Turn a PDF into a fully editable Word document (.docx) without sending it anywhere. We read the text, fonts and images directly in your browser and rebuild them as Word paragraphs, headings and pictures you can edit in Microsoft Word, Google Docs or LibreOffice. Text-based PDFs convert faithfully; complex layouts like multi-column pages and tables are approximated. Drop one or several PDFs and download the Word files instantly — nothing is uploaded, no account, no watermark.
One or several PDFs — nothing is uploaded
For text-based PDFs, yes to a large extent: paragraphs, line breaks, bold and italic text, relative font sizes and headings are reconstructed, and embedded images are placed back into the document. Because a PDF stores positioned glyphs rather than a document structure, very complex layouts — multiple columns, tables, forms — are approximated rather than reproduced pixel-for-pixel. The result is meant to be edited, not to be an exact visual clone.
A scanned PDF is just a photo of a page — it contains no selectable text, only an image. There are no letters to extract, so there is nothing to place into the Word file. We detect this and tell you instead of handing you a blank document. To convert a scan you first need OCR (optical character recognition) to turn the image into real text; this tool does not include OCR yet.
Nothing is uploaded. The entire conversion runs in your browser using JavaScript and WebAssembly; your PDF never leaves your device and no copy is stored anywhere. This is the key difference from services like iLovePDF, Smallpdf or Adobe's online converter, which send your document to their servers. No account, no email, no limits.
Yes — that's the point. The output is a standard .docx you can open and freely edit in Microsoft Word, Google Docs, Apple Pages or LibreOffice Writer: change the text, restyle headings, move images, add tables. It is not a locked image of the page, it's real editable text.
Images embedded in the PDF are extracted and re-inserted into the Word document near their original position and size. Tables are the hard case: a PDF has no concept of a table — it's just lines and text placed on a grid — so cell text is kept but the table borders and structure may not be rebuilt. Expect to re-apply table formatting for heavily tabular documents.