Utilitly's Reorder PDF Pages tool lets you rearrange the pages of a PDF visually — dragging page thumbnails into a new sequence — without installing software or sending your file anywhere. Most online tools upload your document to a server first; this one processes everything locally with WebAssembly, so your file stays on your device.
Because you're working with live thumbnails, you can see exactly what you're doing. Move a page from the back to the front, swap two sections, or fix a scan that came in out of order — then download a clean, correctly sequenced PDF.
There's no upload and no server round-trip. Your PDF is read, reordered, and re-saved on your own computer, so sensitive documents stay private. If you've been looking to reorder PDF pages without uploading them anywhere, this tool keeps everything local by design.
Reordering often goes hand in hand with small fixes. As you rearrange, you can rotate a sideways scan back to upright or delete a blank or duplicate page — all in the same screen, before you download. No need to jump between separate tools.
Yes — your file never actually goes online. Reordering happens entirely in your browser with WebAssembly, so the PDF is never uploaded, transmitted, or stored on a server. It's safe for confidential documents.
That's exactly how Utilitly works. There's no upload — your file is read, rearranged, and saved locally on your device, with nothing sent to the cloud.
Add your PDF, and each page appears as a thumbnail. Drag the thumbnails into the order you want, then download the restructured document.
Yes. You can rotate any individual page — handy for fixing a sideways scan — without affecting the other pages, all in the same view.
Yes. You can remove blank, duplicate, or unwanted pages as you rearrange, then download the cleaned-up PDF. To focus only on removing pages, use our delete PDF pages tool.
No. Your reordered file comes out clean, with no Utilitly watermark or branding.
No. It's free and requires no account, email, or payment — just open the page and start dragging.
No. Reordering only changes the sequence of pages; the content, resolution, and text of each page stay exactly as they were.