Scan documents
Use your scanner, phone camera, or document app to create PDFs. Save them to your device.
Merge scanned documents from your scanner, phone camera, or document apps. No re-compression, no quality loss, no upload. Works with any image-based PDF.
Works with scanner output, phone scans, and document apps
PDF files only · Preserves scan quality · No upload
Scanned PDFs combined successfully!
Merge scanned documents without losing image quality or uploading files.
Use your scanner, phone camera, or document app to create PDFs. Save them to your device.
Pick the scanned files from your computer or phone. They load locally — no upload.
Drag files to reorder them. Make sure pages are in the right sequence.
Click merge. The combined PDF downloads with original scan quality preserved.
Regular PDFs contain text, fonts, and vector graphics. Scanned PDFs contain images of pages — each page is a photo or scan stored as a JPEG or TIFF inside the PDF. When you scan a document with a scanner or phone camera, you're creating an image-based PDF. These files are often large, so check out merge large PDF files if you're working with 100MB+ scanned documents.
This matters because scanned PDFs are usually larger than text-based PDFs. A scanned page at 300 DPI might be 1-2MB, while a text page is often under 100KB. When you combine multiple scanned documents, file sizes add up quickly.
The pdf-lib library extracts pages from each scanned PDF and copies them into a new document. It doesn't re-compress images or change quality settings — the original scan quality is preserved. If you scanned at 300 DPI, the merged PDF keeps that resolution. To understand exactly how pdf-lib processes files locally in your browser, read how browser-based PDF merging works.
Some online tools re-compress scanned PDFs to save bandwidth, which degrades image quality. This tool processes everything locally, so there's no reason to compress. Your scans stay sharp.
Desktop scanners: Office scanners, all-in-one printers, document feeders. Phone scanner apps: Adobe Scan, Microsoft Lens, Apple Notes, Google Drive. Multifunction printers: Scan-to-email, scan-to-USB features. Portable scanners: Handheld scanners, pen scanners, sheet-fed scanners.
You can mix scanned PDFs from different devices. Combine pages from your office scanner with phone scans from a meeting. Merge documents scanned at different resolutions or color settings. The tool handles all of them — it just copies pages without caring about their origin.
Scan resolution affects file size. A letter-size page scanned at 150 DPI is about 500KB. At 300 DPI, it's 1-2MB. At 600 DPI, it's 4-8MB. Color scans are larger than black-and-white. If you're combining dozens of scanned pages, expect large files.
This tool has no file size limits, so large scanned PDFs aren't a problem. Check out merge large PDF files for more on handling big documents.
No. OCR (Optical Character Recognition) converts scanned images into searchable text. It's useful if you want to search or copy text from scans, but it's not needed for merging. This tool combines scanned PDFs as-is, without OCR processing.
Scanned documents often contain sensitive information — contracts, tax forms, medical records, legal papers. Uploading them to online tools creates privacy risks. This tool processes scans locally on your device, so your documents never leave your computer. Learn more at merge PDFs without upload for complete privacy protection.
Also check out: merge large PDF files, merge PDFs offline, or merge PDFs without upload.