PDF to Word Conversion: The Complete Guide (2026)
You received a PDF report and need to update three numbers. Or someone sent you a contract template you have to customize. Or you're salvaging text from a research paper. PDF to Word conversion solves all of these — when it works correctly.
What gets preserved
A good PDF-to-Word converter preserves:
- Text content — every word, in the right order
- Fonts — at least the font family, often the exact font
- Paragraphs and line breaks — including indentation
- Tables — structure, columns, cell content
- Images — at original resolution, in their original positions
- Lists — bullets and numbering
- Hyperlinks — clickable in Word as in the PDF
What's harder
Complex layouts with text wrapping around images, multi-column scientific papers, and decorative typography may need cleanup in Word. Text positioned with absolute coordinates (rare in business docs, common in design) becomes text boxes instead of flowing paragraphs.
Scanned PDFs need OCR first
If your PDF is just images of pages (a scan), the text isn't actually text — it's pixels. Run the file through PDF OCR first to recognize the text, then convert to Word. Skipping OCR results in a Word doc full of unselectable image pages.
How to convert PDF to Word
- Open PDF to Word
- Drag your PDF (up to 100 MB, hundreds of pages)
- Wait for processing — typically 5–30 seconds
- Download the .docx file
- Open in Microsoft Word, LibreOffice, or Google Docs
For damaged or unusual PDFs
If the conversion fails, the PDF may be damaged or use unusual font encoding. Try compressing it first with PDF compress, which can fix some corruption issues, then re-convert.
Privacy and limits
Free conversion supports files up to 100 MB. Files are encrypted in transit, processed on European servers, and auto-deleted after your session.