays selectable, fonts and vector graphics stay crisp, and there's no image quality loss. The file size stays close to the original because nothing is rasterized or re-compressed.
You can rotate each page on its own, in 90-degree steps, so a single sideways scan in an otherwise upright document is an easy fix. The rotation is written into the page itself, so it stays correct in any PDF viewer after export.
Organize PDF works on a single file — one PDF in, one PDF out — for reordering, rotating and deleting pages. To combine several files use nimbril's Merge PDF, and to pull pages into separate files use Split PDF; both also run fully on your device.
No. This is a page-level tool, so it arranges, rotates and removes whole pages rather than editing the words, images or layout inside a page. That deliberate limit is what keeps every page byte-for-byte intact in the exported file.
Yes. Because pages are copied rather than flattened to images, the output keeps its real text layer, so it stays searchable and selectable and works with screen readers. Bookmarks tied to pages you keep are preserved in their new positions.