Rotate PDF
Rotate PDF pages 90°, 180° or 270°.
100% private — runs in your browser, nothing is uploaded.
Click to upload or drag & drop a PDF
Select one PDF file
How to use the Rotate PDF
- 1Upload a PDF
Drag and drop or click to select a single PDF file.
- 2Choose an angle
Pick 90°, 180° or 270° (clockwise).
- 3Choose the pages
Rotate all pages, or enter specific pages to rotate.
- 4Download
Click Rotate & download to save the corrected PDF.
Free online PDF rotator
This rotate PDF tool fixes sideways or upside-down pages in seconds. Rotate the whole document or just the pages that need it, then download a PDF that always opens the right way up.
Rotate all pages or just some
Scanned documents often mix portrait and landscape pages. Choose specific pages and give each the exact turn it needs — 90°, 180° or 270° clockwise — without touching the rest.
Private and permanent
The new rotation is baked into the file, so it looks correct everywhere. And because everything runs in your browser, your PDF is never uploaded — no watermark, no sign-up.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I rotate a PDF?
Upload your PDF, choose 90°, 180° or 270°, decide whether to rotate all pages or only some, then click Rotate & download. The fixed PDF saves instantly.
Can I rotate only certain pages?
Yes. Choose 'Specific pages' and enter the page numbers or ranges (for example 1-3, 5). Only those pages are rotated; the rest stay as they are.
Is the rotation saved permanently in the PDF?
Yes. The rotation is written into the PDF itself, so every viewer — browsers, phones and print — shows the pages the right way up.
Are my files uploaded to a server?
No. Rotation happens locally in your browser using pdf-lib, so your document never leaves your device. It is private and works offline.
Does rotating reduce quality or add a watermark?
No. Only the page orientation changes — the text and images are untouched, and no watermark is ever added.
Which direction does the rotation go?
Rotation is clockwise. 90° turns a page a quarter-turn right, 180° flips it upside down, and 270° turns it a quarter-turn left.