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Merging tools

One file out of many — in the order you choose

You have a folder of receipts, clips, voice memos, or screenshots that should already be a single file. Drop them in, drag them into the order you want, and download one clean output. No timeline editor. No Pro subscription. No watermark.

Drag, drop, download · One file out of many · No watermark

Pick what you're merging

Four merge tools — one for each file type you'll actually run into.

Merge PDF

You have two or more PDFs and need them as one document. Combine them in the right order in seconds.

Merge my PDFs
Merge images

You have a handful of photos that should read as one — a before/after, a screenshot thread, a product spec. Merge them with a live preview, no watermark.

Combine my images
Merge videos

Two clips, ten clips, or thirty — drop them in, drag them into the right order, and download a single merged MP4. No watermark.

Combine my clips
Merge audio

Your podcast intro, the interview, and the outro live in three files. Merge them into one before publishing.

Merge my files

Why merging feels harder than it should

Combining files is a primitive operation, not a creative act. Most tools have forgotten that.

The merge button is buried inside an editor

iMovie wants you to import, lay out a timeline, and export — twenty minutes of friction for a thirty-clip stitch. Acrobat hides PDF combine behind a Pro subscription. Audacity needs a download and a tutorial.

All you wanted was "play file A, then file B, then file C, save as one." Instead you're learning a new app for the same shape of task you've done five times this year.

One job, four different tools

To combine PDFs you need a different app than for video; the video app can't help with audio; the audio app can't touch images. Free online tools exist but watermark the output, paywall the batch, or cap the upload at a number that's smaller than what you actually have.

The same fifteen-second job gets re-learned every quarter in a different tool because the file type changed.

The files sit there, unmerged, while the task goes stale

The receipt envelope stays open on the desk for a week because the expense report can't go in until the scans are one PDF. The wedding video never quite gets sent. The podcast guest is left on read while three voice memos sit in iCloud.

It isn't the merge that's slow — the merge is twenty seconds. It's the search for a tool that just *does* that, without becoming a project.

Combining shouldn't require a creative app

There's no creative judgment in "play file A, then file B, then file C, save as one." The tool needs to play the files in sequence and write one output — that's it.

Editing is where complexity is justified. Merging isn't. The two should not share a UI.

We know how it feels to be the person sitting on a folder of receipts the night before an expense deadline, or to come back from a weekend with thirty short clips and realise no-one is going to watch thirty notifications. The friction isn't the merge. It's finding a tool that just does that.

Built for the merge — and only the merge

4file types covered: PDF, image, audio, video
100%in your browser — your files don't leave your device
0watermarks, ever

Three steps. That's it.

The merge itself is twenty seconds. The page is built so the rest of the flow takes less than that.

1

Drop your files in

PDF, image, audio, or video — pick the matching merge tool and drag your batch onto the page. No upload to a server.

2

Set the order

Drag-to-reorder on desktop, up and down arrows on mobile. The output follows the order you set, exactly.

3

Download one clean file

A single PDF, MP4, MP3, or merged image — no watermark, no banner, no logo. The originals stay untouched.

What happens when there's no merge tool that just works

Each one of these is a real moment we've heard about more than once.

  • An expense report that sits at "missing receipts" three days past the deadline because the scans are still in fifteen separate files
  • A holiday video that never quite gets shared because no-one wants to learn iMovie for a thirty-clip stitch
  • A podcast guest left on read for a week while three voice memos wait for someone to install Audacity
  • A spec sheet returned with comments because the supplier photos arrived as eight separate JPGs and the buyer couldn't find page 3
  • A chat thread sent as eight screenshots in random order, read out of sequence, replied to with "wait, what?"

From a folder of fragments → to one clean file

Before

  • The files exist. The recipient is waiting. The merge is a one-line ask.
  • You open the wrong app, learn the wrong thing, give up, and send the folder.
  • The recipient swipes through three of fifteen items and replies the next day, if at all.

After

  • Drop the batch in, drag the order, click once.
  • One file lands in your downloads folder — receipts, clips, audio, or screenshots, whichever this batch was.
  • The recipient opens one thing, reads it through, and replies inside the hour.
Juggling stacks of separate files — receipts, clips, voice memos, screenshots — and apologising for the mess every time.Handing over one clean file every time, in the right order, without the recipient ever knowing it started as fifteen.

What you can count on, every time

No installation

Drag your batch into the browser and combine. No download, no setup, no admin rights needed.

No account

No sign-up, no email, no payment screen. Open the page, merge your files, get on with the day.

Your order, your output

Drag-to-reorder on desktop, arrows on mobile. The merged file follows the sequence you set — never the upload order, unless you want it that way.

No watermark

The output is yours — a clean PDF, MP4, MP3, or merged image. No logo, no banner, no "made with X" footer.

Your files stay yours

Merging happens in your browser. We don't store, see, or process your files on a server.

Free to use

Combine as many batches as you need. No daily cap, no Pro tier hiding the batch button.