How to Rotate PDF Pages
Got a PDF with sideways or upside-down pages? This happens frequently with scanned documents, mobile photos saved as PDFs, and files received from others. Here's how to fix the orientation in seconds.
Step-by-Step Instructions
- Open the Rotate Pages tool — Find it in the “Organize” section on the PDF Tools homepage.
- Upload your PDF — Drag and drop or click to browse. Your file is loaded locally in the browser.
- Choose rotation angle — Select 90° clockwise, 90° counterclockwise, or 180° (flip upside down). You can apply the rotation to all pages or specific page numbers.
- Apply rotation — Click the rotate button. The pages are transformed instantly in your browser.
- Download the corrected PDF — Your fixed document is ready to download with the correct page orientation.
Why Do PDFs End Up Sideways?
Scanner orientation mismatch. When you scan a document, the scanner may not detect the page orientation correctly. This is especially common with automatic document feeders (ADFs) where pages can be inserted in landscape orientation but the scanner assumes portrait. The resulting PDF pages appear rotated 90 degrees.
Mobile phone camera PDFs. When you photograph a document with your phone and convert it to PDF, the phone's orientation sensor may misread the angle. This is particularly common when the phone is held at an angle while photographing a document on a desk.
Mixed orientation documents. Some documents contain both portrait and landscape pages — for example, a report where most pages are portrait but tables or charts appear in landscape. PDF viewers display all pages with the same orientation, so landscape pages appear sideways.
Software export issues. Some applications export PDFs with incorrect rotation metadata. The content is correct, but the page rotation flag in the PDF specification tells viewers to display it at the wrong angle.
Rotation Options Explained
90° clockwise: Turns the page a quarter turn to the right. Use this when text reads from bottom to top (the page was scanned with the left edge on top).
90° counterclockwise: Turns the page a quarter turn to the left. Use this when text reads from top to bottom (the page was scanned with the right edge on top).
180°: Flips the page upside down. Use this when the entire page is inverted — text appears upside down and mirrored left-to-right.
Tips
- If only certain pages are sideways, specify those page numbers rather than rotating the entire document.
- Rotation doesn't affect content quality — text, images, and formatting remain identical. Only the display angle changes.
- If you're dealing with a scanned document where every page is sideways, rotate all pages at once to save time.
- After rotating, the page dimensions update accordingly — a portrait page rotated 90° becomes landscape, and vice versa.
Why PDFs End Up Rotated
Understanding why pages end up at the wrong angle helps you prevent the issue in the future and choose the right fix:
Scanned at the wrong orientation. Document scanners with automatic feeders process pages quickly, but they assume a standard orientation. If you feed a landscape-format document (like a check or a wide spreadsheet) through an ADF scanner, it will typically scan it as if it were portrait, resulting in a sideways page. Flatbed scanners have the same issue if you place the document at the wrong angle on the glass.
Phone camera captures in portrait. When you photograph a document lying on a desk, your phone's accelerometer determines the image orientation. If the phone is tilted or held at an ambiguous angle, the sensor may record the wrong orientation. This is especially common when photographing documents on cluttered surfaces where you're holding the phone at an angle to avoid shadows or glare.
Exported from apps with wrong settings. Some applications set incorrect rotation metadata when exporting to PDF. This happens with certain CAD programs, presentation software, and older print drivers. The content renders correctly within the originating app but appears rotated when opened as a PDF in a different viewer.
Mixed-orientation pages in merged documents. When you merge multiple PDFs, some source files may have been in landscape while others were portrait. The merged document preserves each page's individual rotation setting, which can result in a document where you have to keep rotating your view back and forth as you scroll through different sections.
Rotating vs Cropping
Rotation and cropping solve different problems, and it's worth understanding which tool you actually need:
Rotation changes the display angle of the entire page. The content is correct, but it's facing the wrong direction. Rotation fixes this by turning the page 90, 180, or 270 degrees so the content appears right-side-up. No content is added or removed — just reoriented.
Cropping removes margins or whitespace from the edges of a page. The content is already facing the right direction, but there's too much blank space around it — perhaps from scanning with a border, or from a PDF that was generated with oversized margins. If your pages are oriented correctly but have excessive whitespace, use the Crop PDF tool instead.
Sometimes you need both: rotate first to fix the orientation, then crop to clean up excess margins. Both tools preserve the underlying content quality.
Need more advanced features?
Adobe Acrobat Pro
Advanced editing, OCR, e-signatures, and batch processing
Frequently Asked Questions
Does rotation change the file size?
No. Rotation modifies the page's display transformation without re-encoding the content. The file size remains virtually the same.
Can I rotate individual pages in a multi-page PDF?
Yes. You can specify which pages to rotate using page numbers or ranges (e.g., “3, 5-7”). Pages not specified remain at their current orientation.
My PDF looks correct on my computer but sideways on my phone. Why?
Different PDF viewers interpret rotation metadata differently. Some viewers auto-rotate based on content detection, while others display the raw page orientation. Explicitly setting the rotation with this tool ensures consistent display across all viewers and devices.
Can I rotate just some pages?
Yes. You can specify individual page numbers or ranges (e.g., “3, 5-7, 12”) to rotate only those pages while leaving the rest unchanged. This is especially useful for merged documents where only a few pages from one source file are at the wrong angle.
Will rotation affect the text content?
No. Rotation only changes the page's display angle — it modifies a rotation flag in the PDF's metadata without touching the actual content. All text remains fully searchable, selectable, and copy-pasteable after rotation. Images, fonts, links, and form fields are also completely unaffected.