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How to Password-Protect a PDF on iPad

A simple step-by-step guide to password-protect a pdf on iPad using PDFWix's free online tools.

How to Password-Protect a PDF on iPad

Password-protect a PDF on iPad in Safari with PDFWix — AES-256 encryption runs locally, file stays on your iPad. Free, no app, no signup, no watermark.

Why iPad can't password-protect PDFs natively

PDF encryption requires writing the encrypted streams back into the file — something none of iPad's built-in tools do. Most iPad users either pay for Acrobat Premium or send a password-protected .zip instead, which is a worse experience for the recipient.

Native iPad options

iPadOS has no built-in PDF encryption. PDF Expert and Acrobat both support it but require paid subscriptions.

Password-protect a PDF on iPad with PDFWix

Open pdfwix.com/protect-pdf in your browser. Drag in the PDF. Type a strong password (mix of letters, numbers, symbols). Optionally set a separate owner password to restrict printing and copying. Click Protect — the encrypted PDF downloads to your device.

Encryption is AES-256, applied via a WebAssembly build of qpdf inside your browser. The PDF and password never reach our servers.

Tips for sharing a protected PDF

Send the password through a different channel than the PDF — text the password if you email the file, or vice versa. Don't include the password in the same email body, which negates the protection if the email account is compromised.

How it works

  1. Open the protect tool — Open pdfwix.com/protect-pdf in Safari or Chrome.
  2. Add your PDF — Drag the PDF onto the dropzone.
  3. Set passwords — Type a strong user password and optional owner password.
  4. Download protected — Click Protect — the AES-256 PDF saves to the Files app (Downloads).

Frequently asked questions

Is PDFWix's encryption strong enough for iPad on confidential files?

Yes. Protect PDF uses AES-256 — the same standard used by US government FIPS 140-2 systems and almost every enterprise document policy. It's the strongest standard PDF supports.

Can I add an open password and a separate edit password?

Yes. PDFWix supports both: a 'user' password required to open the file, and an 'owner' password that controls printing, copying and editing permissions.

What if I forget the password?

There is no recovery. AES-256 PDFs cannot be brute-forced with a strong password — that's the point. Save the password somewhere safe before you encrypt.

Is my PDF uploaded for encryption?

No. Protect PDF runs in your browser via a WebAssembly build of qpdf. Your file and password stay on your device.

Will the encrypted PDF open everywhere?

Yes. AES-256 PDFs open in every modern viewer — Adobe Acrobat, Edge, Preview, Foxit, mobile Safari, Drive — as long as the recipient knows the password.