Overview
Metadata is not always visible on the page, but it can still describe the document. Reviewing it can prevent confusing or outdated labels.
This guide focuses on a simple browser-based workflow. The goal is to finish a common PDF task quickly while keeping the original file available as a backup.
When to use this workflow
Use this type of tool when you need a small PDF change, such as selecting pages, correcting page order, creating a new copy, or preparing a file for sharing. It is especially useful for everyday documents like assignments, invoices, handouts, forms, notes, receipts, and scanned pages.
Metadata is different from visible page content. It may include title, author, subject, and keywords stored in the file properties.
Step-by-step
- Open the Edit PDF Metadata tool.
- Select the PDF or image files from your device.
- Use the preview area to check pages before processing.
- Choose the page range, order, rotation, watermark, metadata, or output option required for the task.
- Process the file locally in your browser.
- Download the result and open it to confirm the final file is correct.
Privacy and file safety
PDF Page Tools is designed around browser-based processing for supported tools. Your PDF file is handled in your browser and is not uploaded to our server for these operations. This can be helpful when you want a quick edit without sending everyday documents to a remote service.
For sensitive files, always follow your organization, school, or legal requirements. If a document includes highly confidential information, confirm that browser-based tools are acceptable for your situation before editing or sharing it.
Practical tips
- Keep the original file until you have checked the edited copy.
- Use clear page ranges such as 1-3,5,8.
- Work with smaller files on older phones or low-memory devices.
- Preview pages before clicking the final process button.
- Rename the finished PDF with a clear file name so you can find it later.
Common mistakes to avoid
Do not rely only on the file name. Open the output PDF and check the page count, order, orientation, and visible text before sending it. If you are preparing a document for school, work, or printing, a quick final review can prevent missing pages or incorrect order.
Related tools
FAQ
Is metadata visible on the page?
Usually no. Metadata is stored in document properties, separate from page text.
Can I use this on mobile?
Yes, but larger PDF files usually work better on a desktop or laptop because they require more browser memory.
What should I do after downloading?
Open the downloaded file, check the pages, and keep the original file until you are sure the result is correct.