How to Reduce a PDF's Page Count (Combine Multiple Pages onto One)
For printing handouts, study guides, or save-paper batch jobs — PDFShed combines 2, 4, or 6 PDF pages onto a single physical sheet. The "n-up" trick that saves trees.
The problem
You have a 100-page document to print as a handout. At one page per sheet, that's 100 sheets. At 4-up, it's 25. Same content, 75% less paper.
Step-by-step
- 1
Open the N-up Layout tool
Drop your PDF in.
- 2
Pick layout
2-up (two pages on one sheet, side by side), 4-up (four pages on a 2×2 grid), 6-up (six on 2×3 grid), or 9-up (nine on 3×3).
- 3
Choose orientation
Landscape for 2-up usually looks better. Portrait for 4-up matches normal page layout.
- 4
Set margins and gaps
Default margins are usually fine. For more text legibility on 4-up, reduce gaps.
- 5
Generate and print
Output PDF has fewer physical pages, each containing N original pages.
Pro tips
- •For lecture handouts: 2-up is the sweet spot — readable, saves 50% paper.
- •For bulk reading material (PDF books, manuals): 4-up may be too small to read comfortably. Try 2-up first.
- •For reference cards (cheat sheets): 6-up or 9-up works for small text.
- •After n-up, [compress the PDF](/en/tools/compress-pdf) — file size sometimes grows due to layout overhead.
Frequently asked questions
Will the text be too small to read?
Depends on original. Letter-size pages 4-up are about half the original linear size — readable for body text, harder for footnotes.
Does this affect the digital PDF or just printing?
It changes the digital PDF too. The "real" page count is reduced. If you only want to print n-up without changing the file, use your printer's "Pages per sheet" setting in the Print dialog.
Will hyperlinks still work?
Yes — hyperlinks remap to their new positions on the combined pages.
Can I do double-sided n-up?
In your printer's duplex setting, yes. The n-up tool creates a single-sided n-up PDF; your printer can then print double-sided for further savings.