Run PDF Editor on a whole folder of PDFs
Drop a folder, get a folder back. The bulk workflow with PDF Editor when you have dozens of PDFs to process the same way.
Doing one PDF at a time is fine. Doing 50 of them is a different problem entirely — and exactly where most browser tools fall apart. PDF Editor handles batches by design, processing them through the same in-browser pipeline as single files without re-uploading anything.
Launch the tool: PDF Editor — Runs entirely on your device using open web standards.
The batch workflow
- Open PDF Editor.
- Select all the PDFs at once. Drag a whole folder onto the drop area, or use Ctrl/Cmd+A in the file picker.
- Set the options once — they apply to every PDF in the batch.
- Start the run. PDF Editor processes them sequentially; progress shows file-by-file completion.
- Download — usually a single ZIP with every result inside, named after the original PDFs.
How long does a batch take?
Roughly the same time as one PDF, multiplied by the count. A small PDF processes in well under a second; 50 of them take under a minute. Larger PDFs (video, scanned PDFs) scale linearly — budget a few seconds per file. Your CPU is the limit, not the network, because nothing is being uploaded.
Memory and browser limits
PDF Editor stages the work so the browser only holds a few PDFs in memory at once, not all 50. This means you can safely batch hundreds of files on a normal laptop — the limit is your patience, not the browser's RAM.
Use the tool
Browser-only. Nothing is sent to a server.
When batching saves real time
Examples where batch processing pays off:
- Wedding photo cleanup — a thousand-image album, processed at once, downloaded as a single ZIP.
- Monthly invoice archive — every PDF for a year, compressed and stripped of metadata in one pass.
- Bulk format conversion — every HEIC photo from a trip, converted to JPG for sharing.
- Document scan run — a folder of scanner output, all run through the same cleanup, all named consistently.
Frequently asked questions
Is there a maximum batch size?
Not a hard one — we've seen users process 500+ files in a single session. The practical limit is your computer's patience.
Will all files in the batch get the same settings?
Yes — that's the whole point of batching. If you need different settings per file, run them in separate batches.
Can I cancel a batch midway?
Yes — close the tab. PDF Editor doesn't keep anything; files already processed are saved in your downloads, unfinished ones are simply lost.
Does the ZIP download work on mobile?
Yes — both iOS and Android handle ZIPs from browser downloads. You can extract them with the built-in file manager.
Related guides
- A free browser-based way to edit a PDF
- Why is PDF Editor not behaving as expected? Common causes
- Pro tips for using PDF Editor well
- PDF Editor for a resume or job-application PDF
- Run Split PDF on a whole folder of PDFs
- Run Image Color Adjuster Pro on a whole folder of images
Ready to try it?
Run it in your browser: PDF Editor. Everything happens locally in your browser — your file never leaves your device.
Last reviewed May 2026. File-size limits, portal requirements, and software defaults change over time — always verify with the destination platform before uploading time-sensitive documents. References to third-party services and products are for descriptive purposes only and do not imply any partnership or endorsement.