GuidesJuly 1, 20264 min read0 views

PDF Conversion Guide: Which Method Is Right for Each Task?

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PDF Conversion Guide: Which Method Is Right for Each Task?

PDF is everywhere — invoices, bank statements, contracts, reports. But "converting a PDF" means something different depending on what you actually need to do. Extracting a data table is a completely different task from compressing a large file or merging multiple documents. This guide covers 7 common PDF conversion and processing tasks, and for each one, explains the right approach so you don't waste time with the wrong tool.

1. Convert a PDF Table to Excel or CSV

This is one of the most searched PDF tasks — and the most frustrating when done manually. If you have a PDF invoice, bank statement, or purchase order with structured data, copying and pasting row by row is error-prone and slow.

The smarter approach is to use an AI-powered preset that recognizes the document structure and maps data directly into a spreadsheet. For standard documents like invoices or bank statements, you can use purpose-built workflows that handle the heavy lifting automatically.

2. Extract Data from Invoices or Bank Statements

When you're processing financial documents regularly — supplier invoices, receipts, or monthly bank exports — a generic converter often isn't enough. You need something that understands the specific fields (date, amount, vendor, line items) and outputs them consistently.

Tablola offers dedicated presets for these use cases that go beyond simple text extraction:

3. Merge Multiple PDFs into One File

Need to combine several reports, contracts, or scanned pages into a single document? This is a straightforward task but requires the right tool to preserve page order and quality.

Use the PDF Merge tool to combine multiple files quickly without losing formatting. You can drag-and-drop files and reorder pages before merging.

4. Split or Remove Pages from a PDF

The opposite of merging — sometimes you receive a 40-page document and only need pages 3–7, or you want to remove blank pages that crept in during scanning.

  • Split a PDF into separate files — use the PDF Split tool to divide by page range or extract individual pages
  • Remove specific pages — the PDF Page Delete tool lets you drop unwanted pages in seconds
  • Remove blank pages automatically — handy after scanning, using the blank page remover tool

5. Compress a Large PDF

PDFs with embedded images can balloon to 50MB or more, making them hard to email or upload. Compression reduces file size without making the document unreadable — the key is choosing the right quality setting for your use case (print vs. screen vs. archiving).

For single files, the PDF Compress tool works well. If you have a batch of files to process at once, bulk compression saves significant time.

Tip: For documents you only need to read on screen, aggressive compression is fine. For documents that will be printed professionally, use a lighter compression setting to preserve sharpness.

6. Convert Images to PDF

Got a folder of JPG scans — signed contracts, receipts, ID documents — and need them as a single PDF? The JPG to PDF conversion flow is simple: select your images, set the page order, and export.

This is especially useful when submitting documents to portals that only accept PDF format. The JPG to PDF tool handles multiple images at once and preserves image resolution.

7. Edit PDF Metadata or Page Layout

Less talked about but genuinely useful — sometimes you need to adjust document properties rather than content. This includes rotating pages that were scanned upside down, reordering pages after the fact, or standardizing page sizes across a multi-source document.

  • Rotate pages — fix scanned pages that came in sideways
  • Reorder pages — drag pages into the correct sequence
  • Equalize page sizes — useful when merging documents with mixed A4 and letter-size pages
  • Edit metadata — update title, author, and keywords stored inside the file

Choosing the Right Approach: A Quick Reference

Here's a simple way to decide which method to use:

  1. Data extraction needed? → Use a preset (invoice, bank statement, table extractor)
  2. File management needed? → Use tools (merge, split, rotate, compress)
  3. Repeated task? → Set up a workflow so you're not redoing the same steps manually each time

PDF conversion doesn't have to be a chore. Once you match the right tool to the right task, most of these operations take under a minute. Start with the task you do most often, and build from there.

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Start with the right workflow and continue with an editable table output.

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