Home / How-to
A simple step-by-step guide to split a pdf on Chromebook using PDFWix's free online tools.
Split PDFs on a Chromebook in Chrome with PDFWix — extract pages or split by range. Free, browser-based, no extension, no signup, no watermark on output.
PDF splitting isn't part of any built-in Chromebook app. Drive, Files and the stock viewers can show a PDF but can't break it into smaller pieces — that's a gap browsers solve cleanly.
ChromeOS doesn't have a native PDF editor. Google Drive's viewer can't split PDFs, and the Acrobat Reader Android app on ChromeOS gates split behind a paid subscription.
Open pdfwix.com/split-pdf in your browser. Drag in the PDF. Pick the split mode: a specific page range (e.g. pages 5-12), fixed chunks (e.g. every 10 pages) or every page. Click Split, then download the resulting PDFs (or the .zip if more than one file).
Everything happens in your browser. No upload, no signup, no daily cap, no watermark on the output.
A paid native app (PDF Expert, Acrobat) is worth it if you split PDFs all day every day and want offline support plus iCloud/Drive sync. For a one-off split, PDFWix in your browser is faster and free.
Yes. PDFWix runs in mobile/desktop browsers — no app install, no signup. The split happens in your browser via WebAssembly.
PDFWix supports three modes: extract a page range, split into fixed-size chunks (every N pages), or split at every page (one PDF per page). All three produce a downloadable .zip when more than one file is created.
No. Splitting copies the source pages byte-for-byte into the output PDFs. Text remains text, fonts stay embedded, images keep their original resolution.
Internal page-to-page links inside a split chunk are preserved. Links pointing to pages outside the chunk are dropped (they'd break anyway). Top-level bookmarks are kept where they fall.
No. Split runs entirely in your browser.