Combine several PDF pages onto one sheet (N-up layout) to save paper when printing.
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Printing a long PDF one page per sheet burns through paper fast — especially for drafts, handouts, or reference material where you don't need each page full-size. Fitting several pages onto a single sheet, often called "N-up" printing, is a simple way to cut paper (and ink) usage significantly.
QuickPDFonline's Multiple Pages Per Sheet tool rearranges your PDF into a grid — 2, 4, 6, 9 pages per sheet and more — right in your browser. All processing happens directly in your browser — your files are never uploaded to any server. Choose how many pages per sheet, the sheet size, orientation, margins, and whether to draw a border around each page.
Useful for printing lecture slides as handouts, distributing draft documents for review, or archiving long reports in a more compact, paper-saving format.
ध्यान दें (Helpful Tip)
"Pages per sheet" चुनें (जैसे 4), फिर दाईं तरफ़ के preview में देखें कि pages किस order में arrange होंगे। "Reading direction" से order left-to-right या right-to-left set करें, "Margin" से pages के बीच की spacing adjust करें, और "border" checkbox से हर page के चारों तरफ़ एक हल्की line add करें ताकि print करते वक्त pages अलग दिखें।
Click or drag & drop your PDF into the upload area above.
Pick pages per sheet, sheet size, margins, and border — preview updates live.
Get a new, paper-saving PDF with multiple original pages per sheet.
Save Paper & Ink
Fit up to 15 original pages onto a single printed sheet.
Flexible Layouts
2 through 15 pages per sheet, with custom margins and borders.
100% Private
Nothing is uploaded. All layout work runs locally in your browser.
Live Preview
See exactly how pages will be arranged before you convert anything.
It depends on how much text was on the original page and how many pages you pack per sheet. 2 or 4 pages per sheet usually stays comfortably readable; 9 or more pages per sheet works best for pages with large text, images, or when you just need a compact visual reference rather than reading fine print.
No. Each original page is re-rendered as an image and placed into its grid cell, so the output PDF is a flattened, image-based layout — great for printing and viewing, but the text is no longer selectable or searchable.
The last sheet is simply left with empty cells — for example, an 11-page PDF at 4 pages per sheet produces 3 sheets, with the final sheet holding just 3 pages instead of 4. No pages are dropped or duplicated.
Never. Rendering, layout, and rebuilding the PDF all happen entirely inside your browser using JavaScript. Your file is never sent to any server. Once you close the tab, no trace of your document remains anywhere outside your device.
Ready to save some paper?