Merging PDF files is one of the most common document tasks in any office, and most people do it the riskiest possible way: by uploading private files to a stranger's server. Combining invoices for accounting, stitching scanned pages into one document, packaging forms for a filing deadline, compiling a report from five different sources. Knowing how to merge PDFs the right way saves real time and keeps sensitive paperwork off the internet.
This guide covers everything you need to know about combining PDF files: the most common use cases, the tools available, and the important differences between online and desktop merging methods. Privacy gets the most attention here, because the documents people merge most often (tax returns, contracts, medical records, payroll) are the exact ones that should never touch a third-party server.
The short version: free web mergers like iLovePDF, SmallPDF, and Sejda upload every file to their servers and cap free use (Sejda allows three tasks per day up to 50MB; SmallPDF allows two tasks per day). A desktop tool such as ReamPDF merges entirely on your own machine for a one-time $9.99 USD, with no account, no upload, and no daily limit. The rest of this guide explains when each one makes sense.
Common Use Cases for Merging PDFs
Combining invoices and receipts: Accounting teams regularly need to package multiple invoices or receipts into a single PDF for record-keeping, expense reports, or audits. A merged file is easier to file, search, and share than a folder of separate documents.
Assembling scanned documents: If you scan a multi-page document in batches or across multiple scanning sessions, you end up with separate files that need to be combined into a single coherent document.
Compiling reports: Business reports often draw from multiple sources: a cover page from Word, charts from Excel, appendices from other PDFs. Merging creates a polished, single-file deliverable.
Packaging forms and applications: Legal filings, permit applications, and insurance claims often require multiple supporting documents submitted as a single PDF.
Organising personal documents: Tax returns, medical records, property documents, and insurance policies are easier to manage when related files are merged into organized collections.
Free Online Merging Tools: What to Know
Free online tools like iLovePDF, SmallPDF, and Sejda merge PDFs through a browser: upload your files, arrange the order, download the result. The workflow is easy. The trade-offs are not obvious until you hit them.
Privacy Concerns
Every file you merge online gets uploaded to the provider's servers. The merge happens on their hardware, and the result waits there for you to download. Most services promise deletion after some window, but during processing and that retention gap, your documents sit on machines you do not control.
That matters most for the documents people actually merge: financial records, legal filings, medical files, HR paperwork. The highest-sensitivity files are the ones people upload first.
File Size and Usage Limits
iLovePDF: 25MB file size limit on free tier, one batch at a time
SmallPDF: Two tasks per day on free tier
Sejda: 50MB limit, three tasks per day, up to 50 pages
Merging a batch of scanned documents or a fat report hits these caps fast. Going past them means a paid plan: iLovePDF runs about $5 to $9 USD per month, and Smallpdf is about $15 USD monthly or roughly $9 USD per month billed annually.
Desktop Merging: The Private Alternative
Desktop PDF tools process files entirely on your own machine. Nothing touches the internet, nothing waits in an upload queue, and there is no file-size cap and no daily task limit. For sensitive documents or large batches, that is the safer and faster path.
ReamPDF is a desktop app for Windows and macOS that merges PDFs (plus compress, split, convert, and WebP-to-PDF) entirely offline. It is a one-time $9.99 USD purchase from the Microsoft Store or Mac App Store. No account, no subscription, no internet connection required.
How to Merge PDFs in ReamPDF: Step by Step
Open ReamPDF on your Windows PC or Mac. No sign-in or account needed.
Select the Merge tool from the main dashboard.
Drag and drop the PDF files you want to combine into the merge window. You can add as many files as you need.
Reorder the files by dragging them into the desired sequence. The final merged PDF will follow this order.
Click Merge. The files are combined locally on your device.
Save the merged file to your preferred location.
For most file collections the merge is instant. No upload wait, no remote queue, no cap on how many files you combine or how big they are.
Online vs Desktop Merging Compared
Tips for Effective PDF Merging
Name your files clearly before merging. Use descriptive names like "01-cover-letter.pdf", "02-resume.pdf" so the order is obvious.
Check page orientation before combining. Mixing portrait and landscape pages can create an awkward reading experience.
Compress after merging. Combining multiple files can create a large output. Run a compression pass on the merged file to reduce size.
Remove unnecessary pages first. Strip blank pages, duplicate covers, or irrelevant appendices before merging to keep the final file focused.
Verify the final document. Open the merged PDF and scroll through to confirm all pages are present and in the correct order.
When Online Merging Makes Sense
Online tools are fine for the occasional small, non-sensitive merge when a desktop tool is out of reach. On a borrowed laptop, working from a tablet, or doing a one-off merge of a few public documents, a free browser tool gets the job done.
However, for regular use, sensitive documents, large files, or batch merging, a desktop tool is the more practical and private choice.
Conclusion
Merging PDFs should be simple, fast, and private. Free online tools make the process easy but introduce privacy risks, file limits, and usage caps that can be frustrating for anything beyond occasional use.
For a merging tool that runs offline with no daily caps and no files leaving your device, ReamPDF is a straightforward call at $9.99 USD, paid once. Drag, drop, merge, done. Every step happens on your own hardware.
Acrobat is not required. For a quick, non-sensitive file, a free online merger like iLovePDF or Smallpdf works in the browser. For anything private or for a large batch, an offline desktop tool like ReamPDF combines PDFs with drag and drop, on your own machine, with no daily limit and no upload.
Use a desktop tool that processes files locally. ReamPDF merges PDFs entirely offline: open it, drag your files in, set the order, and save. The files never leave your computer, so invoices, contracts, and medical records stay private, and there is no upload wait.
For a small, non-sensitive, one-off file, it is fine. The catch is that online mergers upload every file to their servers before combining it, and your document sits there during processing and a retention window. For financial, legal, or health files, an offline tool keeps everything on your machine instead.
Free tiers cap both size and frequency. As of June 2026, iLovePDF allows roughly 25MB per task, Sejda about 50MB across three tasks a day, and Smallpdf around two tasks a day on the free tier. A local desktop tool has no file-size cap and no daily cap, so a big scanned batch never hits a paywall.
macOS Preview can combine PDFs by dragging page thumbnails between two open files, no install needed. For larger batches, mixed page sizes, or sensitive documents, ReamPDF runs on macOS and Windows and merges offline with no upload and no page limit, as a one-time $9.99 purchase.
Online tools are free with daily limits, then roughly $5 to $15 per month for paid tiers like iLovePDF and Smallpdf, or about $14.99 per month for Adobe Acrobat Standard billed annually (verified June 2026). ReamPDF is a one-time $9.99 purchase with no subscription, so a year of merging costs less than a single month of Acrobat.