Convert pdf page spreads to single page

I was looking for an easy answer for this myself, and didn't like the options given here.

So I made my own:

1. Create a duplicate file

2. In original file, open "Organize Pages"

3. Click "Insert," select "from file"

4. Select the duplicate file, insert "after"

5. Place the pages into their correct orders, such that you have two in a row for each page (1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3. )

8. On first page, select the left hand side of the image, double click on selection

10 10 Upvotes Community Expert , Dec 02, 2022 Dec 02, 2022 JR Boulay • Community Expert , Dec 02, 2022 Dec 02, 2022

You can use this free Action for Acrobat Pro:

14 14 Upvotes 24 Replies 24 Adobe Employee ,

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293447#M16185 Jul 16, 2013 Jul 16, 2013

Copy link to clipboard

Try using Crop function and see if this suits your requirement.

Tools Pane - pages - Crop

Or you can export the PDF to Word doc, and make changes in the word file.

File - Save as - Microsoft Word - Word document

1 1 Upvote Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293448#M16186 Jul 16, 2013 Jul 16, 2013

Copy link to clipboard

Hmm, I appreciate the rply, but neither of those really answers the brief, do they?

I'm aware of the crop function, but doesn't that just discard the parts that are cropped? I need to turn the spread into two single pages, not only save half of it.

And exporting it to a word processir file loses the formatting and layout.

Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

Adobe Employee ,

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293449#M16187 Jul 16, 2013 Jul 16, 2013

Copy link to clipboard

I am afraid but spreading one landscape page into two single portrait pages is not possible.

That's why I gave you other alternative.

You can crop the PDF twice, first get the right side, and then get the second side, and arrange the pages in the document.

This is obviously, time consuming process, but this is one of the workaround that I can suggest you.

Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293453#M16191 Mar 22, 2014 Mar 22, 2014

Copy link to clipboard

You might want to try Abbyy Fineprint. It splits landscape into portrait automatically. Of course, you'll have to re-OCR the document, but if the results are acceptable, you're good to go. I just did one myself, worked fine.

1 1 Upvote Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293450#M16188 Feb 09, 2014 Feb 09, 2014

Copy link to clipboard

Workaround (time consuming but it works):

1) extract the page(s) to split. This creates a copy in a different window.

2) crop the copy to be one part of your split page

3) crop the original to be the other part of your split

4) drag the thumbnail from the extract back to the original windows

Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293451#M16189 Feb 09, 2014 Feb 09, 2014

Copy link to clipboard

If the document is tagged, saving as a DOCX or DOC file may be the fastest way to get what you want. However, as a PDF you can also use the crop tool and do what is not generally recommended. That is crop the left side and print to a new PDF in portrait with expand to page. Repeat the proces for the right side (you can do a ctrl-Z to uncrop usually). When the two PDFs are complete, then use Insert Pages to put one into the other. Then use the PAGES button (maybe expanding the Pages view) to reorder the pages. Some users have developed some JavaScript to do what you want, but you will have to either search for it or wait until they drop by. I am not sure if Quite Imposing ( http://www.adobe.com/products/plugins/acrobat/quiteimpose.html ) has this option.

Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

Community Expert ,

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293452#M16190 Feb 10, 2014 Feb 10, 2014

Copy link to clipboard

You might see if the script mentioned in the blog post Splitting PDF Pages by Karl Heinz Kremer can help you.

3 3 Upvotes Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/5293454#M16192 Feb 18, 2016 Feb 18, 2016

Copy link to clipboard

I was looking for an easy answer for this myself, and didn't like the options given here.

So I made my own:

1. Create a duplicate file

2. In original file, open "Organize Pages"

3. Click "Insert," select "from file"

4. Select the duplicate file, insert "after"

5. Place the pages into their correct orders, such that you have two in a row for each page (1, 1, 2, 2, 3, 3. )

8. On first page, select the left hand side of the image, double click on selection

9. Set page range to "All," and "apply to" to " odd pages"

10. Go to second page, which shouldn't be cropped, select the right hand side of the page, double click

11. Set page range to "All," and "apply to" to " even pages"

Step 5 is potentially time consuming if you have a many paged pdf, but otherwise this is pretty easy,

10 10 Upvotes Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/10751106#M229624 Nov 20, 2019 Nov 20, 2019

Copy link to clipboard

Agree after much searching this seems the only way. Well documented! Ta.!

Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/11923359#M304820 Mar 24, 2021 Mar 24, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

Pretty much the best option I have found so far. Thank you for the detailed instructions.

1 1 Upvote Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

Community Expert ,

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/11923468#M304828 Mar 24, 2021 Mar 24, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

If you want to do it with a single click consider this (paid-for) tool I've created that does just that:

Direct purchase using PayPal ($40 only)! This script allows you to split each page of a PDF into two parts and recombine those parts into .

Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

Community Beginner ,

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/12443956#M333113 Oct 11, 2021 Oct 11, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

I just bought a new carbon monoxide detector. The instructions were printed in something like 5 pt. Compressed. And my eyes are not what they were.

So I downloaded the PDF of the instructions and used your technique to split the pages (vertically rather than horizontally, but same principle) and then printed out the resulting document on A3 paper, using the "Fit" option in the print dialog to expand the pages to, er, fit.

:grinning_face_with_smiling_eyes:

I can now install my carbon monoxide detector correctly, so your trick may have saved my life. And that of my wife, my daughter, a cat, three guinea pigs and a rabbit

OK, I may be exaggerating just a touch here, but thanks for the tip!

1 1 Upvote Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/12466085#M334827 Oct 22, 2021 Oct 22, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

This helped me out! Thanks.

I found a bit shorter way to do this. You can Copy-Paste the pages in Acrobat instead of duplicate a file and import it. Nevertheless, this was a brilliant solution!

1 1 Upvote Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/12569288#M340706 Dec 03, 2021 Dec 03, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

Great result! And you taught me something new. Thank you!

Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more

/t5/acrobat-discussions/splitting-a-landscape-spread-into-2-portrait-pages/m-p/12590679#M341959 Dec 13, 2021 Dec 13, 2021

Copy link to clipboard

I think you’ll find there’s a less manually intensive way. I’m assuming that you have something like a book/booklet which has been scanned as spreads with two facing pages per Acrobat page and you want single pages in order. I realize this looks like a lot of instructions but it’s actually very straightforward and, believe me, it’s nothing compared to trying to manually re-arrange pages.

  1. Create two copies of the file
  2. Working with the first copy go to Tools/Edit and select a spread – doesn’t matter which.
  3. In the menu above the page select Crop Pages.
  4. Draw a crop box around the RIGHT-HAND half of the spread.
  5. When you have completed the crop box double-click inside it and in the dialogue which appears select Page range: All and Apply to: ODD PAGES ONLY.
  6. Now do the opposite to the even pages. Select a spread, crop to the left-hand half of the spread, double click in the box to select the whole page range but Apply to:EVEN PAGES ONLY.
  7. You should now have the first part of the booklet in single page order.
  8. Save that file!
  9. Open up the second copy of the original and go to Tools/Organize pages.
  10. Select all pages and choose Extract in the top menu and check the box to save as separate pages.
  11. You now have on disk a bunch of numbered files each of which represents an individual spread and you can close the file from which you extracted them.
  12. On the File menu choose ‘Create/Combine files into a single PDF’ and select all of the individual spread files you just made.
  13. The files will be imported in name order and you’ll be presented with a list to approve but DON’T press Combine yet.
  14. BEFORE you click on Combine, check that the numbered files are in descending order. If not click at the top of the file name column to reverse the order.
  15. Now you can press Combine to create a binder that has all the spreads in your booklet in reverse order.
  16. The rest is just the opposite of what you did with the first half. Delete the left-hand half of all the even-numbered spreads, and the right-hand half of all the odd numbered spreads.
  17. You should be left with the second half of your booklet in single page order.
  18. Open the file containing the first half, then copy all the pages in the binder and paste them on the end. You have the complete booklet in single page order.
Community guidelines

Be kind and respectful, give credit to the original source of content, and search for duplicates before posting. Learn more