Merging PDF files is one of the most common document tasks in any professional environment. Whether you are compiling a report from multiple sections, combining invoices for accounting, or assembling a portfolio, knowing how to merge PDFs efficiently saves significant time. Here are ten professional tips to help you get the best results every time.
Before uploading files, decide on the final page order. Write down or mentally map the sequence: cover page, table of contents, sections, appendices. Having a clear plan prevents the need to re-merge after realising the order is wrong.
If you name your files with a numbered prefix (e.g., "01_Introduction.pdf", "02_Methodology.pdf"), many merge tools will sort them automatically in the correct order. This is especially useful when merging large numbers of files.
Merging PDFs with different page sizes (A4 and Letter, for example) can produce inconsistent results. Use the PDF editing tools to standardise page sizes before merging if a uniform appearance is important.
Use the Split PDF or Organise PDF tools to remove blank pages, duplicate pages, or irrelevant sections from each file before merging. This keeps the final document clean and professional.
Mixed portrait and landscape pages within a merged document can be jarring for readers. If some source files are landscape (e.g., spreadsheet printouts), consider whether they should be rotated to portrait or kept as-is, and ensure this is intentional.
After merging, use the Organise PDF tool to drag and drop pages into the exact order you want. This gives you fine-grained control over the final page sequence without having to re-merge.
Add page numbers to the final merged document rather than to individual source files. This ensures consistent numbering throughout the combined document. AllPDFTools' Page Numbers tool lets you customise the position, font, and starting number.
Merging multiple large PDFs can produce a very large combined file. After merging, run the Compress PDF tool to reduce the file size before sharing or archiving.
Always open and review the merged PDF before sending it. Check that all pages are present, in the correct order, and that no content has been cut off or distorted during the merge process.
Always keep the original source PDF files after merging. If you need to update one section of the combined document in the future, having the individual source files makes it much easier to make targeted changes and re-merge.