Rotate PDF
Rotate selected pages of a PDF by 90°, 180°, or 270°. Fix orientation in seconds.
Fix sideways or upside-down pages permanently
Scanners often drop pages in at the wrong orientation — especially duplex scanners that flip every other page, or phone camera captures taken in portrait when the document is landscape. A viewer's on-the-fly rotate only shows the page correctly until you close the file. This tool actually writes the rotation into the PDF so every viewer, printer, and thumbnail shows the right orientation.
When to use this
- Duplex scans where every even page is upside-down
- Phone-captured documents where a couple of pages rotated wrong
- Landscape spreads stuck in portrait orientation
- Mixed-orientation scans that need uniform reading direction
- Printing — most printers respect the stored rotation, not viewer overrides
Selecting pages to rotate
Click thumbnails to toggle selection — rotate just the problem pages without touching the rest. Use Select All to fix a whole document stuck in the wrong orientation. Choose 90° (right), 180° (flip), or 270° (left) depending on what's needed; you can always re-run the tool if you over-rotate.
How to use this tool
- Upload the PDF.
- Click the pages that need rotating (or select All).
- Pick an angle — 90°, 180°, or 270° — and click Rotate selected.
Frequently asked questions
Does rotation stick after saving?
Yes — rotation is written to the PDF so every viewer opens it in the right orientation. It's not a temporary on-screen effect.
Can I rotate different pages by different amounts?
Run the tool twice: select one set and rotate them, then upload the output and rotate the rest. The tool applies one angle per run.
Will rotating change the page dimensions?
90° and 270° swap width and height; 180° keeps dimensions the same. Pages that were A4 portrait become A4 landscape after a 90° rotation.
Is text and content preserved?
Yes — nothing is re-rendered. Only the page rotation flag is updated, so text stays selectable and quality is unchanged.
Is my PDF uploaded?
No — rotation happens in your browser. The file never leaves your device.