Open a Password-Protected PDF Without the Password
Forgot your PDF password? This guide covers every method — from built-in browser workflows for basic protection to professional recovery for fully encrypted files.
Step 1: Determine What Type of Password You Have
Owner (Permissions) Password
You can see the PDF content, but can't print, copy, or edit it. This is just a restriction flag — the content itself is not encrypted.
User (Open) Password
You see "Enter password" and can't see any content at all. The entire file is encrypted — every page, image, and text element.
Step 2: Built-In Methods (Owner Password Only)
These methods only work for owner/permissions passwords. If your PDF asks for a password before showing any content, skip to Step 3 — built-in methods won't help.
Chrome Print Trick
Open the PDF in Google Chrome (drag the file into a Chrome window). Press Ctrl+P (or Cmd+P on Mac). Change destination to "Save as PDF". The saved copy has no restrictions.
Google Drive Method
Upload the PDF to Google Drive. Open it with Google Docs. Then download as PDF again. The permissions password will be stripped.
Preview on Mac
Open the PDF in Preview. Go to File → Export as PDF. The exported version will have no restrictions.
Step 3: Professional Recovery (User/Open Password)
When Built-In Methods Don't Work
If your PDF shows "Enter password" and you can't see any content, it has user-level encryption. The entire file is encrypted with AES or RC4 — no browser trick can bypass this. You need the actual password.
Our service uses powerful dedicated servers to test millions of password combinations per second. We try common passwords, dictionary words, patterns, and intelligent combinations based on any hints you provide.
Upload your PDF
We detect encryption type automatically
Server-side brute-force
Millions of combinations per second
Get the password
Open and re-save without protection. Simple PINs (up to 4 digits) and top 10K common passwords are FREE if found during Fast Check.
PDF Encryption Types Explained
40-bit RC4
PDF 1.1–1.3 (Acrobat 2–4, 1996–2001)
128-bit RC4
PDF 1.4–1.6 (Acrobat 5–7, 2001–2006)
128-bit AES
PDF 1.6+ (Acrobat 7–9, 2006–2008)
256-bit AES
PDF 2.0 (Acrobat X+, 2010–now)
Not sure which encryption your PDF uses? Upload it — we detect the type automatically and tell you the estimated recovery time before you pay anything.
Frequently Asked Questions
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