Resize a PDF.
Printer wants Letter, document is A4? Pick the target size — or a percentage — and every page is rescaled as vectors: text stays selectable, images keep their quality, and links and form fields stay exactly on their words (most resize tools silently drop them). Landscape pages keep their orientation. All in your browser, nothing uploaded.
What you get
- Changes the physical page size of a PDF — scale to A4, US Letter, Legal or a custom size — so it prints correctly instead of cropping or leaving margins.
- Content is scaled to fit the new page cleanly rather than being chopped, and you choose whether to preserve the aspect ratio.
- Fixes the classic my-PDF-prints-half-on-the-page problem when a document was built for a different paper size.
- Runs in your browser — nothing is uploaded.
Questions people ask
What's the difference between Resize and Compress?
Resize changes the page dimensions (the paper size) so it prints right. Compress reduces the file's byte size for emailing. They solve different problems — resize for layout, compress for file weight.
Will resizing blur my text?
PDF text and vector graphics are scaled mathematically, so they stay sharp at the new size. Only embedded raster images follow normal scaling rules.
Can I switch a document from Letter to A4?
Yes — pick the target size and the pages are rebuilt to it, so a US Letter file prints cleanly on A4 paper and vice versa.
More PDF tools
Every PDF tool runs the same way: privately, in your browser.